Our Freedom

Honour Anna Mae Pictou Aquash and Harriet Nahanee / Free John Graham and Leonard Peltier

John Graham’s lawyer files motion to dismiss one count October 30, 2008

Filed under: Legal — ourfreedom @ 3:28 am

John Graham’s lawyer files motion to dismiss one count

John Graham’s lawyer, John Murphy, has filed a motion to dismiss the third count against Graham that alleges jurisdiction over him based on his aiding and abetting Arlo Looking Cloud, Theda Clarke and Richard Marshall, all “Indians” under US law.

Murphy argued the court doesn’t have jurisdiction because Graham and Anna Mae Pictou Aquash were Canadian citizens and affiliated with Canadian tribes when she was killed and the law requires them to be members of a tribe recognized by the US government.

“Defendants who are affiliated with Indian groups not recognized by the United States government are not Indian for criminal jurisdiction purposes,” wrote Murphy.

Also, Murphy argued that the third count does not state an offense because it doesn’t allege that Graham is an “Indian” under US law.

Graham and Richard Marshall are scheduled to stand trial in Rapid City, South Dakota, on February 24, 2009.

Source: Carson Walker, Associated Press, Rapid City Journal, October 27, 2008

Note: Carson Walker incorrectly claims that John Graham is Tsimshian from the Yukon. In fact, Graham is Southern Tutchone from the Yukon.

‘Indian’ status at issue in case against John Graham

 

Even more recent graffiti October 30, 2008

Filed under: Graffiti — ourfreedom @ 3:23 am

Taken on October 24, 2008, Coast Salish Territory, Vancouver

Taken on October 24, 2008, Coast Salish Territory, Vancouver, Canada

Taken on October 23, 2008, Coast Salish Territory, Vancouver, Canada

Taken on October 23, 2008, Coast Salish Territory, Vancouver, Canada

 

More recent graffiti in Vancouver October 21, 2008

Filed under: Graffiti — ourfreedom @ 11:53 pm
Taken on October 20, 2008, Vancouver, Canada (Coast Salish Territory)

Taken on October 20, 2008, Vancouver (Coast Salish Territory)

From the Free John Graham photo group at flickr.com

 

John Graham and Richard Marshall’s trial set for Feb. 24, 2009 October 18, 2008

Filed under: Legal — ourfreedom @ 11:56 pm

John Graham and Richard Marshall’s trial set for Feb. 24, 2009

US District Judge Lawrence Piersol has set John Graham and Richard Marshall’s trial for February 24, 2009, in Rapid City, South Dakota. Federal prosecutors Marty Jackley and Bob Mandel had asked for an expedited trial on December 9, 2008. Graham’s lawyer, John Murphy, wrote it would be too soon, mainly because the case might not be resolved before the Christmas holiday break. Marshall’s attorney, Dana Hanna, indicated December would be too soon because of the amount of evidence and other pending cases, and a federal magistrate already granted his request to delay the trial until February 24 in Sioux Falls. Graham and Marshall have pleaded not guilty to charges that they murdered and aided and abetted the murder of fellow AIM warrior Anna Mae Pictou Aquash.

Source: Carson Walker, The Associated Press, October 18, 2008

Note: Anna Mae Pictou Aquash’s body was found on February 24, 1976, but FBI and Bureau of Indian Affairs police claimed they could not identify her and had her body buried as a Jane Doe before identifying her. Their pathologist claimed she had died of exposure despite an obvious bullet hole wound to the head.

 

Richard Marshall’s attorney opposes December 9 trial date October 16, 2008

Filed under: Legal — ourfreedom @ 11:58 pm

Richard Marshall’s attorney opposes December 9 trial date

In a motion filed October 14 in US District Court, defense attorney Dana Hanna wrote that if Richard Marshall’s trial were moved from February to December 9 Marshall “would be deprived of his constitutional rights to present a defense and to effective assistance of counsel.”

“The government has taken 33 years to investigate this case,” Hanna wrote in his motion. “Now, Defendant Richard Marshall requires more than three months to investigate the facts and history of this case and to prepare his defense.”

Hanna said he received about 5,000 pages of discovery from the government on October 6. In addition to reviewing that information he wants to seek additional information through interviews and court documents. Hanna also said he plans to file a motion asking US District Judge Lawrence Piersol to separate trials for Marshall and John Graham because “Richard Marshall’s defense is irreconcilably in conflict with that of Defendant Graham.”

Marshall and Graham are charged with murder and aiding and abetting in connection with the 1975 or 1976 slaying of fellow American Indian warrior Annie Mae Aquash. Graham was scheduled for trial on October 6 but a judge threw out the indictment because it didn’t show that grand jurors considered whether either he or Aquash – both Canadian citizens – belonged to a federally-recognized tribe.

A federal grand jury then re-indicted Graham and Marshall as co-defendants. Marshall, who was originally indicted in August, was already scheduled for trial February 24.

Source: Heidi Bell Gease, Rapid City Journal, October 16, 2008

 

Recent “Free John Graham” graffiti in Vancouver October 12, 2008

Filed under: Graffiti — ourfreedom @ 2:32 am

Recent “Free John Graham” graffiti in Vancouver

From the “Free John Graham” photo group at flickr.com

Taken on October 4, 2008, Commercial Drive, Vancouver, Canada (Coast Salish Territory)

Taken on October 4, 2008, Commercial Drive, Vancouver, Canada (Coast Salish Territory)

Taken on October 4, 2008, Commercial Drive, Vancouver, Canada (Coast Salish Territory)

Taken on October 4, 2008, Commercial Drive, Vancouver, Canada (Coast Salish Territory)

Taken on October 4, 2008, Commercial Drive, Vancouver, Canada (Coast Salish Territory)

Taken on October 4, 2008, Commercial Drive, Vancouver, Canada (Coast Salish Territory)

 

Graham and Marshall arraigned in South Dakota court October 11, 2008

Filed under: Legal — ourfreedom @ 11:36 pm

[Our Freedom notes in brackets]

Two defendants arraigned in South Dakota court for 1975 [or 1976] slaying

CARSON WALKER, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
October 10, 2008

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. – Two men newly indicted for a 1975 [or 1976, according to an FBI informant] slaying on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation were arraigned Friday in federal court in Rapid City.

John Graham and Richard Marshall each are charged with three alternate counts of committing and aiding and abetting the first-degree murder of Annie Mae Aquash when all three were active with the American Indian Movement. [The three "counts" refer to the Indian status of Graham and Pictou Aquash, as well as Marshall, Arlo Looking Cloud and Theda Clarke]

Graham was to stand trial this week, but the judge threw out the indictment because grand jurors didn’t previously consider whether Graham or Aquash, both Canadians, belonged to a federally recognized American Indian tribe.

The judge gave lawyers until Tuesday to indicate whether Graham and Marshall could be tried together starting Dec. 9 in Rapid City.

Graham’s lawyer, John Murphy, wrote in his response it would be too soon, mainly because the case might not be resolved before the Christmas holiday begins Dec. 20 for families that might be hosting or travelling, which would create an urgency for jurors.

“If the trial goes into the Christmas holiday week, jurors may feel rushed to reach a verdict prior to the holiday beginning. This is not fair to any party involved in the case, and it would prejudice Mr. Graham,” Murphy wrote.

The trial would likely last longer than the eight intervening business days, and if Graham and Marshall are tried together, it’s even more likely jurors would deliberate into the holiday break, he argued.

Murphy wrote there are evidence issues and other matters that also will take longer to resolve.

In their response, federal prosecutors Marty Jackley and Bob Mandel, who asked for an expedited trial, said Dec. 9 would work.

The government expects to take about four days for its main case and call approximately 29 witnesses.

There still is enough time to handle other issues well before the trial, the prosecutors argued.

“The United States believes that there is sufficient time to try the case before the Christmas holiday.”

Marshall’s lawyer, Dana Hanna, has not yet filed his response to the proposed trial date.

Marshall was indicted separately in August, five years after Graham and a third AIM member, Arlo Looking Cloud, were charged.

Looking Cloud was convicted in 2004 of killing Aquash and sentenced to a mandatory life prison term. [Looking Cloud was convicted of aiding and abetting.]

Witnesses at his trial said he, Graham and another AIM member, Theda Clarke, drove Aquash from Denver in late 1975 and that Graham shot Aquash in the Badlands as she begged for her life. [All testimony at Looking Cloud's trial was hearsay, based on what Looking Cloud was claimed to have said to other persons. No person testified to witnessing the actual murder.]

Clarke, who lives in a nursing home in western Nebraska, has not been charged.

Graham has denied killing Aquash but acknowledges being in the car from Denver. [Graham says he dropped Aquash off at a safe house and never saw her again.]

Some speculated Aquash was killed by AIM members because she knew some of them were government spies, while others said she was executed because she herself was an informant. Federal authorities have said Aquash was not an informant and they had nothing to do with her death. [At the time, most people suspected the FBI or Bureau of Indian Affairs police or their GOON squad of killing Anna Mae, since they tried to cover up her identity and true cause of death when her body was found.]

Aquash, 30, was among the Indian militants who occupied the village of Wounded Knee in a 71-day standoff with federal authorities in 1973 that included an exchange of gunfire with agents who surrounded the village.

 

John Graham and Richard Marshall may be tried together October 11, 2008

Filed under: Legal — ourfreedom @ 1:12 am

John Graham and Richard Marshall may be tried together

Federal prosecutors have asked a judge to set a December date for the murder trial of John Graham and Richard Marshall (AKA Dick Marshall), rather than wait for Marshall’s scheduled trial in February.

“This Motion is necessitated due to the age of the case, the preparations that have been made for trial, and that both Defendants remain in pre-trial custody,” said the motion filed in US District Court on October 8, 2008.

John Graham’s trial was scheduled to start on October 6 but was canceled when US District Judge Lawrence Piersol ruled that the indictment was fatally flawed because it did not state that either Graham or Anna Mae Pictou Aquash were members of a US federally recognized tribe.

A federal grand jury issued a new superceding indictment on October 6, that charges Graham and Marshall with first-degree murder and aiding and abetting. A criminal complaint filed against Graham on October 3 by the FBI states that Graham is an Indian, Anna Mae Pictou Aquash was an Indian or “other person” and that Graham aided and abetted Indians.

Graham and Marshall were initially charged in separate indictments but because they are now listed together they will be tried together unless the judge orders they be tried separately.

On Wednesday, October 8, Judge Piersol issued an order stating that the court could schedule the trial of Graham and Marshall for December 9 if all parties can be ready for trial by then. He asked counsel to respond by Tuesday, October 14.

Prosecutors filed a response, saying that they had provided all discovery material to the defense attorneys and asking that the trial be set for December 9 for both Graham and Marshall.

Sources: Heidi Bell Gease, Rapid City Journal staff, October 08, 2008, and Indianz.com, October 6, 2008

 

‘Indian’ status at issue in case against John Graham October 11, 2008

Filed under: Legal — ourfreedom @ 1:11 am

‘Indian’ status at issue in case
Federal prosecutors allege Indian man from Canada can be tried as an “recognized Indian” in U.S. court.

Relevant Documents:

Dismissal of Indictment (link to PDF)

New Indictment (link to PDF)

Murder trial stalled due to ‘Indian’ status issue

Monday, October 6, 2008
Filed Under: First Nations | Law
Indianz.com

Government prosecutors filed new murder charges against a Canadian man on Friday after a judge raised questions about the defendant’s “Indian” status.

The new indictment acknowledges John Graham is from the Southern Tutchone First Nation in the Yukon of Canada. But prosecutors claim he was “affiliated” with the Oglala Sioux Tribe of South Dakota and participated in tribal ceremonies on the Pine Ridge Reservation.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in South Dakota also says Anna Mae Pictou Aquash, who was murdered on the reservation in December 1975, was affiliated with the tribe even though she was from the Indian Brook First Nation in Nova Scotia. Since Graham and Aquash are “Indian” and the crime occurred in Indian Country, the case belongs in federal court, the indictment alleges.

Even if Graham is not “Indian,” prosecutors want him to stand trial for aiding and abetting the brutal murder. Two other defendants — Arlo Looking Cloud, who has already been found guilty, and Richard Marshall, who was recently charged in connection with the crime — are Oglala Sioux members so their status isn’t an issue.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office quickly filed the charges after Judge Lawrence Piersol dismissed the original indictment, ruling that it was “fatally defective.” “In the present case, there is no dispute that Graham’s Indian status is an essential element,” the decision stated.

Prosecutors tried to save the first indictment by bringing up the aiding and abetting charge but Piersol said that wasn’t sufficient to fix the defect. Looking Cloud and Marshall might be “Indian” but Graham’s status hasn’t been properly presented, the judge ruled.

The development posed a setback for the government since it came on the eve of Graham’s trial. Proceedings were due to start today in Rapid City but they were canceled since the indictment was dismissed.

The case already suffered a delay of more than five years as Graham fought his extradition from Canada. The U.S. Attorney’s Office now faces the possibility that they won’t be able to try Graham at all if Piersol doesn’t agree that the defendant is “Indian.”

In that situation, the state of South Dakota would be able to prosecute the crime. But it’s not clear whether the extradition proceedings for Graham to face charges in federal court mean Graham can be tried in state court.

Aquash, who was born in Nova Scotia, was a prominent activist who helped start the Indian center in Boston, Massachusetts, a city that has historically drawn Mi’kmaqs from Canada. She became involved in the American Indian Movement in the 1970s and took part in the Wounded Knee standoff at Pine Ridge in 1973.

She married Nogeeshik Aquash, an Ojibwe from Canada, on the reservation and, despite her work for AIM, became the target of rumors that she was an informant for the government. The rumors led to her murder, prosecutors allege.

Looking Cloud was found guilty for Aquash’s murder in February 2004 and is serving a life sentence in federal prison. The 8th Circuit Court of Appeals rejected his bid to overturn his conviction.

Marshall was indicted in August for his role in the crime. Another suspect, Theda Clarke, took part in the murder, according to prosecutors, but she hasn’t been charged.

Looking Cloud, Marshall and Clarke are all members of the Oglala Sioux Tribe. Clarke was considered Graham’s “adopted” aunt.

Graham is not a member of the tribe, nor was Aquash. The new indictment does not allege either has Indian blood from a U.S. tribe but states that Graham, through his affiliation with the Oglala Sioux Tribe, his acceptance by tribal members and his participation in tribal life makes him a “recognized Indian.”

Graham has been charged under Title 18 of the United States Code. Section 1153 states that any “Indian” who commits a crime in Indian Country is subject to federal court jurisdiction.

 

John Graham Benefit Concert Well-Attended October 11, 2008

Filed under: Events — ourfreedom @ 1:10 am

John Graham Benefit Concert Well-Attended

About 100 people attended the Free John Graham benefit concert in Vancouver on October 1, 2008, raising funds for his family.

Resistance on trial: FREE John Graham.
A benefit show in solidarity.

Featuring:

JASON BURNSTICK
ECHOLALIA
ERICA MAH
and SPECIAL GUESTS!

Cafe deux Soleils (2096 Commercial Drive), Vancouver
October 1st @ 8:30 pm
$5-15 sliding scale (all donations go directly to John’s family for traveling to South Dakota for his trial.)

Live music and speakers from John Graham’s family.
T-shirts and Artwork available.

All proceeds to help John’s family get to South Dakota for his trial on October 6th, 2008. John is a Southern Tutchone from the Yukon and former member of the American Indian Movement (A.I.M). The allegations against John are murdering fellow AIM member and Nova Scotia Mi’kmaq Anna Mae Pictou in 1975. He strongly denies killing his friend and comrade Anna Mae. John’s case has a striking resemblance to another framed A.I.M member, Leonard Peltier.

For more information: johngrahambenefit(at)gmail.com