Sunday,  April 29, 2012 • Vol. 12--No. 290 • 19 of 34 •  Other Editions

(Continued from page 18)

badmouthing of Wounded Knee continues. You and people like you are to perpetuate this erroneous image you have of who we are. And I'm sick and tired of you bringing up these false accusations, based on what? Nothing!"
• Robinson's wife, Cheryl Buswell-Robinson, flew to Sioux Falls from Detroit to attend the conference examining the 40th anniversary of the Wounded Knee uprising in hopes of finding out where her husband is buried. She took to the stage on Friday, pleading with anyone with information to share where her husband may be. Black and white photocopies of a picture of Ray Robinson from 1971 were passed out to guests.
• Buswell-Robinson said she is not looking for arrests or prosecutions. She just wants to know where her husband's body is so she can give him a proper burial.
• But Means expressed anger that AIM, which was founded in the late 1960s to

protest the U.S. government's treatment of American Indians and demand the government honor treaties with tribes, was being associated with Robinson and his disappearance.
• "You people who want to continue to put AIM in this certain pocket of illegality, I can't stand you people. I wish I was a little bit healthier and a little bit younger, because I wouldn't just talk," said Means, who recently recovered from cancer.
• The confrontation came at the final session of the Dakota

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