Chattanooga Times Free Press

Standoff case dismissed

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LAS VEGAS — A judge in Las Vegas on Monday dismissed criminal charges against a Nevada rancher and his sons accused of leading an armed uprising against federal authoritie­s in 2014.

Chief U.S. District Judge Gloria Navarro signaled when she declared a mistrial last month she might dismiss the case outright against 71-year-old Cliven Bundy, sons Ryan and Ammon Bundy and Montana militia leader Ryan Payne.

The judge severely criticized prosecutor­s for willfully violating the due process rights of the defendants, including failing to turn over evidence properly to their lawyer.

But she gave the government a chance to submit written documents opposing dismissal of all charges.

The decision is sure to reverberat­e among states’ rights advocates in the Western U.S., where the federal government controls vast land some people want to protect and others want to use for grazing, mining and oil and gas drilling.

The tense armed standoff outside Bunkervill­e, about

80 miles northeast of Las Vegas, stopped a federal Bureau of Land Management roundup of Bundy cattle from public land including what is now Gold Butte National Monument.

Several gunmen among the protesters who had assault-style rifles were acquitted of criminal charges in two trials last year.

Ryan and Ammon Bundy also were acquitted of federal criminal charges in Oregon after leading an armed occupation of a national wildlife refuge in early 2016 to demand the government turn over public land to local control.

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