Bribe? Rio Tinto Feeds Police As They Arrest Tribal Members

As Tribal Members were rounded up and arrested on Thursday, Rio Tinto employees had their hands full with massive coolers of subs and soda which were distributed to the arresting officers.

This is classified as police bribery and was documented on video. A brief clip can be found at Stand For The Land For full video coverage of witness testimony contact Gabe Caplett

In the 1970’s the Knapp Commission was established to deal with Police Corruption in NYC. They defined “Corruption of Authority” as “Police officers receiving free drinks, meals, and other gratuities”.

The actions of the State Police on Thursday match this description exactly. Lieutenant  Robert Pernaski of the State Police corroborated the claim at 12:40pm on May 28th on the phone to office members at Save the Wild UP. Saying, “Yes they fed us because we had a lot of personnel up there for an extended period of time.” When asked if this happens regularly, he responded “I’m sure it’s happened in the past, but it doesn’t happen regularly, it’s not something we ask for”.

A report was filed this morning with the Lansing Administrative Office of the Michigan State Police

Raid at Eagle Rock

Two campers arrested, camp destroyed

By Greg Peterson, Today correspondent

Story Published: May 27, 2010

BIG BAY, Mich. – The defenders of sacred Eagle Rock sat in a circle and wept as they were surrounded by dozens of heavily armed state and local police officers who raided the Eagle Rock encampment the morning of May 27 arresting two campers at the request of Kennecott Eagle Minerals, who wasted no time destroying the month-old camp to make way for their nickel and copper mine.

Witnesses say there were about six people at Eagle Rock when police moved in including four campers who had spent the night and two supporters who arrived with a warning the raid was imminent. Armed with high-powered rifles, Michigan State Police and mine security could be seen atop Eagle Rock scanning the vast Yellow Dog Plains with binoculars apparently looking for trespassers.

Two handcuffed campers, who refused to leave when ordered by police, were taken away by sheriff’s deputies and driven nearly one hour to the Marquette County Jail and were released on bond. Arrested were Keweenaw Bay Indian Community members Chris Chosa, 28, and Charlotte Loonsfoot, 37, both of Baraga, Mich.

Loonsfoot was one of three women who set up the encampment April 23 protesting the arrest three days earlier of environmentalist Cynthia Pryor and hoping to protect Eagle Rock from the Eagle Project nickel and copper mine. Despite federal treaties that allow Ojibwa to hunt, fish and gather on the Yellow Dog Plains, the state of Michigan leased the land to Kennecott to open a sulfide mine. The mine portal is planned near the front of Eagle Rock and the tunnel will travel underneath the rock.

“Today, we got a message in camp that police were on their way,” said non-Native camper Catherine Parker of the warning from two members of the Yellow Dog Watershed Preserve who arrived shortly before police. “Charlotte and Chris had no intention of leaving voluntarily.”

Parker said the Eagle Rock defenders wept for the land as they sat in a circle.

“There were a lot of tears and passionate remarks because the people have come to care a lot about each other out here,” said Parker of Marquette, Mich. “We have all been working together, Native Americans and whites to protect something that is tremendously important to us.”

After police arrived, “we stayed as long as we could, we kept asking to stay with our friends (Chosa and Loonsfoot),” said Parker, wiping away a tear. “We sat down with them repeatedly, we were pushed verbally numerous times by law enforcement.”

“It’s breaking my heart,” said a crying Parker as she witnessed heavy equipment roaring up the entrance to Eagle Rock. “This mine is not going to perform (safely) as they say it will. What is going to happen if the mine collapses into the Trout Salmon River?”

Police from several agencies “literally surrounded us in a big circle,” said Kalvin Hartwig, a member of the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa who spent the night of May 26 at Eagle Rock but was not arrested after agreeing to leave the property with his car.

When police arrived, “three of us and two visitors were down by the sacred fire and another one of our campers (Charlotte Loonsfoot) was up on the hill fasting,” Hartwig said. “I think this whole situation is pretty sad.

“The water and this land is at-risk. These people (Kennecott) are here illegally about to destroy it.”

According to the Save The Wild UP Web site, about 20 police cars were sent and warned to expect a riot that never occurred. Many supporters and the media rushed to the scene after hearing the Powell Township emergency personnel dispatched with instructions to stage at the main entrance to the mine including an ambulance and fire trucks. No injuries were reported.

Atop a pole at the entrance to the camp, a lone eagle feather fluttered in the dusty wind as heavy equipment moved in. Mine officials doused the grandfather fire, uprooted the Eagle Rock Community Garden, removed two flags from atop Eagle Rock and bulldozed the camp.

Deputies blocked the dusty, remote, seasonal Triple A Road at the mine entrance but allowed the media and campers to walk the three-quarters of a mile to the former entrance to the camp that was blocked by heavy machinery as mine employees erected a metal cyclone fence. The media was not allowed to see the remains of the encampment.

“They are putting up a fence and they are wrecking our garden we planted,” said Gabriel Caplett, who has posted daily updates about the campers activities on the Stand for the Land Blog and has written countless stories about the fight to stop the mine since it was announced in 2004. “They are putting out the sacred fire” that has burned since the first night.

There was no word on what happened to the tents and a large cache of food and other supplies donated by supporters. About 10 campers spent the night of May 25 at Eagle Rock, but several left to prepare for activities planned at the rock for Memorial Day weekend.

Two non-Native campers, not present for the raid, broke into tears while walking to Eagle Rock.

“It’s heartbreaking, it’s really disconcerting to feel the rights of the corporations have been put above and beyond the rights of the people,” said Amy Conover of Marquette, Mich. When politicians “get into power they don’t act on behalf of the people, they act on behalf of the money.”

A Detroit native attending nursing school in Marquette said she “can’t understand how hardened the hearts have become of the people who are doing this.”

“To not feel how wrong it actually is – is a very scary thing,” said Laura Nagle. “The police officer said this is a ‘bummer’ this was happening, it is not a bummer, it is a catastrophe, a tragedy and a misfortune for us all. This can still be stopped.”

Native Garden At Eagle Rock A Success

Last night natives and volunteers put the finishing touches on a a community garden up at Eagle Rock. The garden was meant to try to heal the land that state land and federally ceded land which was bulldozed by Rio Tinto. Following ancient tradition, the natives planted, among other things, “The Three Sisters” (Corn, Beans and Squash) as well as native tobacco donated to them by another tribe.

The hurdle will be finding a way to water the garden. Anyone with good ideas about providing water should participate in this phase of the project 🙂

Camper Counts Coup on Kennecott

May 24, 2010

On Sunday one of the campers “counted coup” on a Kennecott worker putting up a fence around Eagle Rock.  Kennecott informed the Michigan State Police, who are now investigating it.

According to one of the spiritual advisors at Eagle Rock, “Coup is a hundreds-of-years old tradition of touching your enemy without hurting them.  It brings shame to the enemy, Kennecott, by getting that close to them.”

According to Gabriel Caplett, a camper at the Eagle Rock settlement, “Kennecott seems to have a habit of blowing things out of proportion.  We’ve seen this when they wasted taxpayer resources getting a citizen arrested for sitting on a stump with her dog.  While campers at Eagle Rock have had to listen to Kennecott supporters drive by at night yelling racial slurs, swerving at us while we walk on the road, throwing beer cans and, in one incident reported to the State Police, firing shots, Kennecott gets the State Police investigating a camper who tapped a construction worker on the butt with a jackpine twig.  This is kind of ironic coming from a company with one of the worst human rights and worker rights records around the world.”

The fence would prevent the Eagle Rock community from accessing their water sources, community garden and sacred medicines.  The community asked Kennecott staff to not put the fence up for these reasons but have been ignored.

Settlers at Eagle Rock are planning a meeting Wednesday evening, May 26th at 6 pm, to discuss this situation and plans to finish planting their community garden.  The public is welcome to attend.

For more questions contact us at standfortheland@gmail.com and read updates of Eagle Rock activities at http://standfortheland.com/

The Fight Will Continue for KBIC

For Full Story With Photos By Greg Peterson CLICK HERE

By Greg Peterson, Today correspondent
Story Published: May 21, 2010

BIG BAY, Mich. – The Keweenaw Bay Indian Community Tribal Council promised it would continue to fight the Kennecott Eagle Minerals nickel and copper mine even if the owner moves the entrance, at a meeting with those defending sacred Eagle Rock May 8.

In mid-April, Kennecott started initial work on its mine – dubbed the Eagle Project – but has reportedly offered to move the mine portal about 100 yards west of Eagle Rock, that has been a site of Ojibwa ceremonies for at least 170 years. Since April 23, American Indians from several tribes and non-Natives have been camping at the base of sacred Eagle Rock to protect it from bulldozers.

“What we are trying to do here is save Mother Earth,” KBIC Tribal Council President Warren “Chris” Swartz told campers during an official council meeting in the shadow of Eagle Rock. “Mother Earth is crying for our help.

“We are here today to try to support her (Mother Earth) and to save the fish, the swimmers, the crawlers and the four leggeds and the fliers here. I am really honored to be here (Eagle Rock).”

After a tobacco offering that included praying in all four directions around the encampment’s “sacred fire,” Swartz said those defending Eagle Rock should never give up their fight and pledged neither would the tribal council.

“Our brothers and our sisters here have been making us aware of Kennecott Minerals Company coming here and starting to mine underneath migi zii wa sin (Eagle Rock).”

The future of the protestor’s children and their children is what’s at stake, said KBIC Tribal Council Vice President Susan LaFernier, who’s been fighting the mine for six years.

“I just want to say thank you to you people. It’s been a longer journey for a lot of people.

“Thank you for everyone who is protecting the rock and the land and the water and it is for our seventh generations – our next seven generations – that’s always been our stand since 2004 when we first opposed the mine in our resolution. May our God and Creator be with you all – to bring peace to you.”

KBIC tribal council member Isabelle Helene Welsh thanked the Eagle Rock defenders and praised the non-violent protest.

“My heart is with you, walk in love, walk in peace and wisdom.”

Swartz reminded campers that KBIC filed a “lawsuit hoping to overturn the state permit for the nickel and copper mine” because the council believes the project “doesn’t meet legal requirements for protecting the environment.

“I am personally not against mining but I am opposed to the sulfide mine process.

“The sulfide mining process, I know for a fact, is going to have some detrimental effects to the environment” including groundwater, nearby streams and the Great Lakes, he said. “Those streams feed into Lake Superior, the largest and most precious body of water in the world.”

Holding a ceremonial walking stick, KBIC council member William “Gene” Emery said he’s worried about the environmental effects of sulfide mining on fish and drinking water because when “even the dust hits water, that makes your chemicals and that floats out into (Lake Superior).”

It is inevitable that dust will escape from ore moving equipment and from accidents involving the trucks hauling sulfide mine waste, said Emery, the tribal council assistant secretary. The dust is “going to settle on the trees and you are going to get rain and that’s going to go into your streams.”

Several Eagle Rock defenders briefed the council about the outpouring of support from hundreds of people during the first two weeks bringing food, firewood and other donations. The campers said they are embarrassed to ask for financial support to pay rent and utilities.

KBIC member Glen Bressette, who lives almost two hours from Eagle Rock, said the campers take turns returning home to visit their children.

“I keep my bundles there and bring my physical here,” said Bressette, 38, of Harvey, Mich. “When we come here (to Eagle Rock) we call it home too.

“We need other people to help us so we can go back to our families. They need us – we can’t do this alone.

“We have all races and walks of life who have come here – all colors, creeds and nations – the same way that our medicine wheel shows us,” said Bressette, using his finger to make a circle.

On his knees, Bressette prayed in Ojibwa and spread tobacco on the sacred fire.

“I am offering up our prayers to you and our grandmothers and grandfathers to help us.

“They tell that story about a stick and another stick and another stick and how much stronger it gets as we all blend together and how much strength that brings us. Che megwich for bringing that strength here.”
Eagle Rock Activity
May 11 – Woodland Road LLC announced that it withdrew a permit application for a $50 million, 22-mile haul road – paid for by Kennecott Eagle Minerals but to be used by many businesses – that would connect the remote Eagle Mine to an ore processing facility at the former Humbodlt Mill in west Marquette County – thus preventing 100 trucks from being routed daily through Marquette and other cities.

On May 7, the Michigan Department of Natural Resources and Environment was prepared to decide whether to issue a permit for the road project. The Environmental Protection Agency, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers this year filed federal objections to the DNRE issuing a permit for the road involving issues that include wetlands mitigation and possibly using other routes.

May 12 – Kennecott Eagle Minerals and Keweenaw Bay Indian Community officials met to discuss Eagle Rock and an ongoing lawsuit. Both sides declined comment on what happened during the meeting.

May 13 – At KBIC’s request, EPA officials from Region 5 in Chicago visited Eagle Rock and its surroundings. Tribal officials declined comment, and an EPA spokesperson said May 17 that she was checking on information that could be released about the visit.

May 15 – A pro-mine ATV rally scheduled for Eagle Rock was scaled back reportedly at the request of Kennecott officials. About 20 ATVs showed up near Eagle Rock and stayed only a few minutes.

May 15 – About 40 people attended a “treaty rights” presentation by several people at Eagle Rock including a Native American activist, who would only identify himself as “Just Another Guy from the Rez.” The effects of sulfide mining were outlined by retired iron ore miner Bob Tammen of Duluth, Minn. and mine critic Chuck Glossenger of Big Bay, Mich. A mine spokesman also attending the presentations.

Also, KBIC member and mine opponent Jessica Koski, who addressed Rio Tinto (Kennecott’s parent company) annual stockholders meeting in London April 15, returned to the Upper Peninsula from her environmental management master’s studies program at Yale University.

May 18 – The Eagle Rock defenders continued erecting a cedar fence around their encampment in response to a fence being constructed by Eagle Project mine officials.

On May 17, Kennecott started erecting a fence on the north and east sides of the Eagle Rock encampment – less than 50 yards from the campers, said American Indian Levi Tadgerson.

“Everyone at Eagle Rock has been working hard to put up our own cedar fence, and Kennecott is just putting their fence up around it,” stated a May 18 communique from the campers on standfortheland.com, a blog. “We are calling all friends and concerned citizens to please stop by Eagle Rock. … we really need you and your support.”

“It helps with morale and these are very challenging times,” the campers said. “We must stand united and we need lots of people to stand with us.”

Please Join In This Global Prayer

We, the International Council of Thirteen Indigenous Grandmothers
Ask you to join us:

MAY 18, 2010
CONSCIOUS PARTICIPATION IN HEALING OUR PLANETARY WATERS

OUR MOTHER EARTH NEEDS YOUR HELP!
Along with many peoples all around the globe, and many water prayers this spring, we are calling for a MASSIVE GLOBAL EFFORT.
Our main intention for this healing is to return the waters to their original pure crystalline blueprint, and to add to their abundance for the nourishment of ALL living things on the planet.

Pray in your local waterways, at the rivers or lakes or streams. Or pray with a bowl of water in the middle of the cities.
“We are Water Babies.
Do not to forget to say thank you every day for the water you drink,
the water you bathe in.
Without our Mother water we would not survive.”
Grandmother Agnes Baker Pilgrim, Takelma Siletz, Oregon
The specific ceremonies being conducted on May 18, 2010:
Grandmothers will be holding Water Prayers in the following places:

African Rainforest, Gabon – Grandmother Bernadette Rebienot
Great Lakes, USA- Grandmother Rita Blumenstein
Mountains of Oaxaca, Huautla de Jimenez – Grandmother Julieta Casimiro
Desert of the American Southwest- Grandmother Mona Polacca
France – Grandmother Flordemayo
Black Hills of North America- Beatrice and Rita Long Visitor Holy Dance
Plains of North America, Montana-Grandmother Margaret Behan
Hood River, Oregon- Agnes Baker Pilgrim
Nepalese Himalayas- Aama Bombo
Brazilian Amazon-Grandmothers Maria Alice Freire and Clara Shinobu Iura
Tibetan Ceremonies in Canada- Tsering Dolma Gyaltong
Mahia, Aotearoa, New Zealand – Ambassador Pauline Tangiora
At the same time, people will be praying at
Nine specific bodies of water around the planet using crystalline energy
· Lake Tahoe, California
· Lake Titicaca, Peru
· Lake MacKay Australia
· Lake Chad, Africa
· Lake Bikkal, Russia
· Lake Kissyk-Kul, Kyrgyzstan
· Lake Geneva, Switzerland
· Lake Superior, Minnesota
· Colorado River Complex (Healing and Purification Ceremonies for this vital USA waterway)

“Water reflects the human soul. If you say, ‘thank you’ to water, it will be reflected in the form of beautiful crystals overflowing with gratitude in return.” Masuru Emoto, The Secret Life of Water

For more information:
www.goldeneagleceremonies.com
Forward email

Center for Sacred Studies | P.O. Box 745 | Sonora | CA | 95370

Speaking Out at Eagle Rock

BIG BAY – Weeks into the stand she began at Eagle Rock, Keweenaw Bay Indian Community member Charlotte Loonsfoot said Saturday the time spent has been well worth the effort.

“It’s been up and down, but good,” Loonsfoot said, sitting in the encampment at the base of Eagle Rock.

The rock outcropping is called migi zii wa sin, a site sacred to the Native Americans where the Kennecott Eagle Minerals Company plans to drill the portal for its nickel and copper mine on the Yellow Dog Plains.

Since the protest of the mining company’s efforts began April 24, other members of the KBIC, including the tribal council and elders, have visited the site.

Tents are more numerous at the encampment now, scattered throughout the jack pines and at least one was set up on top of Eagle Rock. There are more permanent structures erected. The sacred fire burning at the site smokes from the spot where the mine’s portal is planned.

Some Indians from other tribes have also come to camp at the site, along with some non-native members of the public.

“We’re waiting, enjoying our time here,” Loonsfoot said.

The tribe objects to the mining project because of environmental concerns, especially involving water pollution and the plans to drill into Eagle Rock, which they view as a sacred living thing.

On Thursday, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency officials from Chicago visited Eagle Rock at the request of the tribe. Kennecott officials knew of the visit, but were not part of the inquiry. EPA officials toured the outcropping and its surroundings, along with KBIC tribal council members.

“It’s good,” Loonsfoot said. “Hopefully, they’ll look at it and work together in a good way.”

Kennecott representatives were at Eagle Rock Saturday, part of an audience listening to discussion on tribal rights, public lands and sacred sites.

“We came up to interact with those concerned about the mine, especially cultural resources concerns as it pertains to Eagle Rock,” said Kennecott spokesman Matt Johnson. “The views and opinions are varied and it’s important to Kennecott to understand the concerns of all our stakeholders.”

Chuck Glossenger of Big Bay was one of the speakers following Loonsfoot, who discussed public lands while the group waited for a tribal rights speaker later in the day.

“There shouldn’t be drilling right here,” Glossenger said. “You’re acting like this is a surgical procedure that you can do here without any ramifications. But mining isn’t like that.”

The bottom line question at Eagle Rock, and at other places across the country, Glossenger said, is who should be able to decide where a mine goes on public land, mining companies or the public?

“It’s embarrassing what Kennecott is going to take compared to what they’re going to leave here,” Glossenger said. “Nobody is going to retire from this mine.”

A group of all-terrain vehicle riders were expected to make a run to the Eagle Rock site Saturday, to express their supprt for the Kennecott project. Like the Native Americans and their supporters, mining company officials have said they do not want confrontations at Eagle Rock.

Chantae Lessard, Kennecott senior advisor forcommunities, said “We appreciate the support, but we want people to be respectful.”

A handful of ATV riders did show up and stop along Marquette County Road AAA to look at Eagle Rock and the surrounding site. Soon afterward, a larger group arrived, but left in just a few minutes.

The original group’s members, who did not want to give their names, said they supported Kennecott’s project.

“I’m for mining as long as it’s done safely,” one of the riders said. “It’s good for economics.”

All of the riders agreed the area desperately needs more jobs.

“You’re not going to please everybody, no matter what you do,” the rider said.

Another one of the riders said there’s a lot of people supporting the project who don’t have the time to come out to Eagle Rock.

He said, “The pro-mining crowd is out working around the clock.”

John Pepin can be reached at 906-228-2500, ext. 206. His e-mail address is jpepin@miningjournal. net