Posted by [EMAIL PROTECTED] :

From: "LPDC" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Canada Obstructs Justice for Peltier--Call the Minister of Justice
Date: Tue, 30 Nov 1999 17:07:35 -0600


Dear friends of Leonard Peltier,

We would like to apologize for the delay in sending out reports this month.
All of our energy has been tied up in the Peltier Freedom Month Campaign,
and we were unable to send out timely reports.  However, we will be catching
you up on everything during the next two weeks, starting now.  Heads up for
a new phone banking instruction sheet, final report from Peltier Freedom
Month, a rebuttal for the FBI's campaign and a new plan of action.  Don't
forget, December 10 is International Human Rights Day.  If organizations in
you area are holding events, ask for Leonard Peltier to be part of that
agenda.  Collect letters to be faxed to the White House that day and remind
your friends to flood the comments line.  Thank you for your patience and
support. Please forward the below message widely.

---LPDC

Canadian Minister of Justice, Anne Mc Lellan
Denies Her Government’s Responsibility For
the Illegal Extradition of Leonard Peltier

LPDC: November 30, 1999

One of the most controversial and well known aspects of the case of Leonard
Peltier is the manner in which he was extradited from Canada after his
arrest in 1976.  At the time of Peltier’s arrest, the US government did not
have enough evidence against him to extradite him from Canada for the
murders of the agents.  For this reason, the FBI, in conjunction with
Canadian prosecutor, Bob Halprin, obtained affidavits signed by a Myrtle
Poor Bear, a Native American woman known to have serious mental problems.
She claimed to have been Mr. Peltier’s girlfriend at the time, and to have
been present during the shoot out, and to have witnessed the murders. In
fact she did not know Mr. Peltier, nor was she present at the time of the
shooting.  She later confessed she had given the false statement after being
pressured and terrorized by FBI agents.  A third Poor Bear affidavit
directly contradicting those submitted to the courts had been withheld by
the FBI, and would later be uncovered before Peltier went to trial.

According to FBI documents, Halprin knew of the existence of this affidavit
and he knowingly withheld it during the extradition proceedings.  Yet, the
complete Poor Bear incident was censored from the jury during Peltier’s
trial.  Poor Bear was not called as a witness by the prosecution, she was
not allowed to testify on the behalf of the defense, and the contradicting
affidavits were not allowed to be entered as evidence of government
misconduct.  No action has ever been taken by either the Canadian or the US
governments to rectify this blatant use of FBI misconduct.  The Canadian
government continues today to cooperate with the US government in
obstructing justice for Leonard Peltier.

In 1995, as a result of mounting pressure compounded from Members of
Parliament, the Royal Commission of Aboriginal Peoples, the Canadian Supreme
Court, and Canadian citizens, the Canadian minister of Justice, Allan Rock,
announced that he would conduct an official review of the extradition of
Leonard Peltier.  In doing so, he asked MP Warren Allmand to review the
documents related to the extradition and make a private recommendation to
him.  MP Warren Allmand reviewed the documents and submitted a confidential
letter to Minister Rock stating that the extradition was fraudulent and that
without the Poor Bear affidavits, there was not enough evidence to extradite
Peltier.  But, Minister Rock changed offices, and never completed his review
of the extradition.

More recently, Peltier supporters, workers unions, First Nations, and MP’s
of Canada began pressuring Allan Rock’s successor, Minister of Justice Anne
Mc Lellan, to finish the review.  On October 15, 1999, after stating that
she had been waiting for the permission of the US government before moving
forward, Ms. Mc Lellan released her results.  Not surprisingly, her reported
results constituted a lazy acceptance of the positions of the Canadian and
US governments rather than an actual review where responsible scrutiny of
the proceedings would have occurred.

Mc Lellan found that the extradition proceedings were legal.  She based
most, if not all of her conclusion on prior court proceedings despite the
fact that it was the courts themselves who suggested that a governmental
review be done because it was a matter regarding nation to nation
relationships that they could not act upon.  Sadly, Ms. Mc Lellan utterly
failed to do her job.

Mc Lellan’s main argument for deeming the extradition legal is that the role
of the Canadian court in an extradition hearing is only to hear the evidence
presented and to decide whether that evidence might be enough for a
conviction if the case was tried in Canada.  However, it is not the judge’s
role, says Mc Lellan, to weigh the credibility of that evidence, making the
fact that the Myrtle Poor Bear affidavits were false, irrelevant.

Minister Mc Lellan outrageously refuses to confront the real issues at hand,
namely that the Canadian prosecutor himself in conjunction with the FBI,
purposely provided the courts with falsified affidavits, securing Mr.
Peltier’s extradition to the US where he did not receive a fair trial as
Canada had promised he would.  It was not Anne Mc Lellan’s responsibility to
simply decide whether or not the courts acted in misconduct, but rather, to
decide whether or not the extradition was legal overall, the role of the
Canadian prosecutor and the FBI being totally relevant.

Though Mc Lellan acknowledges that the Poor Bear affidavits were false and
though she justifies their use by saying that it was not the courts
responsibility to weigh their validity, she goes on to say, that had they
not been used, there was enough circumstantial evidence to extradite Mr.
Peltier anyway, a completely unfounded statement.  According to FBI
documents, Halprin, the Canadian prosecutor, clearly stated that the US did
NOT have enough evidence to extradite Mr. Peltier for the murders of the
agents prior to the obtaining of the Poor Bear affidavits.  That being the
reason the Poor Bear affidavits were obtained in the first place.

On November 1st, 1999 former MP Warren Allmand, publicly released his
previously confidential letter which he had submitted to Allan Rock in 1995
as well as his own response to Mc Lellan’s findings.  In his response, he
argued that there is no way Mc Lellan could have determined that there was
enough evidence to extradite Peltier without the Poor Bear affidavits.
There is absolutely no evidence or documentation that shows that the judge
had felt this to be the case and in fact it is clear he relied solely on the
Poor Bear affidavits in making his decision.  Moreover, the circumstantial
evidence laid out in Mc Lellan’s report was either unrelated to the murder
charges, was too flimsy to be taken seriously by a court of law, or it has
since been impeached through FOIA documents (such is the case with the
ballistic evidence).  In Allmand’s letter to Allan Rock he recommended that
the Minister of Justice make a formal plea to the United States to either
release Peltier through a grant of executive clemency or to grant him a new
trial.  Allmand requested that at the very least that he order an
independent review, either by a learned counsel or by a retired judge.  Mc
Lellan neglected to even consider Mr. Allmand’s advise and she did not post
his letter as part of the documents relating to the extradition on her web
site.  It is an outrage that such blatant governmental misconduct can be
left without any rectification.  You can help by calling Minister of
Justice, Anne Mc Lellan and voicing your opposition to her report.  Ask her
how it can be legal for the Canadian and US governments to intentionally
manufacture evidence.  Ask her why she neglected to consider Warren Allmand’
s letter as part of her review and suggest that she order an independent
review of the extradition.

The Honorable Anne Mc Clellan, Member of Parliament
Minister of Justice
The House of Commons, Room 707
Confederation Building
Ottawa, Canada K1A 0A6
(613) 992-4524
Fax (613) 996-4516


It's 1999, why is Leonard Peltier still in prison???

Leonard Peltier Defense Committee
PO Box 583
Lawrence, KS 66044
785-842-5774
www.freepeltier.org
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