The last holdouts in the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge standoff say they now want pardons for everyone involved before they'll leave the headquarters where they're holed up behind police roadblocks.

"Before we leave, every single one of the people involved in this operation should be pardoned," occupier David Fry said in a feed posted to YouTube just before noon Friday.

With Ammon Bundy and 10 other members of the armed occupation behind bars and most of the rest gone of their own accord, four remain inside the compound.

They are: Fry, 27, of Blanchester, Ohio; Sandy Anderson, 48, of Idaho; her husband, Sean Anderson, 47; and Jeff Banta, 46, of Elko, Nevada.

The remaining occupiers had been livestreaming the standoff on YouTube or posting periodic videos to detail their preparations to die at the refuge. But they had filed no dispatches for more than 24 hours until Fry broke the silence.

His five-and-a-half-minute video included details of the occupiers' new demands and a diatribe against Hillary Clinton.

He said FBI negotiators have told him that they have no power to clear Sean Anderson of charges related to a felony warrant for his arrest. Records show he has an outstanding bench warrant related to an August 2014 arrest.

"Obviously we can't get outta here scot-free," Fry said in the video. He believes authorities plan to arrest the highest-risk occupiers right away. As for the rest, "they just want to separate us and get us all home so they can pick us off one-by-one."

To avoid that scenario, Fry is demanding pardons for the four remaining occupiers plus everyone who has already left the compound.

The Pacific Patriots Network, a group that has followed the refuge occupation, also spelled out several demands on Friday in a call for support from its members. The network of various patriot groups used strong language in condemning the shooting of Robert "LaVoy" Finicum and the arrest of an occupier they were helping to leave the refuge on Wednesday night.

The network, which plans a protest in Burns on Monday, demands the arrest of the top FBI agent in Oregon and any other law enforcement officers involved with his death, removal of all FBI agents from Harney County and the resignation of several county leaders and Sheriff Dave Ward.

Joseph Rice, a founding member of the network from Grants Pass, said he expects as many 200 people to come to Burns over the weekend.

Yet the network was clear it wants a "peaceful" operation.

"If you have any ill intent," the group's statement continued, "please do not come. We do not need you."

The group asked supporters to come in civilian attire and to follow a "policy of no long guns within the community."

Still, the scene at the refuge headquarters 30 miles south of Burns was unusually inactive Friday morning. In recent days, police vehicles have come and gone, sometimes in convoys containing dozens of vehicles.

There was no visible police presence at a roadblock just beyond the turnoff from Oregon 205 onto Sodhouse Lane, which leads six miles to the refuge headquarters. Still, federal agents leading the effort to end the standoff have said they are working "round-the-clock" to remove the holdouts from the compound.

Meanwhile, those in the community are left to wonder when it will end and debate the details of an FBI video depicting the death of LaVoy Finicum, a spokesman for the occupation who was shot by state police Tuesday when leaders Ammon Bundy, his brother, Ryan Bundy, and Ryan Payne were arrested on their way to a community meeting in John Day.

Ammon Bundy, the son of controversial Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy, and his followers took over the federal refuge Jan. 2 in protest of longer prison sentences for two local ranchers and federal land management policies.

"I don't know what's going to happen next," Fry said in his video posted at 11:54 a.m., "but I'll try to keep y'all updated."

--Kelly House

khouse@oregonian.com

503-221-8178

@Kelly_M_House