indianz.com Dynamic Homes
Advertise on Indianz.Com
Home Whats New on Indianz.Com? News Forums
  About
Home > News > Headlines
Print   Subscribe
Opinion: Judge heard early Native murder case
Friday, June 26, 2009
Filed Under: Opinion

"During the summer of 1912, President William Howard Taft appointed Frederick E. Fuller of Nome federal judge for Interior Alaska, headquarters Fairbanks. Fuller, a 44-year-old former Pennsylvanian, immediately faced a difficult trial: A murder case scheduled for September in Iditarod.

The charge was sensational. Joseph Campbell, a 34 year-old woodcutter and laborer, had been arrested for murdering the Nelson brothers, miners John and Gus, on an island in the Kuskokwim River, near the mouth of the Tuluksak River. In June 1911, the two men, both about 40, had been shot, robbed and buried in a shallow grave.

There were no eye witnesses. But Natives fishing nearby heard shots and screams. They also saw a man they identified as Campbell on the island.

The brothers' bodies were located by their younger brother, Nels, in March 1912 after rumors about the shooting rippled through the Native community to his home on Norton Sound. Nels showed the bodies to a deputy marshal, and the deputy telegraphed Commissioner Edward Stier of Georgetown, 190 miles up the Kuskokwim.

Stier assembled a coroner's jury to conduct an inquest at the grave site. It took a week to reach the site by dog team.

Stier later wrote that he had to bring his six-man jury with him because "I could not get a jury of six white men on the Kuskokwim River below Georgetown." He also had to bring an interpreter for the Native witnesses, a man known as Waska The First, one of many Waskas in the region. "

Get the Story:
Michael Carey: Early Alaska judge sided with Native witnesses (The Anchorage Daily News 6/26)



Copyright © Indianz.Com
More headlines...
Indianz.Com Casino Stalker (11/23)
Federal Recognition Database 2.0 (11/23)
In The Hoop Column (11/23)
Indian Gaming News (11/23)
The Federal Register (11/23)
Tim Giago: Open dialogue on America's dirty secret (11/23)
House Resources hearing on Indian Arts and Crafts (11/23)
CNN: Wind River teens died of methadone overdose (11/23)
Mark Trahant: Health reform boosts Indian Country (11/23)
Jodi Rave: Climate change and indigenous peoples (11/23)
Employment: Supervisor at Graton Rancheria TANF (11/23)
Employment: Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe doctor (11/23)
Employment: Creek Nation's request for proposal (11/23)
Employment: Head Start fiscal content specialist (11/23)
Editorial: Obama offers hope at first tribal summit (11/23)
Troy Eid: US Attorney tramples tribal sovereignty (11/23)
Tom Iron: A tribal backer of 'Fighting Sioux' name (11/23)
Senate moves forward with health reform debate (11/23)
Little Traverse Band looking to diversify economy (11/23)
Northwestern Band suspends business executives (11/23)
Column: Struggle continues 40 years after Alcatraz (11/23)
Opinion: Moral outrage over use of Indian mascots (11/23)
Connecticut tribes face tough times at big casinos (11/23)
St. Regis Mohawk Tribe split on off-reservation bid (11/23)
Coeur d'Alene casino donates 300 holiday turkeys (11/23)
Soboba casino opponents indicted over corruption (11/23)
Marketwatch: Online gambling law goes into effect (11/23)
ESPN: 'Rez ball' a source of pride in Indian Country (11/20)
more headlines...
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
Blue Earth Marketing - Hire Us Today!

Home | Abramoff | Arts & Entertainment | Business | Canada | Cobell | Education | Environment | Forum | Health | Humor | Indian Gaming | Jobs | Law | National | News | Opinion | Politics | Recognition | Red Lake | Sports | Trust

Suggest a Site

Indianz.Com Terms of Service | Indianz.Com Privacy Policy
About Indianz.Com | Contribute to Indianz.Com | Advertise on Indianz.Com | Write to Indianz.Com

Indianz.Com is a product of Noble Savage Media, LLC and Ho-Chunk, Inc.