Judge dismisses case against Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy and his sons
It
started four years ago, when Cliven Bundy and his sons refused to pay
federal grazing fees and stared down government agents in an armed
standoff outside their Nevada ranch.
The Bundys dared the federal government to arrest them. The government did, charging them with a range of felonies.
On Monday, a federal judge in Las Vegas set them free.
The
decision left federal prosecutors swallowing another defeat at the
hands of a family whose defiance has become a rallying cry for
Westerners who believe the federal government has no business managing
public land. Four times now — in high-profile cases in Nevada and Oregon
— the Bundy family and its allies have beaten the federal government in
court.
At
least 100 Bundy backers filled the courtroom Monday. Some wore shirts
with American flag motifs. Others carried pocket Constitutions in their
button-down shirts. More than a few wore cowboy boots.
Their
heroes sat looking up at U.S. District Judge Gloria Navarro. Cliven
Bundy, 71, wore a jailhouse jumpsuit. His son Ryan, 44, who led a large
group of supporters in prayer before entering the courtroom, removed his
cowboy hat. Another son, Ammon, 42, and a militia member, Ryan Payne,
barely moved.
It was their moment.
Navarro
rebuked federal prosecutors — using the words "flagrant" and "reckless"
to describe how they withheld evidence from the defense — before saying
"that the universal sense of justice has been violated" and dismissing
the charges.
Supporters dabbed their eyes with tissues. Outside in the hall, there were cheers.
The
four defendants were charged with threatening a federal officer,
carrying and using a firearm, and engaging in conspiracy. The case had
once looked like a slam-dunk to some.
The
images that had made the Bundys heroes to some — armed supporters
facing down federal agents as contractors with the U.S. Bureau of Land
Management tried to seize cattle — seemed to be compelling evidence.
Monday's
dismissal was hinted at last month when Navarro ordered a mistrial. But
she offered prosecutors a chance to make their case for why she should
grant another trial.
Assistant
U.S. Atty. Steven Myhre wrote in his brief that the government had
shared 1.5 terabytes of information with defendants and noted that it
was "by far the largest review and disclosure operation in this [U.S.
attorney's office] history."
Myrhe
also argued the government needed to protect some witnesses from leaks
that might lead to threats, so it "culled the database with witness
protection in mind."
"Unprecedented
database volume and witness concerns aside, the government never let
these obstacles stand in the way of diligently working to fulfill its
discovery obligations," he wrote.
Navarro
didn't buy it and shredded the government for a "reckless disregard for
Constitutional obligations." She said she was troubled by the
prosecution's tardiness in delivering information about the government's
placing of surveillance cameras and snipers outside the ranch.
After the decision, Cliven Bundy emerged from an elevator at the courthouse dressed in jeans, button-down shirt and gray blazer.
"I'm
not used to being free, put it that way," he said. "I've been a
political prisoner for right at 700 days today. I come into this
courtroom an innocent man and I'm going to leave as an innocent man."
He
also seemed ready to resume his role as a leader on the issue of local
control of federal land. It's a decades-long fight for Bundy, who first
tussled with the Bureau of Land Management in the 1990s by refusing to
pay grazing fees for his cattle using federal land.
As
he and his wife, Carol, walked out into a spitting rain, hundreds of
supporters cheered. A "Not Guilty" sticker had been stuck to his lapel.
The rancher took off his hat and waved it to the crowd before posing for
pictures.
He criticized Clark County commissioners, the Clark County sheriff and Nevada's governor for not coming to his defense.
"My
defense is a 15-second defense: I graze my cattle only on Clark County,
Nev., land and I have no contract with the federal government," he
said. "This court has no jurisdiction or authority over this matter. And
I've put up with this court in America as a political prisoner for two
years."
His
attorney, Bret Whipple, said there would be a news conference Tuesday
in front of Las Vegas police headquarters to talk about control of
public land.
U.S.
Atty. Dayle Elieson of Nevada, who was appointed by Atty. Gen. Jeff
Sessions last week, released a short statement after the decision. "We
respect the court's ruling and will make a determination about the next
appropriate steps."
Ian
Bartrum, a law professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said
that while the court decision was a defeat for the Justice Department,
it could be seen as a victory for Trump administration policy to shrink
national monuments and push for local control of federal land.
"Most
of Trump's base are Bundy supporters," Bartrum said in an email. "This
plays right into the larger Trump narrative about the Swamp versus the
People. I think you might be right to say they aren't that unhappy … and
will likely make some political hay out of it."
Advocates for federal enforcement of land regulations were quick to criticize the government's handling of the case.
"Federal
prosecutors clearly bungled this case and let the Bundys get away with
breaking the law," Kieran Suckling, executive director of the Center for
Biological Diversity, said in a statement. "The Bundys rallied a
militia to mount an armed insurrection against the government. The
failure of this case will only embolden this violent and racist
anti-government movement that wants to take over our public lands."
Twice
last year, Las Vegas juries acquitted or deadlocked on felony charges
against Bundy supporters. Then Ammon and Ryan Bundy each beat federal
felony charges in a case stemming from a 41-day standoff in 2016 at an
Oregon wildlife preserve
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