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A federal jury has convicted occupiers Jason Patrick and Darryl Thorn on felony conspiracy charges for their roles in last year’s armed takeover of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge.

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Defendants Duane Ehmer and Jake Ryan were acquitted of conspiracy, but convicted on lesser charges.

Patrick, Thorn, Ehmer and Ryan were considered less prominent players in last year’s 41-day occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in a remote part of Eastern Oregon’s high desert. The armed protest began Jan. 2, 2016, and ended when the final four occupiers surrendered to the FBI on Feb. 11 during a dramatic conclusion that spanned several hours and was broadcast live on the internet.

The verdict in this second trial comes after three weeks of testimony and more than two days of deliberations.

All four were charged with conspiracy to impede federal employees through force, threats and intimidation — the same charge the occupation's leaders, brothers Ammon and Ryan Bundy, were acquitted of during another federal trial last fall.

Ryan, Thorn and Patrick also were charged with carrying a firearm in a federal facility. Ryan and Ehmer were charged with depredation of government property.

The jury delivered the following verdict:

Jason Patrick guilty of conspiracy; not guilty of carrying a firearm in a federal facility

guilty of conspiracy; not guilty of carrying a firearm in a federal facility Darryl Thorn guilty of conspiracy; guilty of carrying a firearm in a federal facility

guilty of conspiracy; guilty of carrying a firearm in a federal facility Jake Ryan not guilty of conspiracy; not guilty of carrying a firearm in a federal facility; guilty of depredation of government property

not guilty of conspiracy; not guilty of carrying a firearm in a federal facility; guilty of depredation of government property Duane Ehmer not guilty of conspiracy; guilty of depredation of government property

“We are gratified that justice has been served and thank the jury for their service,” Billy J. Williams, United States Attorney for the District of Oregon, said in a news release issued shortly after the verdicts were announced. “Our communities and state are stronger because of our joint effort to bring these individuals to justice and we as Oregonians can now begin to move past these unfortunate events.”

However, the second trial's verdicts mark a stark contrast to last year's trial, when a different jury acquitted seven occupiers on all counts.

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"My impression is that the jurors in the first trial believed that the prosecutors were overreaching, and that the verdict was in some ways as much a repudiation of the prosecution as it was a finding that the defendants were actually innocent," said Stephen Saltzburg, a law professor at George Washington University. "I think the general understanding will be that the less culpable people were convicted and the leaders weren't. Some people will think that's not justice. But it turns out to be, in a peculiarly American way, the way we do justice here."

Renn Cannon, the special agent in charge for the Portland division of the FBI, said the criminal justice system isn't perfect, but it's the best one out there.



"I hope that everybody looks at it and will say this is the American justice system, functioning exactly as it's supposed to," Cannon said. "You have a right to a jury by your peers and that's going to mean there are differences in how decisions are met with similar fact patterns, or overlapping fact patterns in evidence. That really is just a byproduct of a system that we've got that it's as good as system as we've got in the world today."

Harney County residents responded to the jury verdict with muted enthusiasm.

"I have the same gut reaction as I did in the first trial," said former county Judge Steve Grasty, a vocal opponent of the occupation. "The wheels of justice have turned. We have an outcome."

Related: An Occupation In Eastern Oregon

Grasty added that he found it strange that the two different juries arrived at different verdicts. But he also said he accepted both decisions and wants his community to move forward

Burns Paiute Councilman Jarvis Kennedy said he was pleased with the verdict.

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“I was happy and excited that people of Harney County and the Burns Paiute Tribe actually got some justice out of this second trial, unlike the first," Kennedy said.

The occupation fueled a long-running debate about the federal government’s role in managing public lands, largely in the American West. Many of the occupiers believe the federal government doesn’t have the ability to own lands, except for limited purposes outlined in the Constitution.

Throughout the occupation, leader Ammon Bundy frequently said his goal was to shift the federally owned land to local control. During press conferences and interviews, Bundy frequently said he wanted to “get the ranchers back to ranching, get the loggers back to logging and miners back to mining.” The protesters even went so far as to order signs renaming the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge as the “Harney County Resource Center.”

During closing arguments in this trial, the government acknowledged there was no signed document or recording that showed the occupiers' goal was to prevent federal employees from going to work. But federal prosecutors argued there was more than enough circumstantial evidence for jurors to conclude there was a conspiracy to block federal workers from their jobs at the refuge.

Kenneth Medenbach's attorney, Matt Schindler, tells reporters outside the courthouse that defendant Jason Patrick told him he has "respect" and "acceptance" for the verdict. A jury convicted Patrick of conspiracy. Medenbach was found not guilty last fall. Ryan Haas / OPB

“At its core, this case is about four defendants that went too far,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Ethan Knight said during the government’s closing arguments.

Prosecutors also pointed to a Dec. 29, 2015, meeting in Burns, during which Ammon Bundy described a plan to occupy the refuge.

The government’s case relied heavily on testimony from law enforcement -- largely FBI agents -- but also several federal employees who worked at the refuge.

Agents testified about their roles in processing evidence at the refuge, response to the occupation and follow-up investigations. Refuge employees talked about the work they weren’t able to do because of the occupation, as well as the deep sense of fear they felt in the weeks leading up to and throughout the occupation.

Related: 41 Days And 8 Months Later: Dissecting The 1st Oregon Standoff Trial

“At my house, I had loaded guns at every door,” refuge manager Chad Karges testified. “Normally, the guns are locked in a safe.”

Prosecutors spent hours showing jurors thousands of rounds of unspent ammunition and dozens of firearms investigators recovered from the refuge after the occupation.

At one point during the government’s case, U.S. District Court Judge Anna Brown told an FBI SWAT team member testifying as a witness for the government to be careful with guns in the courtroom. She said some jurors had expressed concerns during previous testimony where agents held up firearms in the courtroom.

In order to be found guilty of conspiracy, the government had to prove the occupiers intended to keep federal employees from going to work. During its case, the defense argued that was never the goal.

Defense attorneys said those on trial were protesting the way the government manages millions of acres of public lands and never intended to interfere with refuge workers.

Related: Why Were The Hammonds Sent Back To Prison?

“The thought was never given to the employees,” Michele Kohler, Ehmer’s attorney, said during her closing arguments to the jury.

The defense argued that what they were doing at the refuge was protected by the First Amendment. And they said the presence of firearms was protected by the Second Amendment.

Jurors also heard considerable testimony about the Hammond family as a reason for coming to occupy refuge. Dwight and Steven Hammond are two Harney County Ranchers who are serving time in federal prison for arson.

“A lot of people think laws were broken, but the laws that the government has accused these men of violating were not broken,” said Jesse Merrithew, Ryan’s attorney, before the verdict.

Merrithew said the four defendants were engaged in a protest.

“The laws the government has accused these men of violating are laws that were designed to prevent violence against federal officials who were trying to do their jobs,” he said. “They were not designed to prosecute people for engaging in protest activities.”