Biden’s Final Commutation Was Too Much Even for Christopher Wray
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Biden’s Final Commutation Was Too Much Even for Christopher Wray

Biden’s Final Commutation Was Too Much Even for Christopher Wray

Peltier’s guilt looks pretty conclusive. And the timing of this commutation, coming in literally the last few minutes of Biden’s presidency, suggests that his inner circle knew that too. 

Infuriated by former President Joe Biden’s preemptive pardons of family members in the last hour of his term or simply focused on the imminent inauguration ceremony, most Republicans missed the final act of his presidency – his commutation of the life sentence of Native American activist Leonard Peltier. He was convicted of murdering two FBI agents, Ronald Williams and Jack Coler, during a “standoff” on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota in 1975.

The White House news release read: “The President is commuting the life sentence imposed on Leonard Peltier so that he serves the remainder of his sentence in home confinement. He is now 80 years old, suffers from severe health ailments, and has spent the majority of his life (nearly half a century) in prison.”

[Note: The news release is no longer available on the White House website. The link now responds with a 404 error.]

Peltier, who is a member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa in North Dakota, has had “multiple bouts with Covid-19, diabetes, a stroke and an aortic aneurysm,” according to The Washington Post. The report said that Peltier and his supporters have long claimed he did not receive a fair trial and was wrongly convicted.

Minnesota Public Radio News provided a detailed account of the case on Monday:

The shooting of the two agents followed a tense two years on the Pine Ridge reservation. At the time, leaders of the American Indian Movement (AIM) demanded better treatment of Native people living on and off the reservation-including jobs, better health care and education. … Peltier joined the movement in 1972.

In February of 1973 the tension culminated at Wounded Knee when members of AIM and other Indigenous people took over the town. A stand-off between members of AIM and federal law enforcement lasted for 71 days.

In the late morning of June 26, 1975, agents spotted and followed what was described as a red pickup truck. Peltier and a few other men were in the truck, which turned into Jumping Bull Ranch in Oglala, South Dakota, where Peltier and other AIM members were camping. A firefight ensued.

Just before noon, agents radioed for backup, saying they were under fire and needed assistance. Other agents were miles away and also under duress. Within minutes, both Coler and Williams had been shot and killed. It took hours for their bodies to be recovered.

According to the FBI, “a total of five rounds had been fired from both Williams’ and Coler’s weapons. The agents’ vehicles alone had 125 bullet holes.” Williams was shot in the foot, his body and head while Coler was shot twice in the head after sustaining other bullet wounds, the FBI said.

Butler, Peltier and Robideau were charged with two counts of first-degree murder and aiding and abetting. Peltier, who already had an outstanding warrant for unlawful flight to avoid prosecution, fled to Canada. He was placed on the FBI’s ten most wanted list in 1975. In 1976, he was captured by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and was extradited to the United States. His trial took place a year later in Fargo, North Dakota.

After a five-week trial, Peltier was found guilty and sentenced to two consecutive life terms in prison. Butler and Robideau were acquitted in 1976 on grounds of self-defense.

MPR reported that Peltier’s story changed over the years.

In the book written by Peter Matthiessen titled, “In the Spirit of Crazy Horse” Peltier said he was working on a car nowhere near Jumping Bull when the incident occurred. In another account, he said he was awakened by the sound of gunfire. In his 1999 memoir, “Prison Writing, My Life is My Sundance,” Peltier admitted to shooting at the agents but maintained he did not kill them.

Peltier was denied parole at his most recent hearing in July and would not be eligible again until 2026, as per CBS News.

Delighted by the news of Peltier’s commutation, his former attorney Kevin Sharp issued a statement on Monday which said, “President Biden took an enormous step toward healing and reconciliation with the Native American people in this country. It took nearly 50 years to acknowledge the injustice of Leonard Peltier’s conviction and continued incarceration, but with the president’s act of mercy, Leonard can finally return to his reservation and live out his remaining days.”

The FBI was vehemently opposed to any form of clemency for Peltier. When asked for input from the White House earlier this month, former FBI Director Christoper Wray wrote a blistering letter to Biden expressing his strong objection to such a move.

Perhaps angry that Biden ignored their guidance and went ahead with clemency anyway, the FBI released Wray’s letter on Monday. It read (in part): “Even though courts have repeatedly examined and exposed Peltier’s claims as baseless, his sympathizers continue to wrongly promote him as a standard-bearer for legitimate grievances about the United States government’s historical mistreatment of Native Americans. But the facts cannot — and must not — be ignored. Peltier is a ruthless murderer who has shown a complete lack of remorse for his many crimes.”

Activists, according to MPR, have lobbied for Peltier’s release since his incarceration, and the calls for his release have only increased over the years. His supporters include far-Left human rights group Amnesty International, the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, Pope Francis (naturally), Robert Redford, and the members of the band, Rage Against the Machine.

At any rate, Biden’s grant of clemency to Peltier has sparked outrage among Republicans and even some Democrats such as pollster Mark Penn.

As Wray wrote in a previous letter (in opposition to Peltier’s 2024 parole request), “Over the last 45 years, no fewer than 22 federal judges have evaluated the evidence and considered Peltier’s legal arguments. Each has reached the same conclusion: Peltier’s claims are meritless, and his convictions and sentence must stand.”

Peltier’s guilt looks pretty conclusive. And the timing of this commutation, coming in literally the last few minutes of Biden’s presidency, suggests that his inner circle knew that too.


Elizabeth writes commentary for The Washington Examiner. She is an academy fellow at The Heritage Foundation and a member of the Editorial Board at The Sixteenth Council, a London think tank. Please follow Elizabeth on X or LinkedIn.

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Comments

Of the many egregious pardons issued by Biden during the final days of his term, many have said that he had been taking a $–t on the country.

This one makes it look like diarrhea.

Those peoples that occupied North America when the Europeans arrived were not Noble Savages. They often were meaner and more cruel than the Europeans. They fought wars with each other. The European settlers may have lost battles but they won the war. Whatever you want to call them, these first settlers of the Western continents now have their own lands and are responsible for most of their own problems. They are not “owed”.

Peltier did not deserve this commutation. He should have died in prison.

So Peltier was convicted of two murders, but his buddies were acquitted based on self defense? Something does not add up.

    irishgladiator63 in reply to Tim1911. | January 21, 2025 at 6:33 pm

    The agents were in unmarked cars and followed the vehicle with Peltier and others onto a reservation. Apparently no one could prove the others knew they were shooting at FBI agents. Peltier, however, executed both agents, shooting both agents in the head as they lay wounded and helpless in their vehicles.
    The trials were also a year or so apart, with Peltier being later because he fled to Canada and had to be captured and extradited.

    coyote in reply to Tim1911. | January 22, 2025 at 8:12 am

    His ox was gored.

I would argue that what Biden did was grant immunity and not pardons; the president is not entitled to grant blanket immunity.

For a pardon, it has to be accepted or rejected. If there is no acceptance (and specificity as to what crime the acceptance is granted), then there is no pardon. Trump needs to proceed with prosecution and challenge in court.

    JackinSilverSpring in reply to slagothar. | January 21, 2025 at 5:12 pm

    Interesting take on pre-emptive pardons. I like it because I don’t think pre-emptive pardons are constitutional. We won’t know until one of the pre-emptively pardoned individuals is prosecuted.

The vile, stupid and evil Dhimmi-crats can always summon sympathy and empathy for sociopath murderers, illegal aliens and genocidal, goose-stepping Islamofascists/terrorists.

If any of the beneficiaries of these utterly despicable, self-serving and feckless abuses of the pardon power truly deserved to be pardoned, crime boss/dotard, Biden, would have pardoned them early in his wretched term.

Instead, he waits until the last minute, on his way out the door, as a typically greasy and underhanded means of minimizing scrutiny, opprobrium and criticism from the voting public.

The Dhimmi-crat attorneys and chaperones/puppeteers who advised Biden with respect to these pardons (or, quite likely, signed them without his input or knowledge) are a contemptible disgrace.

The Dhimmi-crats should never hold power, ever again. These wretched reprobates deserve to wander in the political wilderness for one thousand years.

Peltier outlived a lot of his Marxist supporters, so there’s that.

Peak 1970’s crazy.

AIM, Weather Underground, Symbionese Liberation Army, Synanon, Jim Jones are all cut from the same cloth.

Read “Prairie Fire: A Political Manifesto” since all of these groups were spouting the same violent agitprop.

https://archive.org/details/prairie-fire-1974

Who were the ones upon which Biden relied in granting Peltier relief?

    henrybowman in reply to Q. | January 21, 2025 at 7:36 pm

    The loud ones with the dirty clothes and the cardboard signs.

    JohnSmith100 in reply to Q. | January 22, 2025 at 9:14 am

    Probably via Jill. How about charging Jill with elder abuse? Remove her, and see what Joe Biden has to say about all this stuff being done in his name.

Is it crazy to wonder if the morally challenged Biden, or his morally challenged inner circle, might be somehow benefiting financially from some of these pardons and commutations, e.g. the kids-for-cash judge?

So Wray is outraged when it led to the deaths of FBI agents but not at the rest?

GTFOH….he’s not doing the right thing.

Dumb Question #2:
who (what group) was actually running the Biden administration?
Please don’t answer Barry/Mooch Obama: neither has the brains required.

    It was not one person who controlled Biden, it was a series of different people or groups over time: sometimes one gaining the upper hand, sometimes another. Jill controlled certain areas and she became stronger towards the end.

    Self disclosure: I have not cleared this with Milhouse.

      Gremlin1974 in reply to Paula. | January 21, 2025 at 6:36 pm

      From what I can tell, it was whoever could get him to a table with a pen in his hand. My wonder is how often was Biden mislead on what he was actually signing.

        henrybowman in reply to Gremlin1974. | January 21, 2025 at 7:38 pm

        Random people could even phone him and get him to say “Let’s go Brandon.”
        All the brains of Moe Syzlak, and none of the work ethic..

          mrtomsr in reply to henrybowman. | January 22, 2025 at 10:24 am

          I think that Baron Trump probably said Let’s Go Brandon to Biden at the inauguration. Looked like Mrs. Trump said “shut up” then smiled broadly when he spoke to her immediately afterwards.

Bribed by ice cream

Wray belongs in a cell formerly occupied by a J6’er. After a house raid and toss at 5 in the morning. He is a pig.

Wray … he is outraged when it is HIS bull that is gored … but that is the only
outrage .. yeah got it.

    henrybowman in reply to jqusnr. | January 21, 2025 at 7:40 pm

    Probably more that he was not bothered about all the white-collar criminals the FBI hadn’t and wouldn’t ever investigate, but was pissed off over a “real” criminal the FBI did investigate.

wagnert in atlanta | January 22, 2025 at 9:29 am

“Note: The news release is no longer available on the White House website. The link now responds with a 404 error.”

As does everything on Whitehouse.gov before Monday. So we can’t look up Biden’s transgressions. Not cool, Donald.

Wray only cares because it was FBI agents that were killed. He didn’t say a peep about all the other killers to whom Biden gave a pass.

Apparently, no sightings yet of that RussiaGate binder that the FBI didn’t find at Mar a Largo