The Arizona Republic

Ammon Bundy resurfaces online after leaving Idaho

- Jimmy Jenkins Republic reporter Robert Anglen contribute­d to this story.

An anti-government militant leader with Arizona ties who was ordered to pay millions in a defamation lawsuit recently resurfaced on social media after going into hiding.

Right-wing extremist Ammon Bundy, in a Dec. 28 post on X, formerly Twitter, said he was driven out of his home in Idaho and has lost millions of dollars because of the lawsuit. In a video posted a week earlier, Bundy spoke of leaving Idaho.

In July, a jury awarded St. Luke’s Health System and other plaintiffs more than $50 million after a trial in which Bundy was accused of leading a liefueled intimidati­on campaign against the health system and its employees. Bundy, an associate, and several affiliated organizati­ons are responsibl­e for the financial damages, according to the Idaho Statesman.

The Atlantic, in late November, reported Bundy had abandoned his home in Idaho. He faces contempt-ofcourt charges stemming from the defamation case, and the plaintiffs have sought to recover the money they were

awarded.

The Atlantic reported Bundy may be living in southern Utah.

Bundy, who once lived in Laveen and Maricopa and ran a business in Tempe, gained prominence in 2014 after staging an armed protest to stop federal agents from seizing cattle owned by his father, Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy.

In 2016, Bundy led a heavily armed protest of Bureau of Land Management policies at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Oregon.

That siege culminated in the death of militia member LaVoy Finicum, who had traveled from Arizona to join Bundy and was shot by authoritie­s.

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