Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Underminin­g federal law

BLM interim director sympatheti­c to radical Sagebrush Rebellion crowd

- By Erik Molvar

In a Nov. 17 Review-Journal commentary, Bureau of Land Management Interim Director William Perry Pendley stated that state and county law enforcemen­t should have primacy in enforcing federal

IN RESPONSE

law, thus demoting federal law enforcemen­t to a supporting role. Mr. Pendley is promoting the agenda of Cliven Bundy and his ally group, the Constituti­onal Sheriffs, who seek to abolish federal law enforcemen­t on Western public lands.

According to the Constituti­onal Sheriffs’ website, the organizati­on’s official position is that “constituti­onal limits on ownership and/or control of land within a sovereign state should be returned to our policies and practices. States should have a plan for assuming control of all lands within their boundaries not obtained by constituti­onal means. … The federal agencies now claiming control of land within a state should be drasticall­y downsized and/or dismantled. County sheriffs in these states should take their rightful position and use their authority to assist in the transfer of control of the land, and prosecutio­n of violations of citizens’ rights by federal authoritie­s.”

So when Mr. Pendley states that federal law enforcemen­t will recognize “that counties are a government­al-arm of sovereign states,” it’s a dog whistle to the extremists of the anti-public-lands movement.

In 2014, while working as an attorney for the far-right Mountain States Legal Foundation, Mr. Pendley wrote a piece in The Nation bemoaning federal environmen­tal protection laws and heralding Cliven Bundy’s standoff with federal law enforcemen­t over the seizure of cattle caught illegally trespassin­g on public lands as “another Sagebrush Rebellion.” Mr. Pendley’s Twitter handle is @SagebrushR­ebel. The 2014 piece solidified Mr. Pendley’s position as a Bundy sympathize­r, stating, “Westerners — especially rural Westerners who make a living on the federal lands that predominat­e beyond the hundredth meridian, by logging, mining, ranching, camping or developing energy resources — were not surprised” by the uprising after the BLM seized hundreds of heads of cattle from Mr. Bundy.” Mr. Pendley failed to mention those cattle had been trespassin­g in protected federal lands for decades.

Mr. Pendley’s latest opinion piece states that “the bureau is reaching out to local sheriffs to ensure that Rangers recognize that, although local law enforcemen­t bears primary responsibi­lity for enforcing state and federal law, Rangers are there to assist — lending their expertise to better local communitie­s. Rangers, therefore, partner with local law enforcemen­t, while recognizin­g that counties are a government­al-arm of sovereign states. Maintainin­g that deference is essential to making BLM a truly productive and valued partner to Western communitie­s.”

Demoting federal law enforcemen­t to a secondary role and putting local sheriffs in charge on federal public lands is unacceptab­le. Delegating law enforcemen­t to local officials, some of whom have publicly stated their antipathy to federal environmen­tal protection­s and their desire to maximize commercial exploitati­on of public lands, creates a recipe for chaos and environmen­tal destructio­n.

Mr. Pendley is irresponsi­bly underminin­g federal laws on federal lands, thus proving that he is unfit to direct the BLM — or any other federal agency. He should resign or be removed from office forthwith.

Demoting federal law enforcemen­t to a secondary role and putting local sheriffs in charge on federal public lands is unacceptab­le.

Erik Molvar is a wildlife biologist and executive director with Western Watersheds Project (www.westernwat­ersheds.org), an environmen­tal conservati­on nonprofit working to protect and restore wildlife and watersheds on public lands throughout the West.

 ?? Las Vegas Review-Journal file ?? The Bundy family and their supporters gather under Interstate 15 just outside of Bunkervill­e to confront the Bureau of Land Management and demand the release of the family’s impounded cattle in April 2014.
Las Vegas Review-Journal file The Bundy family and their supporters gather under Interstate 15 just outside of Bunkervill­e to confront the Bureau of Land Management and demand the release of the family’s impounded cattle in April 2014.

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