I've blogged before about my research on the American Indian Movement and the murder of Anna Mae Aquash, a Mi'kmaq from Nova Scotia, Canada, who joined up with AIM at the 1973 Wounded Knee occupation. Her body was discovered on February 24, 1976, on the side of Highway 73 near Wanblee, South Dakota. There has always been suspicion as to whether AIM or the FBI was behind her murder. Recently, journalist Steve Hendricks has argued AIM killed her because they suspected she was an FBI informant. AIM maintains the FBI was behind her murder. In 2004, the a federal jury declared Arlo Looking Cloud, a former AIM activist, guilty of first-degree murder in the execution-style death of Aquash. A second man, John Graham, was also charged with first-degree murder and, since 2004, fought extradition from Canada until he was extradited on December 8, 2007. The Associated Press reports that his trial will begin in Rapid City this coming June:
The second man charged with the 1975 slaying of an American Indian Movement activist will stand trial in Rapid City starting June 17, according to court documents.
John Graham, 52, was extradited from Vancouver, British Columbia, on Dec. 8, four years after he was arrested and charged with killing fellow AIM member Anna Mae Pictou Aquash on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. Her body was found in February 1976 north of Wanblee with a gunshot wound to the head.
Graham pleaded innocent to first-degree murder in U.S. District Court in Rapid City and is being held in the county jail.
U.S. Attorney Marty Jackley said he was "looking forward to justice being served in this matter for all those involved, including the family members of Anna Mae Aquash."
Graham's lawyer, John Murphy of Rapid City, declined to comment.
Fritz Arlo Looking Cloud, a Lakota from Pine Ridge who had been living homeless in Denver, was convicted in 2004 and received a mandatory life prison sentence.
At his trial, witnesses said Looking Cloud, Graham and another AIM member, Theda Clark, drove Aquash from Denver and that Graham shot Aquash in the Badlands as she begged for her life.
Clark has not been charged. She lives in a nursing home in western Nebraska and has refused to discuss the case.
Graham, a Southern Shoshone from the Yukon also known as John Boy Patton, denies killing Aquash, though he acknowledged being in the car with her from Denver.
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