LAS VEGAS — A federal jury is ready to deliver a verdict in the trial of six men accused of taking up arms against federal agents during the Bundy Ranch standoff in 2014.
The jury is expected to return to the courtroom about 10 a.m. Arizona time.
Jurors began deliberating April 13 after two months of testimony involving 35 prosecution and four defense witnesses.
This is the first of three trials in the most high-profile land-use case in modern Western history, which pit a family of cattle ranchers and states-rights activists against the Bureau of Land Management.
The six men, from Arizona, Idaho and Oklahoma, are among 17 defendants charged with conspiracy, extortion assault and obstruction for helping rancher Cliven Bundy fend off a government round-up of his cattle. If convicted, they could spend the rest of their lives in prison.
For decades, the BLM repeatedly ordered Bundy to remove his cattle from federal lands and in 2014 obtained a court order to seize his cattle as payment for more than $1 million in unpaid grazing fees.
Bundy issued a social-media battle cry. Hundreds of supporters from every state in the union, including members of several militia groups, converged on his ranch about 70 miles north of Las Vegas.
After the BLM abandoned the roundup, the standoff was hailed as a victory by militia members. Cliven Bundy’s sons, Ammon and Ryan Bundy, cited their success at Bundy Ranch in their run-up to the siege of an Oregon wildlife refuge in 2016, also in protest of BLM policies. An Oregon federal jury acquitted Ammon, Ryan and five others in October.
No arrests were made in the Bundy Ranch case until after the Oregon siege ended.
The BLM abandoned the roundup because they were afraid they were going to die, federal prosecutors told the jury. They said law enforcement officers were surrounded and outgunned in a dusty arroyo beneath Interstate 15 where they had penned the cattle.
Local, state and federal law enforcement officers testified they were afraid they would be shot or be drawn into a bloody shooting war with unarmed men, women and children in the crossfire.
Defendants denied they conspired to help Bundy and told jurors the case had nothing to do with cattle. They said they came to protect the public from overzealous and aggressive law enforcement officers.
Defendants said they were moved to join Bundy after seeing internet images of officers throwing an elderly woman to the ground, loosing dogs on one of Bundy’s sons and shocking protesters with a stun guns.
They also said they were inspired to act by the so-called First Amendment zone officers established to cordon off anticipated protesters, which they described as anathema to free speech.
Defense lawyers attempted to cast the case as a constitutional issue and said their clients were exercising their First Amendment right to assemble and Second Amendment right to bear arms.
But U.S. District Court Judge Gloria Navarro would not allow the defense to argue about constitutional protections to the jury.
Navarro also prevented the defense from calling a string of witnesses about what happened in the run-up to the standoff, ruling they could only testify about what happened on the final day of the standoff.
That left lawyers chipping away at the conspiracy charges, which make up the core of the government’s case. They sought to establish the six men acted independently from one another and without coordination from the Bundys.
No information was presented in court to explain what led prosecutors to file charges against the six men out of the hundreds of protesters at the Bundy Ranch. Lawyers said their clients were singled because of comments they made online and in interviews before and after the standoff.
Gregory Burleson of Arizona, Richard Lovelien of Oklahoma and O. Scott Drexler, Todd Engel, Eric Parker and Steven Stewart of Idaho are described as the least culpable of all 17 defendants.
The jury had to work through a complicated set of 37 separate jury instructions to determine the culpability of each defendant.
It had to decide if the defendants were part of a criminal conspiracy that sought to impede and injure federal officers.
It was also asked to determine if the men were guilty of assault and threatening federal officers, carrying or using a firearm in a crime of violence, obstruction of justice, interference of interstate transportation by extortion, interstate in aid of extortion and aiding and abetting.
The second trial against the principal leaders in the standoff, including Cliven, Ammon and Ryan Bundy, could start as early as June. They are being held at a correctional facility in Nevada.
Let’s hope the jury has decided, correctly, that these men need to be freed. This government has become far too heavy-handed in its zeal to pound on the wrong citizens.
The government stands by and hardly ever charges anyone when black lives matter go on a destructive rampage. Still, these charges and trials are about showing the government is the authority, even when violating a citizen’s rights.
Anyone recall the sap jailed for making a movie the government attempted to blame for the attack on the Benghazi Embassy? More of your government’s justice?
“No arrests were made in the Bundy Ranch case until after the Oregon siege ended.”
One less case to ‘prosecute’.
They were probably hoping for MORE corpses.
Well if it was my kangaroo court.
I would find them not guilty of being..
“Not Mormon”.
Bada..ching…
Hey . .what did LDS Joseph Smith say to Jesus that pissed him off so much ?
I don’t either …
But it was a hell of a fist fight.
Bada ching. ..
Hey how many jewish women do arabs have to have sex with before they get killed.
Well according to the lastest article. .about six.
Bada ching.
What’s the difference between Donald Trump and a 20′ inch orange penis.
One of thems is real…
And one of thems doesn’t exist.
Bada ching.
I here the pope has a new sex tape floating around on torrent channels on the internet.
It’s called “Nuns and Boys gone wild”.
Bada ching….
I think Henny Yougman would be proud of me right now.
Is that enough or you want some more.