After spending nearly 50 years behind bars, American Indian Movement activist Leonard Peltier is finally free.
Leonard Peltier, the American Indian Movement activist, returned to North Dakota, where ... He then held court for more than an hour, like a Hall of Famer at an autograph signing, as more than ...
The AR-15 rifle recovered from a car carrying Peltier and several American Indian Movement members had a different firing pin than the rifle used to kill agents Jack Coler and Ron ...
The jingle of regalia echoed throughout the hall as drummers and dancers ... the Sky Dancer Event Center in Belcourt, North Dakota. Over the decades, Peltier maintained his innocence.
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An ailing Leonard Peltier returns home to N.D. with fanfarePeltier’s words upon his release were quickly made into posters that hung around the casino’s dining hall ... I’m from North Dakota,” Peltier told the Star Tribune in 1988.
NDSU students are gaining retail experience at the new Meat Lab store in the Peltier Complex, offering locally sourced meat ...
Native American activist Leonard Peltier, freed from prison, is welcomed on North Dakota reservation
BELCOURT, N.D. — Native American activist Leonard Peltier was defiant toward the government but grateful for his supporters as they welcomed him home to North Dakota on Wednesday, a day after ...
Tuesday is a historic day in the Native American community after well-known Indigenous activist Leonard Peltier was released ... out his sentence at home in North Dakota. Peltier, 80, was serving ...
After fleeing to Canada and being extradited back to the United States, Peltier was tried in Fargo, North Dakota, and found guilty of both murders. Federal prosecutors later changed his charges to ...
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