This Day in History – Feb. 6, 1976. Forty-nine years ago today, February 6, 1976, Leonard Peltier was arrested in western ...
Editor's note: Among his final actions in office, President Joe Biden signed an executive grant of clemency Jan. 19 commuting Leonard Peltier's prison sentence. The commutation, which takes effect ...
But in June 1975, he and his mother came to visit Native American activists camping on Harry and Cecelia Jumping Bull’s land ... Chippewa man named Leonard Peltier — were involved in a ...
But in June 1975, he and his mother came to visit Native American activists camping on Harry and Cecelia Jumping Bull’s land. Days later, he would learn those activists — including a Turtle Mountain ...
Supporters of Leonard ... Jumping Bull’s land. Oglala Sioux Tribe President Frank Star Comes Out speaks at a Jan. 25, 2025, gathering held on the Pine Ridge Reservation to celebrate former President ...
Directors Jesse Short Bull and David France have diligently ... It’s the sort of twist no screenwriter would dare invent: “Free Leonard Peltier,” a persuasively well-researched and often ...
the sound of prayer and song rang out across the plains at the Jumping Bull Ranch on Jan. 25 as Indigenous people celebrated the upcoming release of Anishinaabe activist Leonard Peltier.
And then there is the ending to the new film Free Leonard Peltier. Peltier had been imprisoned for well over 45 years when David France and Jesse Short Bull decided to make a documentary about him.
By Daniel Fienberg Chief Television Critic Late in Jesse Short Bull and David France’s new documentary Free Leonard Peltier, Native activist Nick Tilsen sings the praises of Leonard Peltier‘s ...
AFTER 49 years and 11 months, Leonard Peltier will finally leave prison ... In 1975, in the midst of the “reign of terror,” two FBI agents in unmarked cars stormed the Jumping Bull Ranch on the Pine ...
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