Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trump pardons ranchers

President sets aside arson conviction­s for pair of Hammonds.

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

President Donald Trump on Tuesday pardoned father-and-son cattle ranchers in southeaste­rn Oregon who were sentenced to serve prison time on two separate occasions for the same charges of arson on public lands, a move their supporters hailed as a shift in how the federal government approaches the West.

Trump’s decision to set aside the conviction­s of Dwight Hammond Jr. and Steven Hammond could have major implicatio­ns for how federal officials enforce rules on grazing and other activities on tens of millions of acres owned by taxpayers. The two men’s return to prison helped spark the 41-day occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in early 2016. Robert “LaVoy” Finicum, a rancher who acted as the protesters’ spokesman, was killed by a state trooper during an encounter between the armed occupation group and law enforcemen­t — a shooting that led to charges against an FBI special agent.

In a statement, White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said an “overzealou­s appeal” of the Hammonds’ original sentences during President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, which sent them back to prison, was “unjust.”

“The Hammonds are devoted family men, respected contributo­rs to their local community, and have widespread support from their neighbors, local law enforcemen­t, and farmers and ranchers across the West,” Sanders said, adding: “Justice is overdue.”

The Hammonds were convicted of crimes that require a mandatory minimum sentence of five years in prison under the Antiterror­ism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996. A judge, however, initially gave Dwight Hammond three months and his son Steven Hammond a year and a day behind bars.

The government won an appeal over the Hammonds’ sentences in 2015, and the two men were resentence­d to serve out the remaining years of a five-year minimum.

Their conviction­s have drawn sharp rebukes from the community amid allegation­s that the family was aggressive­ly prosecuted using anti-terrorism statutes because they were outspoken about public land use in rural Oregon.

Jerome Rosa, president of the Oregon Cattlemen’s Associatio­n, said in an interview Tuesday that the pardons “send a signal that the new administra­tion really understand­s the significan­ce and the importance of what the ranching community provides for these Western landscapes.”

Rosa had raised the Hammonds’ case with Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke — who oversees the Bureau of Land Management, on whose land the Hammonds operate — in April, and Zinke “said he would give his blessing to the president.”

Land Tawney, president of Backcountr­y Hunters & Anglers, said in an interview that while it is understand­able that the ranchers’ supporters were anxious for them to be released, the fact that Trump pardoned them outright rather than commuted their sentences “sends a message of tolerance for lawbreaker­s who could diminish our public lands and waters.

“You are just empowering and emboldenin­g those who disrespect the people who are there to manage these lands for all the people of America,” Tawney said, predicting that the decision “will send shock waves up the ranks of the BLM.”

In her statement, Sanders characteri­zed the arson as “a fire that leaked onto a small portion of neighborin­g public grazing land.” She noted that Dwight Hammond is 76 and has served about three years in prison and that Steven Hammond is 49 and has served about four years.

The two fires for which the Hammonds were convicted took place five years apart. The first one occurred in 2001, when, according to the Justice Department, witnesses told a jury that Steven Hammond “handed out ‘Strike Anywhere’ matches because they were going to ‘light up the whole country on fire.’” The second fire was five years later, and the men said it was a prescribed burn — lit in the midst of a burn ban and without permission from the bureau — that spread out of control.

Jamie Rappaport Clark, president of the group Defenders of Wildlife, noted that the Hammonds were convicted of arson, a serious crime.

“Whatever prompted President Trump to pardon them, we hope that it is not seen as an encouragem­ent to those who might use violence to seize federal property and threaten federal employees in the West,” Clark said.

Republican U.S. Rep. Greg Walden of Oregon, who lobbied the White House for the pardon of the Hammonds, said Trump’s decision was “a win for justice, and an acknowledg­ement of our unique way of life in the high desert, rural West.”

The dozens of armed people who occupied the refuge near the Hammond ranch for 41 days said the Hammonds were victims of federal overreach. They changed the refuge’s name to the Harney County Resource Center, reflecting their belief that the federal government has only a limited right to own property within a state.

Cliven Bundy, whose sons were leaders of the occupation, said he was glad Trump pardoned the Hammonds.

“Finally, an elected official did something,” Bundy said. “He can’t give them back their life. They’re going to go back to ranching and put their lives together the best they can.”

Bundy and his sons Ammon and Ryan faced trial after an armed standoff at their Nevada ranch in 2014 that was sparked by land-grazing fees. A federal judge in January dismissed the charges against them.

The brothers and five other defendants were acquitted in 2016 by a federal court jury in Portland on charges stemming from the takeover.

The Hammonds were being held at a federal lockup south of Los Angeles. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear when they’d be released.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by John Wagner, Juliet Eilperin, Mark Berman and Leah Sottile of The Washington Post; and by Andrew Selsky, Jill Colvin and Zeke Miller of The Associated Press.

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 ?? AP File Photo ?? Rancher Dwight Hammond Jr. greets protesters Jan. 2, 2016, outside his home in Burns, Ore.
AP File Photo Rancher Dwight Hammond Jr. greets protesters Jan. 2, 2016, outside his home in Burns, Ore.

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