Updated 10:30 p.m. ET with the case going to the jury
Closing arguments
have been completed
The case against six men and one woman is in the hands of the jury. The defendants were allegedly part of an armed group that took over the refuge's headquarters
in January
The Malheur occupiers were calling for an end to some U.S. government restrictions on land use.
In all, more than two dozen people have been indicted on conspiracy charges in connection with the Malheur occupation.
Oregon Public Broadcasting has created a guide
In addition to Ammon and Ryan Bundy, the group of seven defendants includes the
last occupier to leave the refuge
Closing arguments in the trial began Tuesday following nearly six weeks of testimony. Both the prosecution and defense focused on the main charge of
conspiring to prevent federal employees from doing their jobs
In his closing argument on Tuesday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Ethan Knight argued that the occupation had negatively impacted the federal employees who work at Malheur National Wildlife Refuge. "These are real people with real jobs, whose lives, as you heard from the witness stand, were profoundly disrupted,"
OPB's Conrad Wilson
Marcus Mumford, the attorney representing Ammon Bundy, argued that the issue was not federal employees, but regulatory overreach by the federal government.
OPB has more on Mumford's closing arguments
"'His problem wasn't with the employees,' said Mumford, referring to federal workers at the refuge. 'His problem was with their employer: the federal government. It won't respect its limits.'..."He said Bundy tried other methods before the occupation to raise concerns with government officials. ... 'Ammon Bundy was trying to get to these issues through all the proper channels,' Mumford said. 'And after those channels failed, he decided with others it was time to make a hard stand.' ""Bundy's attorney put the onus on the jury to put an end to what defendants see as outsized federal authority."'We're counting on you to stop government overreach,' Mumford told the jury. 'Our trust is in you.'"
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