Eco-Radical Activists

The Blockader Profile of Kirby Muldoe

Last page edit: November 15, 2025

Kirby Muldoe is SkeenaWild’s Director of Community Relations and Partnerships. He is a child of mixed aboriginal blood, half Tsimsian and Gitxsan. These people who put protesting ahead of historical and traditional laws are all to often so quick at forgetting who they are. Kirby Muldoe’s mother is Isabell Muldoe originally from Kitkatla, Tsimsian people. Both Tsimsian and Gitxsan are matrilineal systems, so by traditional law, Kirby Muldoe is Tsimsian and not Gitxsan.

As the saying goes, the devil is in the details. Kirby Muldoe’s father is George Muldoe, Gitxsan chief Delgamuukw (George Muldoe) who died May 8, 2025. George Muldoe inherited the name from his brother Earl Muldo, who held the name during the historic Gitxsan and Witsuwit’in court case that saw the two Nations fight for their rights all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada. Earl Muldo died in 2022 and the name Delgamuukw passed on to his younger brother George. Here is why all of this is so relevant. Under traditional law Kirby Muldoe is Tsimsian and not Gitxsan, thus he cannot inherit the name Delgamuukw. But there is so much more.

Its amazing how they forget that “Chief Delgamuukw” they love to quote as part of the Supreme Court Decision, also was the man who signed an agreement to approve the PRGT Pipeline. Oh but do not be fooled, he knows, he just does not want you to know, or it blows his story right out of the water. They need to sell you on the victim story and play it like a well tuned harp, while lining their own pockets with American cash.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kirby Muldoe was one of the primary MC hosts in the second event in Gitanmaax , he is connected to the The Raven Network, Skeenawild Conservation Trust, also known for his role in “Kirby Muldoe and a few others distributed 700 T-shirts with the words “Wet’suwet’en Strong” in opposition to the Costal Gaslink Pipeline on Wet’suwet’en territory, showing he does not honor the non interference agreements between aboriginal nations. It never been about aboriginal, its always been about paid to protest.

 


 

 

 

 

Kirby Muldoe spent most of his life hiding from Earl Muldo’s legacy.

Why?  Because he and most of the leading Gitxsan Chiefs  signed a document called “Trustee Resolution of the Amdimxxw Trust,” dated Sept. 6, 2016. This document lists the chief names next to dollar amounts, dividing a total of more than $5.3 million between them.

 

The following is an excerpt from another website. Feel free to read the entire article dated from 2022.

 

One document, the “Prince Rupert Gas Transmission Project Natural Gas Benefits Agreement,” says the B.C. government will provide the Gitxsan Nation with nearly $6 million at various stages of construction in exchange for the nation’s support of the project. The other document, the “Trustee Resolution of the Amdimxxw Trust,” states how much each individual chief who signed on is distributed.

Sebastian’s share? More than $500,000. But that money, he says, is for all Luutkudziiwus wilp members.

Three other chiefs (Mauus, Wosimlaxha, Gyet’mgaldo’o) whose territories are close to where the pipeline would cross also accepted money in exchange for their support of the project.
Three other chiefs (Mauus, Wosimlaxha, Gyet’mgaldo’o) whose territories are close to where the pipeline would cross also accepted money in exchange for their support of the project.

“If we divided the funding up per person, each person would be entitled to about $1,100. So I asked each members that I speak to, ‘Do you want that? Or do you want to keep it together so we can invest or do something valuable?’ And they would rather keep it in an account until we all decide how to disburse the money,” he says.

However, some Luutkudziiwus wilp members are upset Sebastian didn’t consult with them before signing on their behalf.

The leaked agreements were left on the doorstep of Richard Wright’s sister Pansy Wright-Simms, who is also a Luutkudziiwus member. She immediately uploaded photos of the documents to Facebook, sparking over 100 comments and shares from people expressing shock and disapproval.

Luutkudziiwus wilp member Pansy Wright-Simms (second from right) stands with other Gitxsan people dressed in traditional regalia at the Ksan Campground near the village of Gitanmaax. Nikita Campbell
Luutkudziiwus wilp member Pansy Wright-Simms (second from right) stands with other Gitxsan people dressed in traditional regalia at the Ksan Campground near the village of Gitanmaax.

“The information was just mindblowing to me,” Wright-Simms says. “People were clearly upset that nine individuals could speak on behalf of our entire nation.

“We clearly haven’t consented to this.”

Shortly after the documents were leaked, the chiefs who signed the agreement released an information package to members. It outlines the benefits of the agreement and explains how the chiefs came to their decision. It describes a four-year process that included more than 45 meetings with PRGT, the provincial government, industry experts, and those opposed to the project.

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

The maximum upload file size: 256 MB. You can upload: image, audio, video, document, spreadsheet, interactive, text, archive, code, other. Links to YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and other services inserted in the comment text will be automatically embedded. Drop file here