Opening statements to begin in Oregon
refuge takeover case
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[September 13, 2016]
PORTLAND, Ore. (Reuters) - Armed
protesters at a federal wildlife refuge in Oregon were exercising their
rights to freedom of speech and assembly in a bid to expose the U.S.
government's illegal ownership and mismanagement of public lands in the
West, lawyers for the defendants are expected to argue at trial on
Tuesday.
Opening arguments are set for the morning at a federal courthouse in
Portland, Oregon in the case of ranchers Ammon and Ryan Bundy and five
other limited-government activists who led an armed 41-day takeover of
the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge earlier this year.
The seven defendants are charged with conspiracy to impede federal
officers, possession of firearms in a federal facility, and theft of
government property. A jury was seated last week.
The takeover at Malheur was the latest flare-up in a decades-old
conflict over federal control of millions of acres of public land in the
West.
The Bundy brothers have been at the forefront of that movement and stood
by their father, Cliven Bundy, at his Nevada ranch in a 2014 armed
standoff with authorities over enforcement of federal grazing rights.
The Bundys began the Oregon standoff on Jan. 2 with at least a dozen
armed men, sparked in part by the return to prison of two Oregon
ranchers, Dwight Hammond Jr. and Steven Hammond, who set fires that
spread to federal property near the refuge.
A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney declined to comment on the trial.
Lawyers for the Bundys and other defendants said they will argue, among
other things, that the peaceful demonstration was an effort to draw
attention to federal government overreach, and illegal control and
mismanagement of public lands.
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"The government has been squatting on this land for years, illegally
and contrary to how (the U.S.) Congress intended," Marcus Mumford,
an attorney for Ammon Bundy, said in a telephone interview on
Monday.
Matthew Schindler, a lawyer for Kenneth Medenbach, charged with
theft of a government-owned Ford F-350 truck, said: "Federal control
of public lands in the West is destroying the rural way of life, and
that is what my client and others were trying to draw attention to."
More than two dozen people have been charged in connection with the
takeover, and a second group of defendants are scheduled to go on
trial in February.
The conspiracy charge carries a maximum of six years in prison, a
year more than the firearms charge, while the property theft charge
carries a maximum of 10 years in prison, the U.S. Attorney's Office
said.
(Reporting by Courtney Sherwood in Portland, Oregon; Writing and
additional reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle)
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