Albuquerque Journal

Two take plea deals in Cliven Bundy standoff

Both could get 6-year sentences

- BY KEN RITTER ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Two defendants became the first on Thursday to plead guilty in Las Vegas to federal charges in an armed confrontat­ion with U.S. officials over grazing rights near cattleman and open-range advocate Cliven Bundy’s ranch.

Gerald “Jerry” DeLemus and Blaine Cooper each admitted conspiring with others who engaged in an armed standoff with federal Bureau of Land Management agents in April 2014 near Bundy’s property, about 80 miles northeast of Las Vegas.

Each also pleaded guilty to another felony in the case.

Both said they weren’t physically present for the standoff. “I was calling people to participat­e,” Cooper told U.S. District Judge Gloria Navarro.

Their plea deals call for sentences of six years in federal prison, although their defense attorneys can seek leniency at sentencing Dec. 1. Each also could be fined up to $500,000 and be subject to up to three years of government supervisio­n after prison.

Cooper, 37, from Humboldt, Ariz., also pleaded guilty to assault on a federal officer.

He told the judge he interfered with the execution of federal court orders by recruiting gunmen to display support for Bundy and sons Ammon, Ryan, Mel and Dave Bundy and stop the roundup of Bundy cattle.

DeLemus, 61, of Rochester, N.H., also pleaded guilty to a felony charge that when he drove cross-country with guns he intended to display “force and aggression” to stop the roundup.

DeLemus, a former U.S. Marine, arrived in Nevada hours after the standoff.

He spent weeks afterward living in a tent and organizing armed patrols near Bundy’s ranch outside Bunkervill­e. He said at the time that the goal was to prevent government agents from returning to harm or arrest Bundy family members, and that if someone pointed a gun at him he would point his gun back.

DeLemus has also been politicall­y active at home in New Hampshire, where his wife, Susan DeLemus, is a Republican state assemblywo­man.

He stopped several times Thursday to talk with his attorney while entering his guilty pleas.

“I don’t know that I threatened anyone,” DeLemus told the judge at one point, “but I made public statements hoping it would end peacefully.”

Prosecutor­s characteri­zed DeLemus and Cooper as “midlevel organizers” and leaders of the conspiracy to prevent federal agents and contract cowboys from rounding up Bundy cattle that federal authoritie­s said were trespassin­g on public land.

“Federal law enforcemen­t officers must be able to engage in their official duties, including executing federal court orders, without fear of assault or losing their lives,” U.S. Attorney Daniel Bogden said in a statement after the pleas.

DeLemus and Cooper became the first among 19 defendants to take plea deals in the Nevada case.

The government agreed to drop nine other felony charges against them.

 ??  ?? DELEMUS: Organized patrols near Bundy ranch
DELEMUS: Organized patrols near Bundy ranch

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