Leonard Peltier speaks on FBI misconduct ITAL Leonard Peltier has spent 25 years in prison for the death of two FBI agents in a firefight -- despite overwhelming evidence that he did not shoot them. He was denied a proper defense and convicted on the basis false FBI testimony against him. Over 6,000 FBI documents relevant to Leonard's case have been kept secret. His case has attracted diverse support internationally. Bourgeois "humyn rights" group Amnesty International, for example, has called for his immediate and unconditional release.(1) MIM also demands Leonard's immediate and unconditional release. And we point out -- unlike big Amerikan media, which even doesn't question Leonards's conviction -- that the shooting of the FBI officers took place in the context of deadly FBI aggression against First Nation people at Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. In the years preceding the firefight, the FBI and their local accomplices carried out intensive surveillance and harassment at Pine Ridge. Sixty- four people were murdered in three years, most of them affiliated with the American Indian Movement.(2) The FBI had no right to build up a heavy SWAT presence at Pine Ridge, and the two agents who were shot had no right to storm, armed, onto private land. But First Nation people certainly had the right to defend themselves. END I am writing this statement in the midst of controversy surrounding the FBI's withholding of 3000 documents pertaining to the case of Timothy McVeigh and the Oklahoma City bombing. This incident is only one of many revelations of grave FBI misconduct in recent weeks, all of which expose very serious violations of the Constitution and severe abuse of power by the FBI. In Boston, what started with suspicions that FBI Agent, John Connolly was involved in money laundering and racketeering led to the exposure of much more. As it turned out, almost the entire Boston office was involved in a heavy scheme, which protected notorious gangsters, who were allowed to murder with impunity in exchange for information. That office even put two innocent men, men they knew were innocent and who they very purposefully framed, in prison in order to keep their informants free from prosecution. These innocent men served thirty years in prison and were only released after previously hidden FBI documentation was uncovered. What is worse is, it all could have been prevented. FBI agent Robert Fitzpatrick says he reported the misconduct early on, and was ignored. How much time will the agents responsible serve in prison? What will be done to prevent this type of official criminal behavior from reoccurring? If history is any clue, not too much at all unless we take a firm stand against these types of FBI abuses. Meanwhile, media coverage of Thomas Blanton's conviction for the racist murder of four young girls, which occurred some 38 years ago, is widespread. Since 1965 the FBI knew exactly who the murderers were, and they hid the information. They protected KKK members who murdered children. What will happen to these former agents? How will the FBI be held accountable for their complicit role in such heinous activities? These violations are most serious. There can be no due process, there can be no such thing as an open government, there can be no real justice or democracy when an agency as powerful as the FBI can, decade after decade, break the laws it vows to uphold with no repercussions. The cases covered in the media lately are only the tip of the iceberg. There are many, many more well documented incidences of FBI abuses. It is up to the public to hold the FBI accountable. Clearly, no system of checks and balances is in place and the media rarely reports FBI misconduct unless politicians and judges condemn it first, in which case it is usually too little too late. Don't let these latest disclosures deteriorate into "flash in the pan" news stories. An effort must be forged to stop FBI abuses, and to gain recognition that these are continuations of an all too common pattern. The FBI unfairly targeted Wen Ho Lee, withheld evidence about Waco, and botched its handling of the Ruby Ridge incident. In 1998 the Los Angeles FBI crime lab was exposed for it's routine tampering of evidence, especially in high profile cases. In 1997 Geronimo Ji Jaga Pratt was released after 27 long years of unjust imprisonment - yet another FBI frame-up. In 1990 Judi Bari's car was bombed, and again, the FBI hid evidence proving the bomb had been planted. Instead of finding the perpetrators, they criminally charged the Earth First! activist, who was left crippled for life Of course, on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation the FBI allowed, and further supported, the murderous GOON squads. Year after year I sit through meaningless parole hearings where I am told that I must take responsibility for a crime I did not commit. All the while, the faces of my brothers and sisters who were killed during that era, loom in my head, as I suppress my bitterness over such blatant discrimination and injustice. One day I know, this too will be recognized and exposed as a result of the efforts of the people. Officials will likely act surprised and outraged, even though we have been telling them all along about what we have experienced and witnessed. Friends, I am not writing this statement out of bitterness, but out of alarm. When will these kinds of abuses be stopped? When will we overcome our fear of the FBI and say, never again. Not one more innocent person in prison, not one more political prisoner, not one more unnecessary death? If the FBI thought that Martin Luther King was a threat to the "American way of life" then we must ask, what way of life do they defend, and do the American people want the FBI to act on their behalf? In the Spirit of Crazy Horse, Leonard Peltier Distributed by The Leonard Peltier Defense Committee, PO Box 583, Lawrence, KS 66044, www.freepeltier.org MIM adds: The Leonard Peltier Defense Committee is calling on people to "strike while the iron is hot" and write letters to the editors of local newspapers tying Leonard Peltier's story to all of the revelations of FBI misconduct.(3) MIM agrees that this is a good opportunity to increase attention on the case of Leonard Peltier and demand the release of FBI documents relevant to his case. Leonard Peltier is correct to challenge the "democratic," "baseball and apple pie" myth of the "American way of life." He is after all living the reality behind that myth: Merciless repression of the oppressed and those who stand up for a better world. Because of affluence due to the massive superprofits stolen from oppressed nations every year, however, and the fact that the worst abuses occur in oppressed nations, many Amerikans can live in ignorance of the FBI's crimes -- or even support them. We can still appeal to the sense of justice and outrage of the Amerikan petit-bourgeoisie and ally with segments of it, but we should not fool ourselves into believing the entire class can be won over. Notes: 1. Jennifer Harbury, "The case of Leonard Peltier: Statement of Fact," www.freepeltier.org/peltier_faq.htm 2. Harbury, op. cit. See also Ward Churchill and Jim Vanderwall, ITAL Agents of Repression: The FBI's Secret Wars Against the Black Panther Party and the American Indian Movement, END Boston: South End Press, 1988. 3. Leonard Peltier Defense Committee, "More FBI misconduct exposed in media," http://www.freepeltier.org/6000_fbi_docs.htm