DECEMBER 15, 2000 5 Clinton says Hell Decide Peltier Clemency before Leaving Office KANSAS CITY, MO. (AP) - Presi dent Clinton said he will consider and decide on a clemency request from Leonard Peltier, the American Indian activist serving life sentences for the deaths of two FBI agents in South Dakota. Peltier, 56, is serving tvo consecu tive life sentences at the U.S. Peni tentiary in Leavenworth, Kansas for the 1975 killings of the agents on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. A jury convicted him in 1977 in Fargo, N.D. Peltier has maintained his inno cence, and his supporters say there was never enough evidence to prove he shot the agents. But courts and parole officials have repeatedly rejected Peltier's attempts at freedom. In June, a parole exam iner recommended his sentence be 66 know it (the case) 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 it a good look-see.9 President Clinton continued until his next full parole hearing in 2008. Clinton, in a November 7 interview on a radio network, said Peltier's re quest for executive clemency de served a fair hearing and that he would decide the issue before he leaves office. Peltier's case has become a cause triggering rallies, letter-writing and phone-calling campaigns that have grown larger over the last year. Clinton alluded to the controversy in the interview. "I know it (the case) is very impor tant to a lot of people, maybe on both sides of the issue," he said. "And I think I owe it to them to give it a good look-see." Peltier is considered by many sup porters to be a political prisoner, draw ing attention from both domestic and international human rights activists, including Amnesty International and Desmond Tutu, retired Anglican Archbishop from South Africa. Former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark said releasing Peltier would help reconciliation efforts be tween the government and Ameri can Indians. Gina Chiala, co-coordinator of the Leonard Peltier Defense Committee, said that Peltier has little chance of getting his case back into the courts. She said that the radio interview was the first time she had heard Clinton comment on the clemency request. "It's a major development," she said. "We didn't know if he was go ing to go out of office and let it slide by, or what." Peltier has suffered from health problems in recent years, including lockjaw, borderline diabetes and a series of small strokes. He also is said to be nearly blind in one eye. House Bill Would End Indian Preference Laws SANTA FE, NM. (AP) A bill in troduced in the U.S. House of Rep- , resentatives could repeal laws dat ing back to the 1930s that give pref erence to qualified American Indian candidates for certain jobs. The Native American Equal Rights Act, introduced by Rep. Curt Weldon (R-PA.) would eliminate the laws that favor Indian candidates for jobs with ; the Bureau of Indian Affairs and Indian Health Service. The laws permit the Indian Hospi tal and the Institute of American Indian Arts to give the edge to quali fied Indian doctors, nurses and teachers. According to Weldon, the laws vio late the equal-protection clause of the U.S. Constitution. Indian-rights groups are mobiliz ing against the bill. Keith Harper, a staff attorney for the Native American Rights Fund, called the bill "facially bogus." He said it was a lack of under standing. It demonstrates a complete lack of understanding of the history and the special relationship between the federal government and Indian Tribes," Harper said. "It would essentially throw up in the air 200 years of well recognized law and policy. It's asinine." Last week, Frank Pallone Jr. (D N.J.) and Dale E. Kildee, (D-MI.) both members of the American In dian caucus, wrote a letter urging the House of Representatives not to sup port the bill. "Representative Weldon's bill is contrary to our deep respect for the sovereignty of Tribal governments," it said. Kimberly Teehee, the senior ad viser to the caucus, was confident the bill would not be passed. "It is disturbing to find there are members of Congress who still want to propose anti-Indian legislation," Teehee said. She added that representatives from states without American Indian Tribes propose such legislation because "they have no one to answer to." Pennsylvania has no federally rec ognized Tribes. Sen. Pete Domenici (R-N.M.) and his staff have not reviewed the leg islation, spokeswoman Sarah Echols said. But "on the face of it, there is little chance he would support it," she said. ; ;. The bill, which was introduced in October, has been referred to the House Committee on Resources and the Committee on Education and the Workforce. Consider Determining Membership by Blood Degree FORTHALL,ID.(AP) Shoshone Bannock Tribal members will vote on whether to use blood degree to deter mine Tribal membership. Currently, Tribal enrollment is de cided by linear descent rather than blood degree. To be a Tribal mem ber, parents must be Tribal members and residents of Fort Hall at the time of a child's birth. All current Tribal members are de scendants of the first members of the Shoshone-Bannock Tribe, who were listed in a census in 1934. In March, Tribal members wrote a resolution asking that the Tribe re quire a 18-blood degree for member ship. Voters will decide if a blood degree should be used for enrollment, and to what degree. If they vote yes, Tribal members will also choose be tween 14, 18 or 116 requirement. In addition, voters will decide how blood degree will be determined. Since 1974, only Fort Hall Shoshone Bannock blood is counted in the blood degree. Loreen Chavez, chairwoman of the Shoshone-Bannock Election Board, said the issue was important to many because children with parents from different Tribes are not always listed as a full American Indian. "For the children of the Tribe, something has to be done," she said. Although a certain blood degree is not currently necessary for enroll ment, proof of Indian blood is required for things such as health care services and employment on the reservation. Native American Religious Leader Charged with Drug Felonies Milford High School Nickname comes under New Scrutiny SALT LAKE CITY, UT. (AP) A self described Native American medicine man faces a laundry list of drug charges stemming from a raid on his church's headquarters. In October, law enforcement officers arrested James Warren "Flaming Eagle" Mooney, founder of the Oklevueha EarthWalks Native Ameri can Church, after officers confiscated about 12,000 buttons of peyote from the six-acre complex that serves as home to the church. That equates to about 33 pounds of the hallucinogenic cactus used by some Native Americans in their rituals. Mooney was charged with 13 first degree felony drug charges and one count of racketeering. His wife, Linda Mooney, was charged with three drug felonies and one count of racketeering. James Mooney has maintained that he is legally authorized to gather and distribute peyote. The church has sued Utah County prosecutors, claiming the search war rants in the raid were based on false information and did not warrant seizure of the property. The church has de manded that the peyote be returned. The suit claims that the seizure has prevented Moones followers from prac ticing their religion. Utah County prosecutors have said they are concerned about the number of white members of the church who have no American Indian ancestry but partake in the peyote ceremonies. MILFORD, MI. (AP) A planned di versity council and a scheduled perfor mance by a Native American singer are prompting a new look at Milford High School's Redskins nickname. The school cited financial reasons for keeping the Redskins nickname in 1997, following complaints by a then-student who is one-quarter Native American. Now, officials expect the nickname adopted in 1947 to be on the agenda of the diversity council when it is formed after January. It will probably comprise district administrators and interested community members. "I think without question that the Redskins name will be addressed by the new council," said Sam Osborn, the district's Head of Human Resources. The issue still exists in the community, on both sides of the fence, and I do think this is something the district will face again." ' In the meantime, Native American singer Rita Coolidge is to perform De cember 17 at Milford High School's Per forming Arts Center. "I would bet that her concert has something to do with the renewed in terest," Principal Bruce Gilbert told the Oakland Press of Pontiac in a report published recently. Milford High's literary magazine is called Tribal Lore, and the school store is called The Wampum Exchange. Jill Cadreau, the student who com plained three years ago that she found the Redskins nickname offensive, said she hoped the community would be more responsive this time around. "I'm not blaming the students," said Cadreau, now a junior at Michigan Tech nological University. "I don't think they teach enough about Native Americans in the schools to give them understand ing. Our history needs to be more strongly taught."