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Banks said there was no formal AIM investigation into the disappearance of Robinson or anyone else during Wounded Knee. "We never conducted any, like, major search for anybody that was missing, just except by word of mouth, `Did you guys ever see this or that?' That's as far as I know and that's as far as it went," he said. Clyde Bellecourt, another AIM co-founder, said he wasn't in Wounded Knee in April 1973. He left a month or so earlier to form the Wounded Knee Legal Defense-Offense Committee and act as AIM's spokesman. "I've heard some rumors about this Robinson thing, but supposedly that happened a long time after I was gone, if anything did happen," he said. "Nobody's ever talked to me about it implicating anybody or even said it's happened." Perry Ray Robinson Jr. was born Sept. 12, 1937. He was in Washington in 1963 for Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have A Dream" speech, and attended the 1964 funeral of three white civil rights workers killed in Mississippi. In 1968, Robinson was among the protesters who set up Resurrection City, a camp at the Washington Mall. Robinson likely was at Wounded Knee for just a day, but Buswell-Robinson is surprised so many AIM members don't remember him. The personable 6-foot-2 black man with a deep baritone voice would have stood out on a Midwest American Indian reservation, she said.
Robinson's nonviolent approach probably was not well received at what was a violent situation, and it's possible AIM members incorrectly suspected he was a federal informant, Buswell-Robinson said. It's also likely he dealt with some racism, she said. "I'm hoping that AIM people can look in their hearts and realize this was a good man. This is a brother," Buswell-Robinson said. "This is a man that was willing to give his life for justice for what's right." She said she traveled to the conference from her current home in Detroit because she'd like to talk to AIM leaders, anyone who was at Wounded Knee and the two women who ran the clinic where Robinson may have been taken. At the least, she wants to get the Wounded Knee record corrected so it acknowledges her husband's presence. "Maybe that's the best I can hope for, that in the official record Ray's name won't be excluded," Buswell-Robinson said. "Because right now, it's like he never existed."
[Associated
Press;
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