
Supporters Mike McBride, left, Ray St. Clair, center, and Tracker Gina Marie Rangel Quinones stand in front of Federal Correctional Complex, Coleman, while awaiting the release Leonard Peltier, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025, in Sumterville, Fla. (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack)
BELCOURT, N.D. (AP) โ Supporters of Native American activist Leonard Peltier plan to welcome him back to his North Dakota community on Wednesday, a day after his release from a Florida prison where he had been serving a life sentence in the 1975 killings of two FBI agents.
Peltier, 80, is expected to join family and supporters at an events center in Belcourt, on the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indiansโ reservation.
โWeโre so excited for this moment,โ Jenipher Jones, one of Peltierโs attorneys said soon before his release. โHe is in good spirits. He has the soul of a warrior.โ
Then-President Joe Biden commuted Peltierโs life sentence to home confinement, leading to his release Tuesday from the Coleman penitentiary. Peltier was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder and given two consecutive life sentences stemming from a 1975 confrontation on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota.
FBI agents Jack Coler and Ronald Williams were killed, and while Peltier acknowledged firing shots during the confrontation, he denied being the person whose shots killed the men. Native Americans widely believe he was a political prisoner who was wrongly convicted because he fought for tribal rights as a member of the American Indian Movement.
Some in law enforcement have argued for years against freeing Peltier. As Biden considered his options as his term ended, former FBI Director Christopher Wray sent the president a letter in which he called Peltier โa remorseless killerโ who should remain in prison.
In a statement about the commutation, Biden said numerous individuals and groups supported releasing Peltier due to the time he spent in prison, his age and his leadership role among Native Americans.
Comments