By Carson Walker
Rapid City, South Dakota (AP/ICC)
The murder trial of former American Indian Movement member John Boy Patton-Graham should help bring closure – for someone.
If Graham, 52, is convicted of the shooting death of fellow AIM activist Anna (Annie) Mae Pictou Aquash, who died 32 years ago around December 12, 1975, it will mean justice has been done, one of her daughters says.
A conviction also would wrap up a long, winding case for government investigators and prosecutors, who deny Aquash was a snitch.
Rapid City, South Dakota (AP/ICC)
The murder trial of former American Indian Movement member John Boy Patton-Graham should help bring closure – for someone.
If Graham, 52, is convicted of the shooting death of fellow AIM activist Anna (Annie) Mae Pictou Aquash, who died 32 years ago around December 12, 1975, it will mean justice has been done, one of her daughters says.
A conviction also would wrap up a long, winding case for government investigators and prosecutors, who deny Aquash was a snitch.