Canada

N.S. woman's killer in South Dakota gets life

A Canadian man convicted in the 1975 slaying of an American Indian Movement activist from Nova Scotia will serve life in prison, a judge decides.

A Canadian man convicted in the 1975 slaying of an American Indian Movement (AIM) activist from Nova Scotia will serve life in prison, a judge decided Monday.

The sentence closed a major chapter in an investigation that's taken more than three decades. Prosecutors aren't saying if other chapters are to come.

A jury in Rapid City, S.D., convicted John Graham of felony murder for participating in a kidnapping that ended in Annie Mae Pictou-Aquash's death. State law from the time of the incident requires a sentence of life without parole, state Attorney General Marty Jackley said. The jury found Graham not guilty of premeditated murder.

Graham, a 55-year-old from the Champagne-Aishihik First Nation in the Yukon, appeared before Judge John Delaney on Monday to receive his sentence.

Graham is the second person to be convicted in Pictou-Aquash's death, which remains synonymous with the often violent clashes of the 1970s between AIM activists and federal agents.

What still isn't known are the circumstances behind Pictou-Aquash's killing. Authorities believe AIM leaders ordered her death because they thought she was helping the government, which officials have denied. Pictou-Aquash was a member of the Mi'kmaq tribe of Nova Scotia.

Prosecutors continue to discuss the case, but Jackley has refused to comment on whether others will be charged.

"I think it's fair to state that the Annie Mae Aquash investigation remains an open investigation," he said Friday.

No AIM leader has ever been charged in her slaying, and several people involved with AIM have denied involvement.

During five days of testimony last month, witnesses said they saw Graham and two other AIM activists take Pictou-Aquash from a house in Denver and eventually to the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. Arlo Looking Cloud, who was convicted in Pictou-Aquash's slaying in 2004, testified that he watched Graham shoot Pictou-Aquash with a .32-calibre pistol.

For now, Graham joins Looking Cloud as the two people convicted in Pictou-Aquash's death.

Graham's attorney, John Murphy of Rapid City, has said he will appeal the conviction.

Pictou-Aquash was active in AIM, a group started in the late 1960s to protest the U.S. government's treatment of American Indians and demand the government honour its treaties with Indian tribes.

The movement grabbed national headlines with its 1972 takeover of the Bureau of Indian Affairs headquarters in Washington and, during the following year, its 71-day occupation of the reservation town of Wounded Knee, S.D.

By late 1975, Pictou-Aquash had started to fear for her life, witnesses said. One prosecution witness, Troy Lynn Yellow Wood, testified that AIM members showed up at the Denver home where Aquash was staying in November of that year. Yellow Wood said Pictou-Aquash told her she was afraid the activists thought she was an informant.

"'If they take me from here, you will never see me alive again,"' Yellow Wood said Pictou-Aquash told her.

Another witness, Angie Janis, testified about receiving a phone call about Pictou-Aquash that same month from AIM supporter Thelma Rios. Janis, who said she was Graham's girlfriend at the time, testified that she was told "something to the effect that Annie Mae needed to be brought back to Rapid City. She was an informant."

Prosecutors have not revealed who told Rios to call Janis. Rios pleaded guilty last November in connection with Aquash's kidnapping, but did not testify at Graham's trial. Jackley later said her exclusion "wasn't an oversight."

Denise Maloney Pictou, Pictou-Aquash's elder daughter, said Friday she thought others with information had not yet come forward.

"I want to know who made that call," she said. "They obviously are the people that started this ball rolling."

With files from The Canadian Press