cj Page Sig THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursd®y, September 7,:1' 72 P~ge Six YHE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, September 7, 1972 I I pun released by wiretap ruling By ROSE SUE BERSTEIN ..: Il Rainbow People's Party (RPP) leader Pun Plamondon was re-. leased on $50,000 bond late last June from the federal peniten- tiary in Terre Haute, Ind. The bond was posted by RPP. Prior to a Supreme Court rul- ing eariler that month which struck down the government's practice of wiretapping suspect- ed political "subversives," Pla- mondon had been ineligible f o r release under bond. Plamondon is- one of three per- sons accused of bombing the local CIA office in- August, 1968, but the alleged evidence was ob- tained through what is now an illegal wiretap procedure. Followinghis release, Plamon- don said he plans to help on- going anti-war activities, the Michigan Marijuana Initiative (MMI) and to work for prison- er's rights. RPP sponsored the unsuccess- ful MMI petition drive to place the question of legalizing mari- juana on the November ballot. Plamondon remarked that he "We were never engag- ed in criminal activity. We weer just viciously perse- cuted. Some actual crimin- als we really want to deal with are those who run the correctional institutions." -John Sinclair- R.P.-P. learned in jail that ."prisoners are just like everyone else-just like the people in this room. They're not evil or inhuman.". Since his release, Plamondon said that he has been "smoking a lot of marijuana, meeting a lot of people and pretty well cruising around." When asked why his hair was not long, he replied, "It's by chance. It was cut." And when asked how RPP supports its programs and whe- ther his experience in prison made him more timid or cau- tious politically, another RPP leader, John Sinclair responded. "We have changed the laws we set about to change," he said, referring to the state and local marijuana ordinance and the wiretap decision. "We were never engaged in criminal activity," Sinclair ex- plained. "We Were just viciously persecuted. Some actual crimi- nals we really want to deal with are those who run the correc- tional institutions." "Our record," he continued, "of calling people criminals and then proving our case is pretty good." Plamondon predicted that de- spite the court ruling there would not be less wiretapping now. But, he said, "their uphold- ing the Fourth Amendment is gratifying." "Justice only comes," added Genie Plamondon, an RPP lead- er, "when large groups of peo- ple force it." "There ain't any justice in this place," a d d e d Sinclair. "People on the streets know that. There are criminals," he said-speaking about the Nixon administration and large cor- porate interests like ITT-and "we're critizens." Plamondon said he hoped his case would come to trial so that he "could win in court." With- out the wiretap evidence, the prosecution's case would rest upon the testimony of David Valler, a government informer. .ada ' oua YPSILANTI for FINE ITALIAN AND AMERICAN FOOD COCTAIL LOUNGE AND ENTERTAINMENT NOW APPEARING: WYNN & JOHN 483.3027 Carry Out Service on Entire Menu 11 W. MICHIGAN AVE. YPSILANTI J I I I ;, ime