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FBI agents march on White House to oppose clemency for political
prisoner Leonard Peltier
By Jerry White
16 December 2000
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In an unprecedented public protest Friday, hundreds of FBI
agents marched to the White House to oppose presidential clemency
for political prisoner Leonard Peltier, the Native American activist
who has been imprisoned for nearly a quarter of a century. Last
month President Bill Clinton said he would review Peltier's case
before leaving office. Peltier, 56, has been serving two consecutive
life terms at the federal penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kansas
since his frame-up for the June 1975 killing of two FBI agents
on the Pine Ridge Indian reservation in South Dakota.
Peltier, a member of the American Indian Movement (AIM), was
convicted on the basis of coerced and false testimony from witnesses
threatened by the FBI and the suppression of ballistic tests and
other evidence that aided Peltier's case. Before his trial the
government failed to convict two other AIM members after defense
attorneys described to a jury the reign of terror carried out
by government agents and their collaborators against Native Americans
fighting poverty and political repression on the Pine Ridge reservation.
The campaign for Peltier's freedom has won wide international
support.
Friday's FBI protest was supported by the agency's director,
Louis Freeh, who wrote President Clinton last week that the freeing
of Peltier would signal disrespect for law enforcement
and the public. In a separate letter to Attorney General Janet
Reno, Freeh said he represented the voices of thousands
of FBI employees everywhere.
Freeh has the backing of House Republicans, including Illinois
Representative Henry Hyde, the head of the House Judiciary Committee,
who released the FBI director's letters to the public and is circulating
a letter against Peltier's clemency in Congress.
The officially sanctioned protest was particularly provocative
given the fact that FBI agents are bound by law to remain neutral
and abide by the decisions of Clinton and Attorney General Janet
Reno, their nominal employers. Nearly 500 agents, most of whom
were current employees granted time off to protest, marched around
the White House behind a banner reading Never Forget.
They went up to the White House gate and delivered a petition
signed by 8,000 current and former agents opposing clemency for
Peltier.
In El Paso, Texas another 100 FBI agents protested Peltier's
clemency request Friday, standing behind the city's top FBI agent
in front of the agency's local headquarters as he read a statement
against Peltier.
Acknowledging that public displays of our feelings are
not typical for FBI agents and at one time would have been
unthinkable, John Sennett, president of the FBI Agents
Association, said the agents had decided they had to counter the
intense activism of Peltier's supporters.
Peltier's attorneys correctly pointed out the threat the FBI
protest posed to democratic rights. At a Washington, DC news conference
Friday, Jennifer Harbury, an attorney for Peltier, said, It's
a sad day for democracy when our armed forces march through the
streets to influence a decision for mercy and justice by a civilian
president.
President Clinton and Attorney General Janet Reno, who would
have been within their rights to fire Freeh and the other agents
for organizing such an open display of insubordination, chose
instead to pander to the right-wing demonstrators. The White House
declined to issue any statement on the protest and Reno, asked
Thursday about the planned demonstration, said, Everybody
ought to be able to speak out about something that they care about
deeply in a thoughtful, professional and dignified manner.
In recent years, the law-and-order politics of both the Democratic
and Republican parties have encouraged political activity by law
enforcement agents, including demonstrations by police officers
to demand the execution of former Black Panther Mumia Abu-Jamal,
and to defend fellow officers against charges of police brutality.
Friday's demonstration, however, was the culmination of increasingly
open political interventions by FBI Director Freeh on behalf of
the reactionary forces in the Republican Party that have sought
to destabilize the Clinton White House.
In 1997 Freeh publicly opposed Reno's decision to rebuff appeals
from congressional Republicans to appoint an independent counsel
to investigate allegations of campaign finance violations by Clinton.
Then, in September 1999, Freeh joined the attack against Clinton
after the president granted clemency to 12 members of the Puerto
Rican FALN (Armed Forces of National Liberation), releasing 11
of them after they had served as much as 19 years in prison. The
FBI director sent a letter to the House committee investigating
the clemency decision, headed by right-wing Republican Congressman
Dan Burton, outlining his strong opposition to the release of
the Puerto Rican nationalists.
It is noteworthy that the American Indian Movement, the FALN,
as well as the Black Panthers were all targets of the FBI's COINTELPRO
operations, which involved infiltration and provocation of left-wing
organizations as well as assassinations during the 1960s and 1970s.
Peltier and other opponents of the US government's policies had
well-founded fears that they could be killed for their political
activities.
Friday's FBI protest is part of the agency's 25-year-long vendetta
against Peltier and his supporters. But the brazenness of the
protest, organized on the eve of the transfer of power in government,
demonstrates that the most reactionary forces of the capitalist
state have been emboldened by the Republicans' success in taking
control of the White House by undemocratic means.
See Also:
The case of Leonard Peltier: notorious
frame-up of Native American activist returns to public spotlight
[14 December 2000]
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