Native American activist Leonard Peltier said spending the rest of his life in home confinement after being granted clemency by former President Joe Biden is "as good as freedom," after Biden's own FBI director opposed commutation for a man sentenced to life for the killing of two FBI agents.
One of Joe Biden’s final acts as president Monday was to grant clemency to an Indigenous activist convicted of fatally shooting two FBI agents execution-style in the head in 1975. Leonard ...
The FBI Agents Association (FBIAA) released a statement ripping former President Joe Biden for his last-minute move to commute the
President Biden said the decision will allow Peltier, an 80-year-old Native American activist, to fulfill the remainder of his sentence from home.
The ailing Native American rights activist has been in prison for nearly 50 years after the U.S. government lied to put him there.
American Indian activist Leonard Peltier speaks during a 1999 interview at the U.S. Penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kan. President Joe Biden commuted to home confinement Peltier's life sentence after he spent most of his life in prison for the killing of two FBI agents in South Dakota in 1975.
The Native American activist says he did not receive a fair trial in the slayings of FBI agents Ronald Williams and Jack Coler at Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.
President Donald Trump wouldn’t rule out investigating former President Joe Biden in a Fox News interview aired Wednesday.
“The next day a GOP consultant close to both Kushner and Representative Kevin McCarthy called telling me that I needed to change my statement,” Comer writes in his new book, “All the President’s Money: Investigating the Secret Foreign Schemes That Made the Biden Family Rich.”
President Donald Trump rescinded a Biden-era executive order that Republicans argued set aside federal funding to register Democrats to vote in elections.