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		Two plead guilty in 2014 armed standoff 
		at Bundy ranch in Nevada 
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		 [August 27, 2016] 
		By David Ingram 
 (Reuters) - Two men charged along with 
		rancher Cliven Bundy in an armed standoff with federal agents in Nevada 
		in 2014 have pleaded guilty, the first time any of the 19 defendants has 
		agreed to forgo trial and admit wrongdoing.
 
 Jerry DeLemus, 61, and Blaine Cooper, 36, pleaded guilty during separate 
		hearings on Thursday in federal court in Las Vegas, according to court 
		records and a statement from prosecutors.
 
 The standoff, which began when federal agents seized cattle at Bundy's 
		ranch over unpaid grazing fees, came to symbolize opposition to federal 
		management of public lands in the American West.
 
 DeLemus, a prominent conservative activist from Rochester, N.H., pleaded 
		guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit an offense against the 
		United States and one count of interstate travel in aid of extortion.
 
 In April 2014, he traveled to Nevada with firearms and other gunmen, 
		providing security for Bundy and organizing patrols, prosecutors said.
 
		
		 
		Cooper, of Humboldt, Ariz., pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to 
		commit an offense against the United States and one count of assault on 
		a federal officer.
 He helped Bundy to thwart federal agents, including when at least one 
		unidentified member of Bundy's group brandished a firearm, prosecutors 
		said.
 
 DeLemus and Cooper are scheduled for sentencing on Dec. 1. Under plea 
		agreements filed in court, prosecutors plan to ask that they be given 
		prison terms of six years.
 
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			Protesters gather at the Bureau of Land Management's base camp, 
			where cattle that were seized from rancher Cliven Bundy are being 
			held, near Bunkerville, Nevada April 12, 2014. REUTERS/Jim Urquhart 
            
			 
			A trial for the remaining 17 defendants, including Bundy, is 
			scheduled to begin in February. They have pleaded not guilty.
 Cooper will not testify against the others at trial, his lawyer 
			Matthew Lay said. Lay declined further comment.
 
 A lawyer for DeLemus could not immediately be reached for comment on 
			Friday.
 
 In March, DeLemus was named an alternate delegate for businessman 
			Donald Trump at the Republican national convention. He was co-chair 
			of a New Hampshire Veterans for Trump coalition.
 
 (Reporting by David Ingram; Editing by James Dalgleish)
 
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