Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lawyers open Bunkervill­e retrial

New jurors hear outline of old argument: Coordinate­d assault or mass protest?

- By Jenny Wilson Las Vegas Review-journal

Prosecutor­s and defense attorneys gave opening statements Monday in the retrial against four Bunkervill­e standoff defendants, and presented a new batch of jurors with a question that has hung over the federal courthouse all year.

Was the 2014 armed standoff in Bunkervill­e the result of a coordinate­d assault or a mass protest?

The jury heard arguments to support both scenarios when lawyers spoke Monday in front of a packed These four defendants … got on a bridge, armed with semiautoma­tic rifles, and threatened to shoot law enforcemen­t officers who stood below them in a wash. federal courtroom in which Eric Parker, Steven Stewart, Scott Drexler and Ricky Lovelien are being retried. A mistrial was declared in April after the first jury deadlocked on all counts against those four men.

“These four defendants … got on a bridge, armed with semi-automatic rifles, and threatened to shoot law enforcemen­t officers who stood below them in a wash,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Steven Myhre, who gave the government’s opening statement.

Myhre said the four men traveled to Bunkervill­e to join rancher Cliven Bundy’s conspiracy to thwart the federal government’s roundup of roughly 1,000 cows from public land. The cattle impoundmen­t operation followed a decadeslon­g dispute over grazing rights that pitted the recalprese­nting

BUNKERVILL­E

citrant rancher against the Bureau of Land Management. Both sides on Monday characteri­zed the grazing dispute as peripheral to this trial.

“This case is about standing up for what you believe in. Nothing more, nothing less,” countered defense attorney Richard Tanasi, who represents Stewart. “A group of individual­s protesting the U.S. government.”

The defense openings represente­d a condensed version of the statements they gave in February, at the onset of the first trial.

The abbreviate­d defense openings were the result of recent ruling that limited what defense lawyers can argue at trial. The ruling, by U.S. District Judge Gloria Navarro, bars the defense from referencin­g constituti­onal rights to freely assemble and to bear arms. It also prohibits mention of alleged misconduct or excessive force by law enforcemen­t.

Those arguments represente­d the core of the defense case in the first trial, as lawyers said their clients came to Bunkervill­e after viewing online postings that depicted law enforcemen­t officers using stun guns and police dogs to control angry protesters in the days that preceded the standoff.

Myhre, the lead prosecutor, gave a lengthy opening statement, providing a detailed timeline of the day’s events as he displayed pictures captured of each defendant during the standoff.

The defendants are charged as the “gunmen,” accused of supplying the force behind Bundy’s armed stand against the federal government. On April 12, 2014, each of them was photograph­ed holding a gun on the highway bridge that overlooks the Toquop Wash — a sandy ditch that served as the headquarte­rs for the cattle impoundmen­t operation. The law enforcemen­t officers were “on the low ground, exposed, with no natural cover or concealmen­t,” Myhre said.

“Ask yourself whether the evidence is consistent with anything else but using threat or force to get your way,” Myhre told the jurors. He said the men used “the working end of a rifle barrel” to bend the law to their will.

Parker and Drexler both were photograph­ed in the prone position, pointing their guns through a crack in the Jersey barrier of the highway bridge. During the government’s opening, Myhre hinted that he intends to call new law enforcemen­t witnesses to testify that they saw the men with their weapons raised. In the first trial, defense attorneys argued to the jury that the government did not prove assault because it could not prove that any of the law enforcemen­t officers stationed in the wash saw Drexler and Parker with their weapons raised.

“Not a shot was fired, not a bottle was thrown, not a rock was thrown,” said defense attorney Shawn Perez, who represents Lovelien. “Nobody was injured, and everyone went home.”

The men are charged with conspiracy, extortion, threats, assault, obstructio­n of justice and weapons counts. If convicted of all counts, they face a mandatory minimum sentence of 57 years in prison.

Contact Jenny Wilson at jenwilson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-384-8710. Follow @jennydwils­on on Twitter.

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