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Anna Mae Pictou Aquash was killed 32 years ago on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation

Canadian man ordered to U.S to face AIM-slaying murder charges appeals order

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VANCOUVER, British Columbia - A Canadian man ordered back to the United States to face trial on charges that he killed an American Indian Movement activist 32 years ago has appealed that order.
John Graham turned himself in Thursday morning as his case began in the Appeals Court of British Columbia.
His bail was extended until Sept. 7, or until the time when the panel of three judges hearing the case releases its reserved decision.
Although Graham was not in court, about 80 supporters were, some sporting T-shirts with the legend Free John Graham.
Graham is charged with first-degree murder in the killing of Anna Mae Pictou Aquash on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota in late 1975. Her body was found Feb. 24, 1976. The Nova Scotia native had been shot in the head.
Graham says he is innocent of the charge.
Justice Elizabeth Bennett ordered Graham's extradition in March 2005.
"There is sufficient evidence … to commit John Graham for extradition to the United States to face the charge in the murder of Anna-Mae Aquash," she said.
Graham's lawyer, however, told the appeals court Thursday that Bennett made the decision on flimsy evidence.
Aquash's death came amid a series of bloody clashes in the mid-1970s between federal agents and AIM. Aquash, a member of Mi'kmaq Tribe of Canada, was among Indian militants who occupied Wounded Knee, S.D., for 71 days in 1973.
Prosecutors have said AIM leaders ordered Aquash's killing because they suspected she was a government informant. AIM leaders have denied that assertion.
Another man, Arlo Looking Cloud, was convicted a year ago in the slaying. He has admitted he helped drive Aquash from Denver to Rapid City, S.D., and eventually to the place where he and others said Graham shot her.
Looking Cloud's lawyers had asked for a new trial, saying the jury that convicted him based its decision on prejudicial, irrelevant testimony and hearsay.
A federal appeals court, however, last year upheld Arlo Looking Cloud's murder conviction.
Looking Cloud received a mandatory life sentence after a jury convicted him last year of first-degree murder committed in the perpetration of a kidnapping. He could qualify for parole after 10 years.

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