Most decent people hate
to read stuff like this, much less think about it. It sometimes seems hopeless. What’s that?
Oh, the Leonard Peltier statue erected on the American University campus
in Washington DC. It’s an affront to all
decent people, and American University should hear from us. But, guess what, they couldn’t care less.
Ms. Rebeca Basu, Public
Relations Manager for said University put forth the schools justification:
“American
University regards this statue as an exhibited piece of art and takes no
position on the advocacy movement. As part of a major
clemency push by supporters in the final days of President Barack Obama's
presidency, a 9-foot-tall statue of Native American activist and prisoner
Leonard Peltier has been installed at American University Museum to raise
awareness for Peltier's plight and pardon request. Peltier, convicted and
sentenced in 1977 in the shooting of two Federal Bureau of Investigation
agents, has maintained his innocence in the 41 years he's been imprisoned, and
his conviction has been contested by leading human rights organizations in the
United States and beyond.”
Ms. Basu (pictured above), who incidentally looks about 18 years
old, has articulated the University’s position.
It sounds pretty harmless doesn’t it?
Did you notice how she frames her statement to illuminate (exaggerate)
“Peltier’s plight” and to minimize the University's dubious motives.
Well, let’s see… ‘Peltier’s plight’ is that he is now serving a
life sentence for the brutal execution style murder of two FBI Agents – which Ms.
Basu passes off in a very sanitized way as “the shooting of two Federal Bureau
of Investigation Agents.” Almost sounds
accidental, doesn’t it?
Special Agents Jack Coler and Ronald Williams were working a federal
case on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation (South Dakota) – an inquiry that had nothing to do
with Leonard Peltier. As the Agents
drove along, their car was ambushed from a distance by Leonard Peltier et
al. The Agents' car was quickly riddled
with bullets and disabled. Both Agents
were wounded. They tried to take cover behind
their car and return fire, but all they had available were their revolvers and
a shotgun. They were outgunned and had
nowhere to hide. After sustaining
numerous wounds and unable to resist any further, Peltier et al approached the
Agents who were at that point unarmed and helpless. The Agents were shot in the head at close
range. One Agent made an attempt to
protect his face with his hand, an ineffective defense gesture of submission;
but the bullet, of course, passed through his hand and into his face.
Here are the facts of which you should be aware… A letter sent to American University’s
President from the FBI’s Agents’ Association. And, just who is the illustrious President (the principal decision maker) of said University? He is Dr. Cornelius M. Kerwin, aka Neil (and pictured below). I'm sure he is the one who gave Ms. Basu her marching orders.
December 29, 2016
American University
4400 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC 20016-8060
Dear President Kerwin:
I write today on behalf of the FBI
Agents Association (FBIAA), a voluntary professional association currently
representing over 13,000 active duty and retired FBI Special Agents.
We write to express our concern
regarding the decision by American University (AU) to proudly display a statue
of convicted murderer Leonard Peltier in an outdoor area, and to announce that
decision by repeating slanted and misleading claims about Peltiers’ murder convictions.
The message being sent by AU to FBI
Special Agents and their families, past and present, and to all members of the
law enforcement community, is both clear and troubling— AU has decided to
advance the political arguments of activists with little concern for providing
all of the facts or considering the views of law enforcement.
The fact that the display is a political
statement, rather than simply a display of art, is made clear in the press
materials released by AU in connection with the display. The AU press release notes that the display
is “part of a major clemency push by [Peltier] supporters” and that the
installation is intended to “raise awareness for Peltier’s plight and pardon
request.”
The press release from AU also includes
misleading descriptions of Peltier’s case and a variety of hyperlinks to
activist groups that have created a cottage industry dedicated to misleading
the public about Peltier. The press release does not, however, mention the
names of the murdered FBI agents, the circumstances surrounding their
execution, or the exhaustive judicial process already utilized by Peltier.
The FBIAA believes that AU should remove
the installation, and that AU has a responsibility to share additional facts
with students and the public.
Relevant facts regarding Peltier and his
convictions include:
On June 26, 1975, Leonard Peltier was
involved in an unprovoked attack on FBI Agents Jack Coler and Ronald Williams
while they were searching for a fugitive on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation
in South Dakota. Both agents were caught in an open field in a deadly crossfire
by members of the American Indian Movement. Both agents were critically wounded
and then summarily executed with rifle shots at pointblank range, killing them
instantly and mutilating their faces.
Leonard Peltier was convicted of first
degree murder and aiding and abetting in those murders and sentenced to two
consecutive life sentences. Through well-over a dozen appeals, twice reaching
the U.S. Supreme Court, every aspect of Peltier’s trial has been reviewed in
minute detail and his conviction and sentence has been upheld in every
instance.
Peltier has been far from a model
prisoner, and would never be considered a candidate for clemency but for his
status as a political celebrity. Peltier has been punished numerous times for
violating prison rules. In 1978, he was involved in an armed escape from Lompoc
Penitentiary, during which shots were fired at prison guards. For this
post-conviction criminal act, Peltier received an additional seven-year consecutive
sentence.
Peltier does not have a credible
argument for clemency. One of the requirements for Executive Clemency, as
described by the U.S. Attorney’s manual, is that a prisoner has accepted
responsibility “for his or her criminal conduct and made restitution to its victims”
and that “A petitioner should be genuinely desirous of forgiveness rather than
vindication.” Peltier’s supporters, and now AU, have decided to re-litigate the
Peltier case rather than satisfy this requirement. AU has repeated the familiar
mix of folklore, falsehoods and out-of-context statements that are designed to
both exonerate and lionize Peltier in the eyes of the public, rather than show
any true remorse regarding the murders of Agents Coler and Williams.
The FBIAA is committed to protecting the
Constitution, and we appreciate the right to free expression. However, with
that right comes a responsibility to consider the consequences of speech. AU
should not use its property to celebrate the man convicted of murdering FBI Special
Agents Coler and Williams.”
PS: One more comment from me regarding ‘freedom
of speech’ and the diversity issue on campuses that seems to supersede any
semblance of commonsense.
American University is
proud to display a statue of Leonard Peltier (convicted cop killer), but would
they do the same for someone like General Robert E. Lee? I don’t think so. That would be just too controversial and politically
incorrect.
To read more details of this case please refer to previous posts:
True
Nelson