Play Video

MEDIA

Press, Media and Production

Press articles, Lives, documentaries, and video files from the frontlines to media outlets can be found here.

TRN Podcast host Nick Estes (@nickwestes) welcomes Nick Tilsen (@nicktilsen) from NDN Collective back to the show to discuss Leonard Peltier’s upcoming parole hearing and the international coalition fighting to get him released after almost five decades of incarceration for crimes he didn’t commit.

LISTEN: Apple Podcasts 

The Red Nation – Nick Estes with Nick Tilsen I 2023

#FreeLeonardPeltier 79th Birthday Action I Washington, DC

Sunny Red Bear, NDN Collective’s Associate Director of Organizing shares why she took action to #FreeLeonardPeltier on his 79th Birthday in Washington, DC.

NDN Collective I 2023

For nearly 50 years, Indigenous organizers, activists, and allies have dedicated themselves to fight against the unjust incarceration of Indigenous movement leader, Leonard Peltier. In Episode 6 of the LANDBACK For The People, Nick Tilsen delves into the complexities of the longest serving Indigenous political prisoner alongside trusted legal and government affairs partners fighting for Leonard Peltier’s freedom. EPISODE GUESTS: Holly Cook Macarro, Red Lake Ojibwe, NDN Collective Government Affairs and Bruce Ellison, Criminal Defense Attorney 

LISTEN: Spotify, Apple Podcasts

NDN Collective I 2023

Levi Rickert, Founder and Publisher of Native News Online, interviews former federal judge Kevin Sharp about Leonard Peltier’s parole hearing on Monday, June 10.

Native News Online – Youtube I May 2024

CBS | February 2022

For nearly five decades, Amnesty International - the non-partisan global human rights organization - has documented serious concerns about the legal process which led to Leonard Peltier’s conviction and sentencing.

Amnesty International – Global Call To Action | May 2024

PRESS ARTICLES

“This administration, the Biden Administration, has said that Native American rights are a priority to them, and yet they’ve got the longest sitting Indigenous political prisoner locked up and we’ve seen no action from the federal government,” Tilsen said. “If he dies in prison this will forever be a part of that administration’s legacy as it relates to Native people.”

Indian Country Today | April 2024

Seven senators urged the president in a letter to grant Peltier clemency, citing “mounting evidence of clear misconduct” during his trial that, they wrote, “has warranted outcry from the very officials who put Mr. Peltier behind bars.”

Politico | November 2022

AP | September 2023
(AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough)

Sharp argues that Peltier “remains a casualty of this country’s cruel and lawless war against American Indians. His continued incarceration, moreover, is a constant reminder to Native communities that they are disposable in the eyes of the U.S. government and unworthy of the most basic protections afforded by our Constitution.”

Indian Country Today – Mark Trahant & Aliyah Chavez | October 2022

“The focus of my two cents leading to my joining the call for clemency is based on Peltier’s inordinately long prison sentence and an ever more compelling need for simple mercy due to his advanced age and deteriorating health. Enough is enough. Leonard Peltier should now be allowed to go home.”

The Guardian | January 2023

“As Members of Congress, we sign this letter with a deep commitment to the crucial role we play in upholding justice for all Americans — and to also hold our government accountable when we see a case of injustice, as demonstrated by the long incarceration of Leonard Peltier,” reads their letter to Biden, which was led by Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.).

HuffPost | October 2023

“Biden doesn’t want to piss off the FBI because they want somebody locked up, even if it’s not the right person. That’s a political prisoner.”

HuffPost (Jen Bendery) | September 2023

“When I’m talking to tribal leaders…whether it’s about freeing Leonard Peltier or addressing the crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous people or the legacy of boarding schools, there’s a lens of justice that is very, very prominent in Indian Country. If ever there was a time going into an election [to free Peltier], the time is now.”

HuffPost (Jen Bendery) | August 2023

Peltier, who is currently detained in Coleman, Florida, has spent 46 of the past 47 years in maximum security. Multiple recommendations to lower his prisoner classification, so that he can be transferred to a less restrictive prison closer to his family, have been rejected.

The Guardian (Nina Lakhani) | February 2023

Nothing is more emblematic of the mistreatment of American Indians and the uneven hand of the criminal justice system than the handling of his case by the federal government. Leonard Peltier has galvanized generations of Indigenous activists and grassroots movements, yet he remains in confinement.

HuffPost (Jennifer Bendery) | December 2022

Peltier has been deprived of his liberty “in contravention of articles 2, 7 and 9 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and articles 2 (1), 9 and 26 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,” says the legal opinion. The opinion also cites discriminatory comments made by his parole examiners in concluding, “Mr. Peltier continues to be detained because he is Native American.”

HuffPost | July 2022

“His conviction rests solely on the fact that he was present at the shootout with a weapon that day — not that he fired a fatal shot or had any hand in killing anyone", said James Reynolds, former U.S. Attorney.

New York Times Article (Mark Walker) | February 2022

“I write today from a position rare for a former prosecutor: to beseech you to commute the sentence of a man who I helped put behind bars,” he wrote. “With time, and the benefit of hindsight, I have realized that the prosecution and continued incarceration of Mr. Peltier was and is unjust. We were not able to prove that Mr. Peltier personally committed any offense on the Pine Ridge Reservation.”

HuffPost article (Jennifer Bendery) | November 2021

Skip to content