
and on his way to his home and family in Australia!
https://www.aol.com/news/wikileaks-julian-assange-admit-violating-233401648.html


and on his way to his home and family in Australia!
https://www.aol.com/news/wikileaks-julian-assange-admit-violating-233401648.html


This week, as we continue to track the humanitarian crises and wars in Gaza and Ukraine, the proliferation of the Iranian nuclear program, the Sudanese civil war, ongoing conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and too many other global hotspots, Native nations have gathered together for peace and prayer.
Many of our friends and relatives have journeyed to Pipestone, Minnesota — the center of Turtle Island — for this year’s World Peace and Prayer Day. Pipestone is a significant sacred site. Underneath it lies a vein of the sacred stone used for carving into our ceremonial pipes. In this special place, spiritual leaders and knowledgeable representatives from Indigenous populations far and wide have converged for an “international and intergenerational celebration for people of all faiths, nations, races, [and] ages.”

Click the pic to join the live-streamed event, which begins at 8 a.m. PST/11 a.m. EST on Friday, June 21.
Even if you can not physically be at Pipestone, you can watch some of the speakers and join the ceremony via Friday’s internet live stream, right here. Lakota spiritual leader Chief Arvol Looking Horse — the 19th keeper of the Sacred White Buffalo Calf Pipe and Bundle — wants you to know that your participation, your prayers and actions, matter.
“Each of us is put here in this time and this place to personally decide the future of humankind,” he wrote on the event’s website. “Did you think the Creator would create unnecessary people in a time of such terrible danger? Know that you yourself are essential to this world. Understand both the blessing and the burden of that. You yourself are desperately needed to save the soul of this world. Did you think you were put here for something less? In a Sacred Hoop of Life, there is no beginning and no ending.”
What more can be said? This is why all of us here at Lakota Law are so deeply appreciative of your friendship with our organization and your dedication to achieving peace and justice. As you know if you’ve read my past messages, we can’t have one without the other. Our ancestors fought so hard throughout the decades, and we must honor them now by uniting in both prayer and action. Our task is no less than to embrace our power and change this world.
Wopila tanka — my sincere gratitude for your participation!
Tokata Iron Eyes
Spokesperson & Organizer
Lakota People’s Law Project

It has been a century since the imposition of American citizenship on Indigenous Nations marked a systemic threat to Tribal Nationhood and people. Since the signing of the Indian Citizenship Act on June 2, 1924, we’ve resisted the many waves of attempted erasure of Tribal sovereignty – legal and otherwise – designed to assimilate Indigenous identities into American citizenship.
Native Nations are not merely American citizens. The rights, privileges, and immunities granted by the U.S. Constitution are not the ultimate aspiration for Native people. Our treaties with the United States were made to uphold our status as sovereign nations, not subjects. Native people’s voluntary defense of the U.S. and its allies in World War I was used as a pretext to impose American citizenship, undermining Tribal sovereignty.

This week, we mark three of the many important anniversaries in our history: As Leonard Peltier nears 50 years in prison we demand his release by the June 10th parole board meeting. And we remember Leonard Crow Dog’s passing June 5, 2021, and the American Indian Movement (AIM) Mount Rushmore Action of June 6, 1971.
While it is good to pursue the rights that America considers inalienable, America will be lost unless it learns from the spiritual foundations of Native Nations and respects our sovereignty. We stand with all those who are willing to stand with Native Nations to defend our collective birthrights in these sacred lands and waters from the poison of corporations and government profiteering.
Free Leonard Peltier: No discussion of the American Indian Movement (AIM) can proceed without advocating for the release of Leonard Peltier, who has been illegally held captive as a political prisoner of the U.S.A. for nearly 50 years. Peltier is a victim of a corrupt FBI and anti-Indigenous Federal policies that caused numerous deaths and conflicts in the 1970s. Why have they not been held to account for this grave injustice? Why has no U.S. President or parole board, in 50 years, freed this man? Who are we if we live in a state of fear and terror of oppressive violent oligarchs?
Join us in calling for Leonard’s release by the Parole Board that meets on June 10th. It is imperative for restoring faith in justice and upholding human rights. Leonard deserves to spend his remaining years embraced by his community.
Remember Leonard Crow Dog: We honor the legacy of Chief of Chiefs Leonard Crow Dog, who passed on June 5, 2021. As a primary spiritual leader of the AIM, Crow Dog’s influence ensured the survival and pride of our traditional ways. His efforts helped establish a world of allies (Oceti Sakowin) and fortified the Native American Church. Crow Dog’s spiritual strength offers hope for humanity’s future against colonial violence.
Commemorating AIM’s Mount Rushmore Action: On June 6, 1971, AIM leaders, including Russell Means and Madonna Thunder Hawk, responded to Oglala Sioux elders’ call to assert Indigenous sovereignty over the sacred Black Hills. Guided by Leonard Crow Dog, they conducted a ceremony and climbed Mount Rushmore to reclaim their rights. Despite National Guard intervention and arrests, the charges were dismissed, culminating this powerful act of resistance and treaty defense.
In Solidarity, we express profound gratitude to all who stand with Indigenous sovereignty. Upholding Native sovereignty is essential to defending our collective rights to clean water, air, and a healthy climate. This is the Native way.
Wopila tanka — Thank you for your unwavering support.
Chase Iron Eyes
Director and Lead Counsel
The Lakota People’s Law Project

Next week, on June 10, Anishinaabe-Lakota elder Leonard Peltier has a scheduled parole hearing — his first since July 28, 2009, nearly 15 years ago. Several months ago, Leonard said that he hopes he makes it to this hearing. He’s 79, he’s been incarcerated since 1976 — almost a half-century — and his health continues to decline.
This means that right now, it’s time to act! Please stand with Leonard, the American Indian Movement, Lakota Law, NDN Collective, and Indigenous People everywhere. Tell the U.S. Parole Commission to let Leonard spend his final days at home, in Bellecourt, North Dakota. As you’ll see on the page, you can send a letter directly to the board, and you can also text a message of solidarity.

Please click above to write the parole board today!
Leonard was a leading member of the American Indian Movement (AIM) during a critical time in our history. In the 1970s, many Indian people began expressing pride in their identity. Then the “Reign of Terror” swept over the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, resulting in the unsolved murders of dozens of Oglala Lakota people and the siege of Wounded Knee by federal agents. In this environment, elders asked AIM for additional security assistance, and Leonard answered the call to help protect Oglala Lakota elders, women, and children.
In 1975, this led to another stand-off, a shooting incident during a violent and unwarranted FBI raid which resulted in the deaths of FBI Agents Jack Coler and Ronald Williams. Leonard was subsequently charged with nonsensical crimes, such as aiding and abetting “murderers” who even the day’s biased courts determined to have acted in self-defense. But the government needed a Native scapegoat, so Leonard was eventually falsely convicted and sentenced to two consecutive life sentences.
We’ve been by Leonard’s side ever since. Since 1977, we’ve demanded his freedom. Evidence that exonerates him includes documents, proven to be illegal, used to secure his extradition from Canada, recanted witness testimony, and the court’s decision to exclude ballistics and other evidence surrounding the shooting, all of which prejudiced the process and prevented a fair trial.
The U.S. Parole Commission has held a number of hearings on Leonard’s case over the years, but it has always denied his parole on the grounds that he won’t accept criminal responsibility for killing Coler and Williams — murders he simply did not commit. That’s why it’s so important that we stand with Leonard, right now. It is now well beyond time for our elder to come home.
Chi-miigwetch,
Lisa Bellanger
Co-Director
American Indian Movement Grand Governing Council
Leech Lake Ojibwe
Via the Lakota People’s Law Project
P.S. Please help flood the parole board with messages of support for Leonard. This is likely the last hearing he’ll have. Our treasured relative deserves to live out his remaining days free, happy, and vindicated. Recently, Leonard’s request for compassionate release was denied, leaving this as possibly his last, best chance of getting released. His team is planning his defense for the parole hearing next week, and in the meantime, he needs your support!