On November 10, 1972, the Oglala Sioux Tribal Council passed several resolutions following the
Bureau of Indian Affairs building takeover in Washington, DC by members of the
American Indian Movement (AIM), after their
march across the US. One resolution criticized AIM for the destruction of records during the building takeover, as this adversely affected many Native American tribes by the loss of land, leasing, and other financial records. Another resolution authorized the elected tribal president,
Dick Wilson, "to take whatever action that he felt would be necessary to protect the lives and property and to insure the peace and dignity of the
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation" of the Oglala Sioux. Wilson soon used this authority to create a new private police force, which critics called "the goon squad", from its acronym. Although both "
goon" and "
goon squad" were both terms used in the United States to describe hired thugs,
mercenaries, or employees of
security companies since at least the 1930s, it is unknown if the organization's name is an intentional
backronym. The GOONs were financed through the tribal government. In his 1991 book about the tribe and reservation, author
Peter Matthiessen alleges that funding was derived through misappropriation of a federal highway safety program. GOONs soon were accused of intimidation of, and violence against, Wilson's political opponents. ==Role during the Wounded Knee Incident==