Shortly before leaving office, President Joe Biden commuted Leonard Peltier’s life sentence to indefinite house arrest following decades of community activists fighting for his release.
“It’s finally over – I’m going home,” Peltier said in a press release from NDN Collective. “I want to show the world I’m a good person with a good heart. I want to help the people, just like my grandmother taught me.”
Peltier, an 80-year-old member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa who is experiencing declining health, has spent nearly fifty years in prison for the murder of two FBI agents on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.
“Leonard Peltier has been serving a sentence based on a conviction that would not hold up in court today and for a crime that the government has admitted it could not prove,” NDN Collective said in a letter demanding Peltier’s release days before Biden commuted his sentence.
The NDN Collective letter was signed by 124 tribal leaders including four headquartered in Oklahoma: Muscogee Creek Nation Principal Chief David Hill, Otoe Missouria Tribe Counsel Wilson Pipestem, Delaware Tribe Chief Brad Kills Crow and Cheyenne Arapaho Governor Reggie Wassana.
Before Peltier’s commutation, federal lawmakers had also called on Biden to take action.
“Serious concerns have been raised regarding the fairness of his (Peltier’s) trial and incarceration,” Democrat lawmakers said in a Dec. 2024 letter to President Joe Biden. “Calls for his release have also received sweeping support from civil liberties and human rights organizations.”
“The power to exercise mercy in this case lies solely within your discretion, and we urge you to grant Mr. Peltier clemency, allowing him to return home and live out his remaining days among his own people.”
Oklahoma’s Congressional delegation did not sign the letter nor did they release statements following Biden’s decision to commute Peltier’s sentence.
Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), who consistently…

News Release Date: December 9, 2024