| by Leonard Peltier
The Eighth Amendment is supposed to be about dignity, humanity and decency. It is intended to prohibit "deliberate indifference to serious infliction of unnecessary or wanton pain or physical torture or lingering death". The Eighth Amendment, I'm told, should reflect the standards of a "maturing" society and your correctional system shouldn't be just about depriving But that is not how it works for me or many other prisoners. Protection against "cruel and unusual punishment" has faded away as have the rights of ordinary citizens under such things as the Prison is a very cruel reality. But unusual? Imprisonment has become a common experience, especially among Native Americans. There are now approximately 3 million people in United States prisons. The Constitution protects against "cruel and unusual punishment," and, therefore, if the Constitution has meaning, then you, as citizens, must care. To ignore the cruel and extreme conditions prisoners endure – overcrowding, poor medical care, and unhealthy conditions – is to return to a way that the 8th Amendment was intended to end. The courts say prison officials have to have acted with "deliberate indifference" to the safety, health and welfare of prisoners for punishment to be considered cruel and unusual. I don't know what this means because "deliberate indifference" is There are other ways prisoners are deprived of their humanity. In many prisons, we Native Americans are not allowed to practice our spiritual beliefs and traditions, as if separation from the earth with which we are one – as stewards, not owners – were not punishment enough. The Eighth Amendment prohibits arbitrary and disproportionate punishments, too. The normal Federal guideline for prisoners convicted of homicide offenses is 200+ months. This means that I should have been released from prison over a decade ago. The U.S. Parole Commission refuses to consider the possibility of my receiving parole until at least December 2008 — when I will have served double the normal time – and there is no guarantee that I will be paroled even then. This disproportionate sentence is particularly cruel and unusual because there is no basis to support the Commission's reasons for doubling my time for parole consideration. The Commission explains its departure from its own congressionally mandated guidelines by saying that I was involved in an "ambush" of two FBI agents and that I executed them at point blank range after the agents had been incapacitated. There's no evidence to support those findings and there never was. The government attorneys have even admitted that they do not know who shot the agents.
The Commission's ruling is not supported by my convictions, which the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld on an aiding and abetting theory. That was a shift in the government's position after we discovered the government withheld evidence that undercut their case. I was never tried on aiding and abetting and there is no evidence that I knowingly aided and abetted in the shooting of the two agents. I can tell you I didn't intend (nor did I) shoot anyone. My only crime was that I defended my People from attack. In my culture, our first responsibility is always survival. There is no other choice when faced with destruction, but to turn and defend ourselves, our women and our children. That is what I did when the agents invaded the private property of the people I and others were there to protect. Yet, I remain in prison awaiting another appeal, another parole hearing… and so it goes. The so-called patriots of today ignore constitutional protections, the very ideas this country was founded upon. Under the guise of threats to " This reminds me of the stories I heard as a child about the hanging of 39 What I have learned in the past nearly 28 years is that innocence is the weakest defense where your government has decided to target a person and/or squash dissent. Innocence has a single voice that can only say over and over again, "I didn't do it." Guilt has a thousand voices, all of them lies. And, unless an innocent lies and admits guilt – so the government can claim victory – the innocent remains imprisoned. Punishment for a crime a person did not commit is the cruelest punishment of all. In the end, maybe you think injustice can't happen to you, only to someone else, the Other. Maybe you can sweep the streets of all undesirables, of everyone who is an "Other." But, one day, you may be declared the "Other" yourself. What then? Justice is not a flexible tool. Unless we all do our part to ensure that justice is applied equally to all human beings, we are a party to its abuse. We must stand together to protect the rights of others. No child should go hungry, no woman denied protection from abuse, no person refused health care or an education, no prisoner held for political reasons. But, as long as any constitutional rights are allowed to become meaningless, you are at risk. The sad thing is that most people outside the prison walls don't even know it. Mitakuye Oyasin. In the Spirit of Crazy Horse, Leonard Peltier |
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