FBI explains 57 unsolved Indian deaths
Copyright 2000 Argus Leader
published: 7/11/00
In response to criticism from the U.S. Commission
on Civil Rights, the FBI released a report Monday it says reconciles 57
unresolved deaths of American Indians on or near the Pine Ridge Reservation
during the early 1970s.
Members of the American Indian Movement and other
reservation residents for decades have accused the FBI of covering up or
ignoring dozens of slayings during the '70s.
But the FBI says only six of the 57 deaths it studied
are unsolved. The vast majority have been cleared by arrests or were never
crimes, according to the report.
"The FBI got a definitive list of people who were
supposedly murdered on Pine Ridge. We took that, and tried to put out the
truth," said Chip Burrus, FBI assistant special agent in charge of Indian
Country.
The chairwoman of the Civil Rights Commission, who
has lambasted the FBI for its apparent nonchalant attitude toward the deaths,
said Monday the report might not be enough to appease distrustful reservation
residents.
"We have no way of knowing about the accuracy of
the reporting, but I'm pleased that that the FBI is attempting to be responsive
by accounting for these cold cases," said Chairwoman Mary Francis Berry,
who suggested that congressional hearings or a grand jury might be the
solution.
"Such an inquiry may inspire greater confidence (in
the FBI), by the Native American people."
The American Indian Movement blames the FBI for not
conducting a thorough investigation into each of the cases, which the movement
considers AIM casualties.
During December 1999 hearings before the U.S. Commission
on Civil Rights in Rapid City, Berry and other commission members chastised
senior FBI officials for a lack of accountability in the deaths.
Monday, the FBI responded.
In a Justice Department document titled: Accounting
for Native American Deaths, Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, South Dakota:
A report of the FBI Minneapolis Division, the bureau dissects each of the
57 deaths its says it came from media outlets. The document provides the
victim's name, allegations surrounding the deaths and the agent's findings.
"We can't do our job without the trust of the people
of Pine Ridge," Burrus said. "This booklet tells the truth."
The report addresses the much publicized deaths of
Anna Mae Pictou Aquash and Joseph Stuntz, both linked to the deaths of
FBI agents Jack Coler and Ron Williams, for which Leonard Peltier is serving
two life sentences.
Civil Rights Commissioner Elsie Meeks of Interior
said the report is a positive step.
"There's something black an white about these," Meeks
said. "It should help people understand what's the truth and what isn't."
Burrus hand-delivered a copy of the report to her
Monday morning. Meeks hopes the report will quiet the rumors about the
deaths.
"I believe the data. I don't have a reason not to,"
she said. "A lot of the issue was perception. People felt like these things
weren't being attended to."
Marc Feinstein, chair of the South Dakota Advisory
Committee to the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, hopes the report is only
the beginning.
"I would hope it alleviates the perception that the
FBI is not doing its job," Feinstein said. "Now, it appears they have done
their job in all but the six or so open cases."
Burrus spent Monday delivering the report to 18 locations
across Pine Ridge, including the tribal radio station and convenience stores.
"We did everything but airdrop it on the reservation,"
he said.
The decision to produce the document was made by
Burrus and Minneapolis Special Agent in Charge Douglas Domin.
The process, Burrus said, was exhaustive.
"We spent hundreds of agent hours conducting investigative
research. We talked to retired agents who had served on the reservation,
and others, and taxed old memories," Burrus said. "For something like this,
you can't just check records at the county courthouse."
He hopes the report will end the rumors about his
agency.
"I hope the document will finally stop the idea that
the FBI is letting murders go uninvestigated on the reservation," he said.
For a family member of one of the victims, the FBI
report provides closure.
"It brings a lot of answers to questions that had
run through my mind for years," said Robert Lamont, 67, of Pine Ridge.
Robert's nephew Buddy is listed in the report as
killed during a gunfight with federal officers at a roadblock in Wounded
Knee in April 1973. AIM says Buddy Lamont
bled to death while pinned down by rifle fire during the occupation and
the case was never investigated.
The FBI report says case facts and autopsy report
were reviewed by the U.S. Attorney's Office, and no charges were filed.
"I never did talk to anybody about it. I was never
told," Robert Lamont said. "I heard he had been shot by a sniper."
Joseph Swift Bird lost his
brother in January 1975. AIM says Leon
Swift Bird was killed by members of the Guardians of the Oglala Nation,
an armed force working under tribal auspices.
Joseph, now 79, heard the rumors but always knew
the truth.
No one bothered to ask, he said. Leon was stabbed
by his girlfriend.
"They were both drinking, argued a bit, and she put
the knife to him," he said, adding he hopes the report will stop the rumors
about his family.
Clyde Bellecourt, AIM co-founder and veteran of the
Wounded Knee occupation in 1973, wonders why it took 28 years for the FBI
to respond to the deaths.
"If it was a white rancher, a banker or a politician,
it would have been taken care of immediately," he said.
Like Berry, Bellecourt wants to see more official
action, in the form of a federal grand jury.
"A lot of these cases never went to a grand jury
to seek an indictment," he said. "We need a federal grand jury impaneled
to get to the bottom of some of the deaths."
Clyde's brother, Vernon, agrees that a grand jury
is needed, but he wants to see congressional hearings into the deaths as
well.
"We feel that if there would be hearings, that would
revisit the early 1970s. It would help in healing and reconciliation,"
Vernon Bellecourt said. "We hope that this release would be an indication
that they are leaning that way."
Burrus said there's no need for a special grand jury,
since agents can present evidence to any grand jury. Nor is there any need
for congressional hearings, he said.
The report will be placed on an FBI Web site after
a period of public discussion, Burrus said. Anyone with more information
is asked to contact the Rapid City FBI office at 605-343-9632.
"We're interested in being proactive and taking on
any problems that could impede our job on the reservation," Burrus said.
Reach reporter Lee Williams at 331-2318 or lwilliam@argusleader.com
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