http://www.oregonlive.com/oregon-standoff/2016/02/cliven_bundy_seeks_court-appoi.html
This may have been posted:
Nevada rancher Cliven D. Bundy asked for a court-appointed attorney as he made his first appearance Thursday in federal court following his arrest the night before at Portland International Airport.
Stick it to the taxpayers again, buddy! (How come he's OK with this federal service?)
http://www.oregonlive.com/oregon-standoff/2016/02/protesters_gone_fbi_agents_in.html
The crime scene starts at the Sod House Lane bridge over a canal, roughly a quarter-mile from the entry into the refuge headquarters. A large front-end loader is still parked, blocking the bridge. The protesters dropped it there sometime the evening of Jan. 26 – hours after Robert "LaVoy" Finicum, 54, was shot and killed while eluding police on a highway roughly 50 miles north of the refuge.
That night, protesters scrambled to provide make-shift roadblocks to stop police who didn't show up.
The front-end loader was part of their hasty defensive moves. Later, protesters would complain that someone lost the key to it, preventing them from moving it out of the way later to make their own easy escape.
Now, the equipment is evidence. FBI technicians will be looking for fingerprints, and there could be future charges of vehicle theft.
http://www.theatlantic.com/national...e-cliven-bundy-oregon-malheur-arrests/462525/
The risks and rewards of the FBI’s strategy remain up for debate. Federal authorities seemed to approach the situation with the goal of not replicating the catastrophes at Waco and Ruby Ridge, where overwhelming force led to many deaths and serious backlash against the federal government. In this case, where the occupiers were specifically alleging an overweening federal government, such a response would have validated that view for many critics. Yet other critics have complained that the hands-off response only emboldened the occupiers. There are calls for thousands more armed “Patriots” to descend on Burns. And after all, it seemed like Cliven Bundy had gotten away with his rebellion in Nevada.
But it turned out the feds hadn’t given up on nabbing Bundy—they were just waiting patiently for the right moment. Whatever the perverse incentives risked by the wait-’em-out approach, it’s hard not to look at the result in Oregon and be impressed: Every occupier gone, the leaders apprehended and in jail, and only one violent death—and that of a man who had declared his intention to die before being arrested, was reaching for a pocket with a gun, and, according to the testimony of another occupier, crying, “Shoot me!” The difference between the FBI’s hesitation and the hasty resort to force by local police departments in dozens of high-profile shootings over the last year couldn’t be clearer, and might provide a model for how more cops should operate.