Three weeks after a group of armed protestors occupied a wildlife refuge in Oregon, the FBI and Oregon State Police moved in to arrest them. VPC
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BEND, Ore. — Several members of a self-styled militia maintained their 25-day takeover of a federal wildlife refuge in Oregon on Wednesday despite the killing of one of their co-leaders and the arrest of nine others, including ringleader Ammon Bundy.
Arizona resident Robert "LaVoy" Finicum, 56, the soft-spoken but defiant co-leader of the protest group, was shot and killed during an encounter Tuesday afternoon with the FBI and Oregon State Police at a roadblock about 20 miles north of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Burns, Ore.
His death was confirmed by his family and reported by The Oregonian and NBC News.
Ryan Bundy, brother of the ringleader, Ammon Bundy, received a minor gunshot wound in the confrontation that occurred about 4:30 p.m. along U.S. 395, according to The Oregonian. He was treated and released from a local hospital and taken into FBI custody.
The shooting took place after FBI and state police stopped the group's two-car caravan as they were headed to a community meeting in the town of John Day. Several other protesters, who did not make the trip, remained behind at the compound and continued to defy authorities, even after the shooting.
One of them, Jason Patrick, said he has been speaking with an FBI negotiator during the night who told him "they just want to get everybody off the refuge."
"It's hard to decide what to do," he said in a phone interview. Patrick called Finicum's death "disheartening" and described the incident at the roadblock as a "violent and coercive force."
Patrick said from inside the compound, where he was cooking eggs Wednesday morning, he could see a number of law enforcement officers in a convoy of armored vehicles.
"Sounds like the definition of peaceful resolution is either forcefully kidnapping me or death," he said. "A peaceful resolution is not dead people."
Oregon Gov. Kate Brown asked for “patience as officials continue pursuit of a swift and peaceful resolution.”
Early Wednesday, the FBI and Oregon State Police established a series of checkpoints along key routes into and out of the refuge. The agencies said in a statement that the containment was to "better ensure the safety of community members." They said the decision was made out of an abundance of caution.
Later, as they tightened their perimeter around the compound and appeared to be preparing for additional action, they advised reporters to leave the immediate area for their own safety.
According to the statement, only Harney County ranchers who own property in specific areas and show identification and be allowed to pass.
Brand Thornton, one of Bundy's supporters, said he left the refuge Monday and wasn't sure what those remaining would do. "The entire leadership is gone," he told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. "I wouldn't blame any of them for leaving."
Thornton called the arrests "a dirty trick" by law enforcement.
Those arrested include the Bundy brothers, Ryan 43, of Bunkerville, Nev., and Ammon, 40, of Emmett, Idaho, along with  Brian Cavalier, 44, of Bunkerville; Shawna Cox, 59, of Kanab, Utah; and Ryan Waylen Payne, 32, of Anaconda, Mont. Also arrested, at separate locations in Burns, Ore., near the refuge, were Pete Santilli, host of a neoconservative online radio, and Joseph Donald O'Shaughnessy, 45, of Cottonwood, Ariz.
An eighth person, Jon Eric Ritzheimer, 32, was arrested after turning himself into police in Peoria, Ariz.
Those arrested were charged with a federal felony count of conspiracy to impede officers of the United States from discharging their official duties through the use of force, intimidation or threats.
Bundy, head of an anti-government group, had been holed up at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge since Jan. 2, when him and his followers seized its headquarters south of Burns as part of a long-running dispute over public land use in the West.
Bundy is the son of Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy, who was involved in a high-profile 2014 standoff with the government over grazing rights.