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Peltier Seeks to Correct Illegal Sentence

Votingisanillusion

Senior member
Fargo, ND ? Last week, in the United States District Court (North Dakota), attorneys for American Indian activist Leonard Peltier filed a Motion to Correct an Illegal Sentence.

"Peltier has been illegally imprisoned for nearly 30 years," said Barry Bachrach, Peltier's attorney.

On June 26, 1975, two agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation were killed on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Mr. Peltier was charged in a two-count federal indictment. He was tried & convicted on both counts of first-degree murder & was sentenced to two consecutive life sentences. Designated as a political prisoner by Amnesty International, which has called for his immediate & unconditional release, Peltier is imprisoned at the U.S.
penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kansas.

"The federal jurisdiction conferred by the statutes under which my client was convicted & sentenced depended on the location of the alleged crime, not against whom the crime was allegedly committed."

The statutes required that the acts in question take place "within the special maritime & territorial jurisdiction of the United States". Because the acts occurred on the Pine Ridge IndianReservation, which Bachrach argues is neither "within the special maritime [or] territorial jurisdiction of the United States," Mr. Peltier claims he was convicted & sentenced for crimes over which the U.S. District Court had no jurisdiction.

The recent Supreme Court decision that ruled the sentencing guidelines in Washington State unconstitutional & threw state & federal courts into turmoil (Blakely v. Washington 124 S.Ct. 2531, 2004) also is cited in the brief submitted to the District Court on Peltier's behalf. In that case, the judge made "findings" independent of the jury and added 37 months to the 53-month sentence stipulated by the state guidelines thereby using a looser legal standard ? "preponderance of the evidence" ? than the "beyond a reasonable doubt" that juries use in criminal cases. The Supreme Court ruled that this practice violates the Sixth Amendment right to a trial by jury. Any facts
used by a judge to justify a sentence longer than that recommended by the guidelines must be based on facts the jury had when it convicted the defendant.

"Not only did the court not have jurisdiction in the Peltier case, but the trial judge inflicted punishment ? two consecutive life terms ? that the jury?s verdict alone did not allow. The jury did not find all the facts 'which the law makes essential to the punishment'. According to the Supreme Court, the judge exceeded his proper authority."

Peltier is calling on the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure in effect at the time of his sentencing ? specifically, Rule 35(a) ? that provided that the Court could correct an illegal sentence at any time.

"This rule applies to any offense committed before November 1, 1997," Bachrach explained.

"The appellate courts have recognized the undisputed misconduct in Peltier's case ? fabricated & suppressed evidence, as well as coerced testimony ? yet have refused to take corrective action for nearly three decades. This is clearly an abuse of the legal standards of American justice. It is our belief
that the action filed today should ultimately lead to Mr. Peltier?s release."

Released on December 15, 2004

Contact: Barry Bachrach, Esquire; Bowditch & Dewey,
311 Main Street, Worcester, MA 01615; U.S.A.
bbachrach@bowditch.com.
http://www.peltiersupport.org

Leonard Peltier Defense Committee
PO Box 583
Lawrence, KS 66044-0583
Telephone: (1) 785/842-5774; (1) 785/842-5796 (Fax);
Web: http://www.leonardpeltier.org
E-mail: info@leonardpeltier.org

Related Articles

Peltier Statement on Graham Extradition Hearing
http://www.unobserver.com/inde...&id=2034&blz=1

U.S.: Justice for Aquash? - by Brenda Norrell
http://www.unobserver.com/inde...&id=1471&blz=1

The Case of Leonard Peltier; Native American Political Prisoner
http://www.unobserver.com/inde...&id=1082&blz=1

The Case of Leonard Peltier http://www.freepeltier.org
 
"The appellate courts have recognized the undisputed misconduct in Peltier's case ? fabricated & suppressed evidence, as well as coerced testimony ? yet have refused to take corrective action for nearly three decades

I would feel more confortable about this if they would provide references to what is quoted.

Many times, these "political" crimes attempt to twist information around and take statements out of context.
 
The links provided are a wealth of information. This was a bad situation gone worse. The FBI were out of bounds with the initial investigation before the raid. Then they went in Janet Reno style anyway. It's a mess, and I fear when Leonard gets out he will go home and find it worse than prison. Pine Ridge is hell.
 
Originally posted by: judasmachine

Pine Ridge is hell.


I think it unlikely that Peltier fired the shots that killed the F. B. I. agents, but he was a member of a group of three AIM members who approached the agents at close range with the intent to kill. One of the three killed the agents. Regardless of which one did, Peltier would be guilty under a felony-murder theory.

If Clinton wouldn't pardon him as a lame duck president, he's guilty...
 
Participation of the killing of a Federal Agent becomes a federal crime, no matter the physical location of the deed. They are just nit-picking in terms of who has the jurisdiction over the crime. They are just hoping for a softer judge if a resentencing/trial can occur.
 
Originally posted by: Votingisanillusion

Mr. Peltier claims he was convicted & sentenced for crimes over which the U.S. District Court had no jurisdiction.

So you can kill someone on the reservation and not be subject to the rule of law? Does that only apply to Indians, or can I get away with it also??
 
Originally posted by: 1EZduzit
Originally posted by: Votingisanillusion

Mr. Peltier claims he was convicted & sentenced for crimes over which the U.S. District Court had no jurisdiction.

So you can kill someone on the reservation and not be subject to the rule of law? Does that only apply to Indians, or can I get away with it also??

When on the reservation you are subject to the reservation's particular laws. In federal cases it's obviously differant though. As my understanding goes, they do operate as indespendant nations for the most part, kind of more like a very loose confederacy.
 
Originally posted by: judasmachine
Originally posted by: 1EZduzit
Originally posted by: Votingisanillusion

Mr. Peltier claims he was convicted & sentenced for crimes over which the U.S. District Court had no jurisdiction.

So you can kill someone on the reservation and not be subject to the rule of law? Does that only apply to Indians, or can I get away with it also??

When on the reservation you are subject to the reservation's particular laws. In federal cases it's obviously differant though. As my understanding goes, they do operate as indespendant nations for the most part, kind of more like a very loose confederacy.

That is the way it is now, not the way it was when the murder was commited. If you commit a crime on the reservation now, you will be arrested by the tribal police. Where it goes from their I don't really know? It seems Mr Peltier wants to take some of the laws as they are now and some as they were then, as they work to his advantage, of course.

Of course we still send the Indians their welfare checks and build their housing, schools and highways, but other then that they don't need/want us meddeling in their affairs. Except of course to come and gamble our money away at their casinos.
 
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