SD jury convicts man in 1975 AIM activist's death
By NOMAAN MERCHANT, Associated Press
A dozen South Dakota jurors needed only about four hours to agree that John Graham and two other American Indian Movement supporters kidnapped a fellow activist in 1975 and killed her on the Pine Ridge reservation, one jury member said. But they weren't all convinced it was Graham who pulled the trigger.
After a second day of deliberations Friday, the 12 jurors convicted Graham of felony murder during the kidnapping of Annie Mae Aquash -- whose death came to symbolize AIM and its often violent struggles with federal agents during the 1970s -- but acquitted him of premeditated murder.
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Prosecutors said the activists who kidnapped and killed Aquash believed she was a government spy, which authorities have denied.
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Aquash, a member of the Mi'kmaq tribe of Nova Scotia, was 30 when she died. Her death came about two years after she participated in AIM's 71-day occupation of the South Dakota reservation town of Wounded Knee.
http://www.salon.com/wires/us/2010/12/11/D9K1JQA00_us_reservation_slaying/Why was she killed? According to testimony given at the trial, she was killed because it was feared that she would testify against Leonard Peltier.
"Earlier Dec. 6, another witness testified that she and Aquash heard another AIM activist, Leonard Peltier, admit to killing two FBI agents in June 1975. Peltier was convicted in 1977 of shooting the agents and is serving a life sentence.
Darlene “Kamook” Ecoffey told jurors that Peltier talked about the incident in the fall of 1975, a few months before Aquash disappeared.
“He held his hand like this,” Ecoffey said, making a gesture resembling a gun with her hand. “And he said, 'That (expletive) was begging for his life, but I shot him anyway.”'
Prosecutors believe Graham, Looking Cloud and Clark killed Aquash because AIM leaders thought she was a government informant.
http://www.nativetimes.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=4716:ex-suspect-testifies-in-aim-activist-slaying-trial&catid=55&Itemid=31An excellent book on this murder, and on the FBI's mishandling of this case is "The Unquiet Grave" by Steve Hendricks.
http://www.amazon.com/Unquiet-Grave-Struggle-Indian-Country/dp/1568583648/ref=cm_cr_pr_product_top