A small group of armed anti-federalists occupied the headquarters of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Burns, Oregon, on Saturday.
Oregon Public Broadcasting reports that the men were apparently led by Ammon Bundy, the son of Cliven Bundy, who was involved in a highly-publicized standoff with the federal government in Nevada over grazing rights.
The day started off with a protest. Militia members marched in support of Dwight Hammond Jr. and his son, Steven Hammond, two ranchers who were convicted of setting federal lands on fire.
OPB reports that as the sun set most of the hundreds of protesters left Burns but a group stayed to take over the refuge. OPB adds:
"A group of five men bundled in coats and scarves fed sagebrush branches into a campfire. Only Ammon spoke to the media, but a few of the men quietly identified themselves as longtime residents of the Burns area and supporters of the Hammonds.
"Asked how many militia members were at the headquarters, Bundy demurred. 'I will not disclose,' he said. 'Operational security.' ...
"There was no sign of law enforcement near the entrance to the refuge, though an Oregon State Police patrol car idled by the side of the road just outside Burns.
"'We are not hurting anybody or damaging any property. We would expect that they understand that we have given them no reason to use lethal force upon us or any other force,' Bundy said."
On its Facebook page, the Bundy Ranch posted video of Ammon Bundy talking to the press:
Standing for the rights of men & womenBREAKING! SHARE! Standing for the rights of Men & Women. Calling all freedom loving people to come to Harney County Oregon, come to the Malhuer Wildlife Refuge. The people are finally getting some good use out of a federal facility.
Posted by Bundy Ranch on Saturday, January 2, 2016
Bundy said that the men were prepared to "stay as long as it takes." He said he wanted to federal government to end the restrictions it has placed on some federal lands.
"All comfort, all wealth... comes from the Earth and we can not have the government restricting the use of that to the point where it puts us in poverty," Bundy said.
OPB reports that the Hammonds plan to report to jail on Monday. They were sentenced to a year or less in prison in 2012 for arson. But federal prosecutors appealed that sentence saying they should have "received the mandatory minimum sentence of five years in prison for burning federal property."
The government won that appeal in October and the Hammonds were ordered to begin serving the rest of that five-year sentence on Monday.
Harney County Sheriff Dave Ward told The Oregonian that multiple agencies are "currently working on a solution" to the occupation.
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