Washington Times on Peltier
Jerry Seper is the
leading "investigative reporter," that is, purveyor of devious
propaganda, for the Washington Times. Most recently he was seen covering up for
the FBI in the Kenneth Trentadue sham suicide
finding. (See FBI covers up again ).
As I detail in Part 5 of "America's Dreyfus Affair, the Case of the Death of
Vincent Foster," it was his reporting of the furtive removal of
"Whitewater documents" from Foster's office after his death that was
used as an excuse to appoint an independent counsel to orchestrate a cover-up
of Foster's death. Seper claimed unnamed Park Police
investigators as his source, but the fact is that at the time the term
"Whitewater" was utterly meaningless to them. Furthermore, all the
Park Police investigators on the Foster case denied to
author Dan E. Moldea that they gave any such
information to Seper and confirmed that they knew
nothing about Whitewater. Seper, in short, was the
conduit for an official leak with treacherous intent.
As an active participant in the cover-up of the
Foster murder, Seper is in
league with the FBI. Authors Hugh Turley, John Clarke, and Patrick Knowlton
show conclusively at www,fbicover-up.com , that,
from beginning to end, responsibility for the cover-up of Vincent Foster's
murder lies with the FBI.
Now we have this from him with respect to this dubiously
convicted political leader whose continued imprisonment is protested more, by
more prestigious people and organizations, than any other American prisoner.
Clinton's 'look-see' at clemency request irks
FBI (Jerry Seper, Washington
Times, Nov. 15, 2000, p. A3)
President Clinton's promise during a radio
interview that he would consider a pardon for Leonard Peltier, the American
Indian activist convicted of murdering two FBI agents, has angered law
enforcement authorities who oppose any clemency.
Mr. Clinton previously had declined any comment
on the pending clemency review, but told Pacifica
Radio during a Nov. 8 interview he owed it to both sides of the Peltier issue
to give the pardon request "an honest look-see" before he leaves
office in January.
"I don't have a position I can announce
yet. I believe there is a new application for him in there when I have time,
after the election is over, I'm going to review all the remaining executive
clemency applications and, you know, see what the merits dictate." Mr.
Clinton told the liberal radio network.
"I will try to do what I think is the
right thing...I know [the Peltier request] is very important to a lot of
people, maybe on both sides of the issue, and I think I owe it to them to give
an honest look-see," he said.
John Sennett, president of the FBI Agents
Association, which represents more than three-quarters of the bureau's 11,000
agents, yesterday said Peltier had no legitimate claim for clemency and warned
Mr. Clinton against granting leniency.
"The president wants to study the matter
on the merits, but the merits have been decided over and over by the
courts," Mr. Sennett said. "What basis is there for leniency and
clemency at this point in time?"
"We hope the predident
appreciates what a blow it would be to the morale of law enforcment
officers at every level of government to watch this unrepentant murderer of two
of our own set free," he said.
The association has said Peltier's pardon would
be an affront to FBI agents Jack R. Coler and Ronald
A. Williams, who were killed in a 1975 shootout with Peltier, and to their
families. In a recent letter to Mr. Clinton, the group warned that Peltier
"couldn't fool the federal courts, he is now trying to fool you and the
public."
"Don't let him get away with it. Sympathy
is appropriate only for the dead heroes and their surviving families. Don't let
their sacrifices be forgotten," the letter said.
FBI Director Louis J. Freehhas
publicly opposed Peltier'spardon,saying the courts
had "firmly established" his guilt. Noting that the two men were
fatally shot as they lay wounded on the ground, he said the FBI "cannot
forget this cold-blooded crime, nor should the American people."
Peltier, who is eligible for parole in 2009,
was convicted in the June 1975 murders of Agent Coler,
28, and Agent Williams, 27, and sentenced in June 1977 to two consecutive life
terms at the federal penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kan.
He filed for clemency in November 1993, his
third such request. President Reagan rejected a similar bid in 1982, and a 1989
request was denied by President Bush. The Supreme Court has twice denied
without comment Peltier's appeals of his conviction.
The killings occurred at South Dakota's Pine
Ridge Indian reservation, when Peltier's vehicle was stopped by agents looking
for a kidnapping and assault suspect. Agents Coler
and Williams were wounded immediately, shot with semiautomatic rifles. The
agents fired only five shots before they were hit, compared with more than 125
bullet holes found in their car.
Prosecutors said Peltier and two others
approached the wounded agents and fired at point-blank range, hitting Mr.
Williams in the face as he knelt and an unconscious Mr. Coler
twice in the head.
Mr. Clinton's radio announcement came in the
wake of an unsuccessful bid by the House Judiciary Committee to find out the
status of Peltier's clemency review. In September, Committee chairman Henry J. hyde said the White House cited executive privilege to
block efforts by the panel to find out any information about the pending
request.
The Illinois Republican said he was
"concerned" Mr. Clinton would approve the request, adding that
"Leonard Peltier should serve his complete sentence and should not receive
clemency."
The Justice Department is required to make a
recommendation to Mr. Clinton on Peltier's pardon, although the department has
declined to comment on any possible decision. Department spokeswoman Chris
Watney did not return calls for comment. (end FBI press release, uh, news
article)
The reader may contrast this thoroughly
one-sided account with what you may find at Leonard Peltier, Shackled Eagle.
David Martin
November 15, 2000
Home Page Column Column 3 Archive Contact