FEBRUARY 1, 2001 Smoke Signals 5 Leonard Peltier Not on List of Clinton Pardons President erases criminal records of his brother and former business partner. SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) - Presi dent Bill Clinton recently decided against a pardon for American In dian activist Leonard Peltier. Clinton's decision came less than two hours before he was to turn over the White House to George W. Bush. Peltier, who is a member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa, is serving two consecutive life sen tences in a federal prison at Leavenworth, Kansas for the killing of two FBI (Federal Bureau of In vestigation) agents in June of 1975. Peltier s supporters vowed to fight on. "We're extremely disappointed," said AIM (American Indian Move ment) leader Vernon Bellecourt. "Es pecially for the two daughters, who never really knew their father be cause he's been in prison. "We're disappointed, but certainly not defeated. We're grateful to those Indian people and other Americans, and friends and supporters worldwide, who offered so many prayers to the Great Spirit, but ask them all to re main resolutely determined,'' he said. Bellecourt said that the Leonard Peltier Defense Committee, based in Lawrence, Kansas, plans to ask a fed eral judge to order the release of "6,000 plus FBI documents that have been e're disappointed, but certainly not defeated. We're grateful to those Indian people and other Americans, and friends and supporters worldwide, who offered so many prayers to the Great Spirit, but ask them all to remain resolutely determined." Vernon Bellecourt, AIM leader Leonard Peltier American Indian activist suppressed for close to 25 years" that they believe would reveal government abuses in the prosecution of Peltier. Peltier's attorneys will ask the Sen ate Judiciary Committee to hold hear ings in South Dakota "to examine this whole era, which we believe would lead to a new trial" for Peltier. According to the FBI, Agents Ron Williams and J ack Coler were killed as they searched on the Pine Ridge In dian Reservation for robbery suspects. Both were shot in the head at point-blank range after they were injured. Their bodies were left on a dirt road. After fleeing to Canada and being extradited to the United States, Peltier was convicted and sentenced in 1977. Those who defend him claim evi dence against him had been falsified. Clinton erased the criminal records of his brother Roger Clinton and his former business partner Susan McDougal. Clinton also commuted the prison sentence of former Navajo Nation leader Peter MacDonald and found a way to spare himself from indictment. The President was spared from in dictment in a deal on Friday, Janu ary 19 with prosecutors. MacDonald, who was sent to prison in connection with a bloody riot in 1989, has been in a Fort Worth, Texas medical prison since 1992. MacDonald, 72, was one of the famed Navajos used by the U.S. military during World War II to stump the Japanese by using their Native tongue as a communications code. MacDonald later rose to be Tribal Chairman of America's largest Na tive American Tribe. He is well known as a passionate orator who, in the past, sharply criticized the fed eral government for threatening Tribal sovereignty. But he became ensnared in contro versy and eventually was sentenced for his role in a Window Rock, Ari zona riot that killed two in 1989. One of the final decisions left to be made concerned McDougal, the former business partner who went to prison rather than give testimony about the president sought by Whitewater prosecutors. . McDougal was convicted of fraud along with her ex-husband, the late failed savings and loan owner James McDougal, in a 1996 trial at which Clinton testified. McDougal's pardon came just one day after the Whitewater investiga tion was closed down under a deal in which Clinton gave up his law license and admitted making false testimony under oath about Monica Lewinsky in return for prosecutors agreeing not to indict him. Roger Clinton, Bill Clinton's half brother, was sentenced to two years in prison after pleading guilty in 1985 to conspiring to distribute co caine. He cooperated with authori ties and testified against other drug defendants. He has since focused on an entertainment career. School's Indian Mascot is Still at Issue SCARBOROUGH, ME. (AP) - Efforts continue in the attempt to come up with a new mascot at Scarborough High School to replace the Redskins. The school board has approved five names and will put them to a vote soon. Students will choose from the Mariners, Red Hawks, Red Storm, Seahawks and Storm. The winner is expected to be declared at the school board's meeting on Febru ary 1. School districts across the country have been pressed by American Indian groups to change team names such as Redskins, Braves, Chiefs and others. Wiscasset and Sanford have chosen to retain the Redskins name. A survey of Scarborough High School students last year found they favored retaining the Redskins nickname by a margin of more than 2 to 1. But the school board voted unanimously in Sep tember to drop the nickname. A committee narrowed the list of pos sibilities to the five names that the board could accept. "We'd like to think that .we are pretty safe," said board Chair Deborah Jackson. "None of them are derogatory to any one. Two of them are birds of prey; we do have a historical connection to ship building; and we do get hit with some pretty good storms." Similar debates are under way around the nation. "As an American Indian educator, I find it shameful that such stereotypical im ages exist in our schools," Virginia Tech Assistant Professor Jeff J. Corntassel told the Virginia Council on Indians recently. He urged the council to follow the lead of the North Carolina Commission of In dian Affairs and adopt a resolution sup porting the elimination oMndian terms in naming mascots and sports teams by June 30, 2003. " Tribes Target State Road Culverts in Salmon Lawsuit OLYMPIA, WA. (AP) - Twenty Puget Sound Indian Tribes have gone to federal court to try to force the State of Washington to fix cul verts that are blocking salmon from reaching their spawning grounds. "Common sense would tell you to allow the salmon passage," said Billy Frank Jr., Chairman of the North west Indian Fisheries Commission. "We need to start fixing them right now. That's all we're asking fix the culverts." Culverts are tunnels, usually pipes, built to let streams flow under roads. There are 1,999 culverts oh state highways, according to the state De partment of Transportation and the Department of Fish and Wildlife, and 449 need to be repaired or replaced so migrating fish like salmon can get through. The state plans to fix the culverts in order of importance over the next 20 to 30 years, perhaps longer. In the lawsuit, the Tribes demand they be fixed within five years. "We understand the problem. We know what to do about the problem. The expenditures from the state just are not there," said Terry Williams of the Tulalip Tribes. It costs an average of $250,000 to repair or replace a culvert, accord ing to Paul Wagner, Department of Transportation Biology Program Manager. At that rate, it will cost about $112 million to fix the 449 faulty culverts on state roads. Governor Gary Locke lashed out at the Tribes recently for pursuing a lawsuit, saying that the 20-year, schedule for replacing culverts is. good enough. "Litigation will serve to siphon valuable time, money and energy away from the vital task of saving salmon," Locke said in a joint state ment with Attorney General Chris tine Gregoire. The statement said that while the state is willing to work with the Tribes on salmon protection, the attorney general's office is pre pared to defend against the lawsuit. Locke said that $40 million has been requested in this budget cycle to repair fish-blocking culverts but in this tight budget year, there's no guarantee of money for salmon. The problems with many state road culverts are easy to see. Some pipes end in a waterfall so steep a salmon would need wings to get back up to its spawning grounds. Other concrete culverts have washed out and worn away over time to leave exposed rebar. A joint report to the 1997 Legisla ture by the State Department of Transportation and Department of Fish and Wildlife puts it plainly: "Fish passage at human-made bar riers such as road culverts is one of the most recurrent and correctable obstacles to healthy salmonid stocks in Washington." The Tribes' legal action isn't a new lawsuit, but a "subproceeding" to the 1974 federal case that affirmed the Tribes' treaty fishing rights. That case, known as the Boldt decision, recognized that a series of 1855 trea ties gave Tribes the right to 50 per cent of harvestable salmon runs. The courts have continued to moni tor issues related to Tribal fishing. . The.subprpceeding.was filed on January 20 in U,$.,District Court in Seattle. Tribes that were historically based around fishing have watched part of their cultures and livelihoods die as Washington salmon stocks dwindled. "It's put a high percentage of our Tribal fishermen out of work," said Williams, who said the number of Tulalip fishermen has dropped from 130 to about 30. If the culverts were repaired, Will iams and other Tribal officials said salmon would benefit very quickly and their numbers would grow within a few years. But he acknowl edged Tribes would be slower to reap the benefits. Fourteen West Coast salmon and steelhead species are listed as endangered or threatened under the Endangered Species Act, so harvest levels will likely be very low for years to come good culverts or bad culverts. "It's for everybody, not just the Tribes," Frank said. "If you fix the culverts, it's not going to bring the salmon back, but it's a piece of a whole big puzzle." The Tribes are asking only that the culverts be repaired, and are not seeking any monetary damages. Still, Locke and Gregoire said that using the Boldt decision on treaty fishing rights to force the state to re place culverts could set a precedent they don't like. "A favorable ruling for the Tribes could impose a duty that may affect other public roadways, public facili ties and lands and even the regula tion of land use and water," Locke and Gregoire's statement said. "We don't believe that the treaties were intended to displace the state's authority."