Published on Oct 27, 2016
Not guilty: Ammon Bundy, Ryan Bundy, Shawna Cox, David Fry, Ken Medenbach, Jeff Banta, Neil Wampler
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YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/prepare333
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/redpill333
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/morphonios
FAIR USE NOTICE: This video may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes only. This constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 106A-117 of the U.S. Copyright Law.
Published on Oct 27, 2016
YES !!!!!!!! THANK YOU ALL SO MUCH !! THANK YOU SO MUCH KELLI JOHN AND DORY + ALL THE SUPPORTERS THESE PAST 10 MONTHS !!
NOT GUILTY!! Bundy Trial Patriot Corner CELEBRATION! RIP LaVoy Finicum !Thursday Update!
Published on Oct 27, 2016
NOT GUILTY !! Shawna Cox also describes attack on attorney when he asks for Ammon and Ryan to walk free.
Published on Oct 27, 2016
Ammon Bundy's attorney Marcus Mumford talks about what led up to his being tazed.
Published on Oct 27, 2016
Ammon Bundy's attorney Morgan Philpot reacts to the not guilty verdict and the tasing incident in the courtroom of attorney Marcus Mumford.
David Fry has been released at this time. Hope they can get an interview of the US Marshalls criminal behavior towards a FREE Citizen of USA< why chain him up then beat him? Unless pure evil they are>
Sarah Redd-Buck
UPDATE: Marcus Mumford has been released from custody. His charges were not dropped. He was charged with disorderly conduct and resisting a lawful command.
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BREAKING: Ammon's attorney Marcus Mumford has been arrested by the US Marshals. His charges are resisting arrest. It will be a federal charge. Share EVERYWHERE!! This needs to be heard around the world!
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BREAKING: Ammon's attorney Marcus Mumford has been arrested by the US Marshals. His charges are resisting arrest. It will be a federal charge. Share EVERYWHERE!! This needs to be heard around the world!
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All he did was ask the judge for proof or documents that Ammon still needed to be detained. The judge even told the US Marshals to back away from Mumford and the US Marshals ignored the judge and tazed and jumped on top of Mumford.
David Fry, a NOT GUILTY free man was beat up by the Marshals, forced into chains and handcuffs and escorted out of the courtroom. He did absolutely nothing to deserve it according to Ammon!
The jury was not allowed in the room when the verdict was read so they were not witness to any of it.
AMERICANS SHOULD BE OUTRAGED RIGHT NOW.
Update:
David Fry, a NOT GUILTY free man was beat up by the Marshals, forced into chains and handcuffs and escorted out of the courtroom. He did absolutely nothing to deserve it according to Ammon!
The jury was not allowed in the room when the verdict was read so they were not witness to any of it.
AMERICANS SHOULD BE OUTRAGED RIGHT NOW.
Update:
David Fry has been released at this time. Hope they can get an interview of the US Marshalls criminal behavior towards a FREE Citizen of USA< why chain him up then beat him? Unless pure evil they are>
The Oregonian
Jury acquits leaders of Oregon standoff of federal charges
PORTLAND, Ore. – The leaders of an armed group who seized a national wildlife refuge in rural Oregon were acquitted Thursday in the 41-day standoff that brought new attention to a long-running dispute over control of federal lands in the U.S. West.
A jury found brothers Ammon and Ryan Bundy not guilty of possessing a firearm in a federal facility and conspiring to impede federal workers from their jobs at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, 300 miles southeast of Portland where the trial took place. Five co-defendants also were tried one or both of the charges.
Despite the acquittal, the Bundys were expected to stand trial in Nevada early next year on charges stemming from another high-profile standoff with federal agents. Authorities rounding up cattle at their father Cliven Bundy's ranch in 2014 because of unpaid grazing fees released the animals as they faced armed protesters.
The brothers are part of a Nevada ranching family embroiled in a lengthy fight over the use of public range, and their occupation drew an international spotlight to a uniquely American West dispute: federal restrictions on ranching, mining and logging to protect the environment. The U.S. government, which controls much of the land in the West, says it tries to balance industry, recreation and wildlife concerns to benefit all.
More on this...
The armed occupiers were allowed to come and go for several weeks as authorities tried to avoid bloodshed seen in past standoffs.
The confrontations reignited clashes dating to the so-called Sagebrush Rebellion of the late 1970s, when Western states such as Nevada tried to win more control of vast federal land holdings.
The group began occupying the bird sanctuary in remote southeastern Oregon on Jan. 2. They objected to prison sentences handed down to Dwight and Steven Hammond, two local ranchers convicted of setting fires. They demanded the government free the father and son and relinquish control of public lands to local officials.
Ammon Bundy gave frequent news conferences and the group used social media in a mostly unsuccessful effort to get others to join them.
The Bundys and other key figures were arrested in a Jan. 26 traffic stop outside the refuge that ended with police fatally shooting Robert "LaVoy" Finicum, an occupation spokesman. Most occupiers left after his death, but four holdouts remained until Feb. 11, when they surrendered after a lengthy negotiation.
At trial, the case was seemingly open-and-shut. There was no dispute the group seized the refuge, established armed patrols and vetted those who visited.
"Ladies and gentlemen, this case is not a whodunit," Assistant U.S. Attorney Ethan Knight said in his closing argument, arguing that the group decided to take over a federal workplace that didn't belong to them.
On technical grounds, the defendants said they never discussed stopping individual workers from accessing their offices but merely wanted the land and the buildings. On emotional grounds, Ammon Bundy and other defendants argued that the takeover was an act of civil disobedience against an out-of-control federal government that has crippled the rural West.
Federal prosecutors took two weeks to present their case, finishing with a display of more than 30 guns seized after the standoff. An FBI agent testified that 16,636 live rounds and nearly 1,700 spent casings were found.
Bundy testified in his defense, spending three days amplifying his belief that government overreach is destroying Western communities that rely on the land.
He said the plan was to take ownership of the refuge by occupying it for a period of time and then turn it over to local officials to use as they saw fit.
Bundy also testified that the occupiers carried guns because they would have been arrested immediately otherwise and to protect themselves against possible government attack.
Ryan Bundy, who acted his own attorney, did not testify.
Authorities had charged 26 occupiers with conspiracy. Eleven pleaded guilty, and another had the charge dropped. Seven defendants chose not to be tried at this time. Their trial is scheduled to begin Feb. 14.
A jury found brothers Ammon and Ryan Bundy not guilty of possessing a firearm in a federal facility and conspiring to impede federal workers from their jobs at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, 300 miles southeast of Portland where the trial took place. Five co-defendants also were tried one or both of the charges.
Despite the acquittal, the Bundys were expected to stand trial in Nevada early next year on charges stemming from another high-profile standoff with federal agents. Authorities rounding up cattle at their father Cliven Bundy's ranch in 2014 because of unpaid grazing fees released the animals as they faced armed protesters.
The brothers are part of a Nevada ranching family embroiled in a lengthy fight over the use of public range, and their occupation drew an international spotlight to a uniquely American West dispute: federal restrictions on ranching, mining and logging to protect the environment. The U.S. government, which controls much of the land in the West, says it tries to balance industry, recreation and wildlife concerns to benefit all.
The confrontations reignited clashes dating to the so-called Sagebrush Rebellion of the late 1970s, when Western states such as Nevada tried to win more control of vast federal land holdings.
The group began occupying the bird sanctuary in remote southeastern Oregon on Jan. 2. They objected to prison sentences handed down to Dwight and Steven Hammond, two local ranchers convicted of setting fires. They demanded the government free the father and son and relinquish control of public lands to local officials.
Ammon Bundy gave frequent news conferences and the group used social media in a mostly unsuccessful effort to get others to join them.
The Bundys and other key figures were arrested in a Jan. 26 traffic stop outside the refuge that ended with police fatally shooting Robert "LaVoy" Finicum, an occupation spokesman. Most occupiers left after his death, but four holdouts remained until Feb. 11, when they surrendered after a lengthy negotiation.
At trial, the case was seemingly open-and-shut. There was no dispute the group seized the refuge, established armed patrols and vetted those who visited.
"Ladies and gentlemen, this case is not a whodunit," Assistant U.S. Attorney Ethan Knight said in his closing argument, arguing that the group decided to take over a federal workplace that didn't belong to them.
On technical grounds, the defendants said they never discussed stopping individual workers from accessing their offices but merely wanted the land and the buildings. On emotional grounds, Ammon Bundy and other defendants argued that the takeover was an act of civil disobedience against an out-of-control federal government that has crippled the rural West.
Federal prosecutors took two weeks to present their case, finishing with a display of more than 30 guns seized after the standoff. An FBI agent testified that 16,636 live rounds and nearly 1,700 spent casings were found.
Bundy testified in his defense, spending three days amplifying his belief that government overreach is destroying Western communities that rely on the land.
He said the plan was to take ownership of the refuge by occupying it for a period of time and then turn it over to local officials to use as they saw fit.
Bundy also testified that the occupiers carried guns because they would have been arrested immediately otherwise and to protect themselves against possible government attack.
Ryan Bundy, who acted his own attorney, did not testify.
Authorities had charged 26 occupiers with conspiracy. Eleven pleaded guilty, and another had the charge dropped. Seven defendants chose not to be tried at this time. Their trial is scheduled to begin Feb. 14.
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