The Pine Ridge Jumping Bull Compound Firefight COINTELPRO Dick Wilson Goon Squad Oglala South Dakota FBI Agent Leonard Peltier Frame-Up Conspiracy (eBook)

The Pine Ridge Jumping Bull Compound Firefight COINTELPRO Dick Wilson Goon Squad Oglala South Dakota FBI Agent Leonard Peltier Frame-Up Conspiracy (eBook)

William C. Lewis
William C. Lewis
Prezzo:
€ 8,99
Compra EPUB
Prezzo:
€ 8,99
Compra EPUB

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EPUB
Cloud: Scopri di più
Compatibilità: Tutti i dispositivi
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: William C. Lewis
Codice EAN: 9798235841390
Anno pubblicazione: 2026
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Descrizione

In the mid-1970's on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, a conflict emerged between Native American Indians on the reservation that were full-blooded Indians that wanted to uphold Oglala Lakota culture and were spirituality known as traditionalists versus the Indians that were mixed blooded Indians that wanted to identify as progressive and aligned with the tribal government. Tribal chairman Dick Wilson identified as progressive and not a traditionalist and began using his Guardians of the Oglala Nation vigilante (GOON) squads that were death squads to intimidate the traditionalist members of the reservation, which led the traditionalists to invite members of the American Indian Movement (AIM) from across the nation onto Pine Ridge Reservation in 1975 as a form of protection against the goon squad attacks of Wilson that included shooting up people's houses and ramming people off of the road at high speeds in their cars, among other nefarious practices. The FBI, as early as 1973 had provided military equipment such as automatic firearms and communications gear to the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) police which disseminated this material to Dick Wilsons' GOON squad. On June 26, 1975, two FBI Special Agents, Jack Coler and Ronald Williams, drove in unmarked cars onto the Jumping Bull Ranch compound off of Highway 18 and followed a red and white truck containing American Indian Movement activist Leonard Peltier under the pretext of apprehending an Indian named Jimmy Eagle who allegedly stole a pair of cowboy boots from two local White ranch hands. There were more than 30 Indians that were armed on the Jumping Bull Ranch compound on that day and only some of them were AIM members. A firefight between both AIM and non-AIM Indians and the FBI resulted after Peltier and two other individuals stopped in the red and white truck and vacated the vehicle. When the firefight was over FBI Special Agents Ronald Williams and Jack Coler were dead, in addition to American Indian Movement (AIM) member Joseph Joe Stuntz. Find out in his informative report about how the FBI pursuit of Jimmy Eagle on Pine Ridge Reservation was really part of a larger plan to initiate a provocation in which Coler and Williams drove into Jumping Bull Ranch shooting expecting back up reinforcements from BIA S.W.A.T. shooters that were supposed to overwhelm AIM Indians with superior firepower after the Indians fired back at Coler and Williams, but instead did nothing. Also find out in this informative report how evidence useful in helping Leonard Peltier's defense was withheld by the prosecution at the time of Leonard Peltier's trial including ballistics evidence that causes doubt that Peltier shot the fatal bullet that killed FBI Special Agent Jack Coler. Learn how the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), using coercive tactics intimidated a Lakota Indian on Pine Ridge reservation that did not even know Peltier into stating that they were on the Jumping Bull Ranch compound property and saw Peltier shoot and kill the FBI Special Agents Ronald Williams and Jack Coler. This false testimony, provided in the form of affidavits is what allowed for the extradition of Peltier from Canada to the United States after Peltier was arrested by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) in On Feb. 6, 1976. The three AIM members prosecuted for the deaths of Jack Coler and Ronald Williams were AIM members Leonard Peltier, Robert Robideau and Darrelle Butler. Robert Robideau and Darrelle Butler were found not guilty for the gunfire murders of FBI Agents Ronald Williams and Jack Coler by a federal court jury in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on July 16, 1976. Leonard Peltier was sentenced to two consecutive life terms on June 1, 1977, after being convicted of two counts of first-degree murder in the 1975 killings of two FBI agents, a crime that he most likely did not commit.