Saturday,  April 28, 2012 • Vol. 12--No. 289 • 35 of 48 •  Other Editions

(Continued from page 34)

• Buswell-Robinson filed a missing person's report with the FBI and in October 1974 traveled to Rapid City and the AIM headquarters in St. Paul, Minn., but said she learned nothing about what happened to her husband. In the years after Robinson's disappearance, she corresponded with writer and political activist Barbara Deming.
• In a letter dated Dec. 29, 1974, Buswell-Robinson wrote that she had been told Robinson backpacked into Wounded Knee at night and was later shot for not following an order to immediately report to AIM co-founder

Dennis Banks.
• AIM member Richard Two Elk of Denver told The Associated Press in 2004 that he had seen someone shoot Robinson in the knees, but the reason was because he had refused to pick up a gun and was constantly annoying people in the bunker. Two Elk declined an email request from the AP this week to talk further about the incident.
• Banks, in a telephone interview Thursday, said he can't recall ever meeting Robinson. He said the only recollection of Robinson he has is when his family visited AIM in St. Paul to ask for information.
• "Over the years, the Robinson name has popped up and I'm not sure even who would have that information or where it was," Banks told the AP. "That's a complete blank to me."
• Banks said there was no formal AIM investigation into the disappearance of Rob

(Continued on page 36)

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