updated Fri. August 16, 2024
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APTN News
April 3, 2018
Arlo Looking Cloud and Theda Clarke, two other AIM members, were also convicted in her murder. Amnesty International highlighted Anna Mae Aquash's murder in its 2004 stolen sister's report. But in 2003, they issued a public statement about Graham. “It was like a punch in the face,” said Pictou-Maloney.
Kotatv
March 31, 2018
Graham was convicted in 2010 of the December 1975 kidnapping and murder of Aquash. Aquash had been accused by other AIM members of being an informant for the FBI. She was kidnapped from Denver by Graham, Arlo Looking Cloud and Theda Clarke, driven to Rapid City and then to the BadlandsÃâà...
CTV News
March 14, 2018
Arlo Looking Cloud was sentenced to life in prison in 2004; John Graham received a life sentence in 2011. “American Indian Movement members kidnapped, interrogated, beat, raped and executed Anna Mae Pictou Aquash,” said her daughter, Denise Pictou-Maloney. Your browser does not support the video tag.
Montreal Gazette
March 13, 2018
Two men, Arlo Looking Cloud and John Graham, were convicted in the 2000s. At the time of her mother's death, Pictou-Maloney said her family was given no information about what happened and never offered any support. Living with few resources in Nova Scotia, they couldn't afford a lawyer to look into itÃâà...
APTN News
March 13, 2018
... describing the high-profile case of her mother. Aquash, a Mi'kmaw woman and member of the American Indian Movement (AIM), was found dead on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota on Feb. 24, 1976. Two members of AIM, John Graham and Arlo Looking Cloud, were convicted for her murder.
APTN News
September 21, 2017
(including markings not investigated, but mentioned during the trial of Arlo Looking Cloud) This (long over due) investigation will clearly determine the innocence of two men and the guilt of one non Indigenous man. The trials concerning Ms Aquash, were based on the testimonies of people, all of whom hadÃâà...
Indian Country Today Media Network
May 12, 2017
Controversy occurred in 2004 when Trudell testified at the trial of AIM members, Arlo Looking Cloud and John Graham, who were sentenced to life imprisonment for the kidnapping and murder of Anna Mae Pictou-Aquash. Trudell was boycotted by Native students in Vancouver, British Columbia, andÃâà...
CBC.ca
March 9, 2016
Arlo Looking Cloud was convicted of Aquash's murder in February 2004 and was sentenced to life in prison. In April 2004, Aquash's remains were exhumed from the reservation and later buried near her childhood home in Indian Brook, a small indigenous community about 70 kilometres west of Halifax.
New York Times
April 25, 2014
Eventually, Nichols broke the case open with a three-hour recording of Arlo Looking Cloud, a low-level AIM associate who had admitted to friends that he was involved. She picked him up from a Denver jail and in her car began asking him about the night of Aquash's disappearance. “Arlo was veryÃâà...
BBC News
February 6, 2004
Arlo Looking Cloud, 50, a former fellow member of the American Indian Movement, denies a charge of murder. The trial in Rapid City opened on Tuesday, 28 years after Pictou-Aquash's decomposed body was found on the Pine Ridge reservation in February 1976. Mr Looking Cloud's lawyer, Tim Rensch,Ãâà...