It’s an elusive dream for so many docmakers: to impact legislation, to find justice, to make a difference. To change the ...
You would have been hard-pressed to find a timelier film at this year’s Sundance Film Festival than “Free Leonard Peltier,” ...
The Associated Press on MSN7d
Leonard Peltier remains defiant in AP interview, maintaining innocence and vowing continued activismPeltier maintains his innocence in the deaths of two FBI agents in 1975. He says he will spend the rest of his life fighting ...
After nearly 50 years of arbitrary detention, Native American activist Leonard Peltier was finally able to return home on ...
"It's a day of victory for Leonard and those of us who have been involved in the struggle with him for 40 or 50 years," Mitch ...
Killer and American Indian Movement activist Leonard Peltier to receive welcome home bash 49 years after conviction in FBI ...
Native American activist Leonard Peltier, freed from prison, is welcomed on North Dakota reservation
Peltier, 80, grew emotional as he addressed about 500 people who gathered at a festive event to welcome him home to North ...
21d
ICT News on MSN‘Finally Free’: Leonard Peltier heads home to North DakotaICT StaffLeonard Peltier is free at last.The longtime American Indian Movement activist was released Tuesday from federal prison in Sumterville, Florida, after 49 years behind bars in what he has long ...
This is a start.” Peltier was active in AIM, which formed in the 1960s and fought for Native American treaty rights and tribal self-determination. Leonard Peltier as a younger man being led ...
Several hundred people attended a feast honoring AIM leader Leonard Peltier at the Sky Dancer Casino in Belcourt, N.D., on Wednesday. Peltier was the guest of honor at a community feast welcoming ...
Lekší is the Lakota word for uncle. Both Mitch Walking Elk and Leonard Peltier have been members of AIM for decades. AIM is a civil rights group that was founded in Minneapolis, Minnesota ...
While “Free Leonard Peltier” uses interviews ... hundreds of Native American activists — led by members of AIM — seized Wounded Knee, leading to a monthslong occupation.
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