As we enter Day 15 of the standoff at Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, here are the latest developments:

* A community meeting with Ammon Bundy scheduled for Friday evening, where armed protesters occupying the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge planned to announce their exit strategy, was called off for want of a venue. County commissioner Steven Grasty said Wednesday that the county won't let any group affiliated with the occupiers use its property.

* Oregon State Police on Friday arrested one of the protesters holding the wildlife refuge, charging him with having a stolen vehicle after he drove into town, authorities said. The man was identified as Ken Medenbach, 62, of Crescent. He was accused of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. Law enforcement officials said Medenbach is currently on federal probation stemming from another militia-style episode in southern Oregon last year.

* Protesters holding the bird sanctuary southeast of here want every county in the U.S. to start a process giving back federal land to the previous owners. They expect that process to start in Harney County with a citizens group processing deeds, according to Ryan Payne, a self-styled militiaman and a key leader of the refuge occupation that started two weeks ago. In an interview, Payne provided the most clear statement yet about what the occupiers want to achieve. They now call themselves Citizens for Constitutional Freedom.

* Brandon Curtiss views himself as a protector. A former police officer who quit after growing disenchanted with the criminal justice system, Curtiss was galvanized by live video of the 2014 armed standoff in Nevada between Cliven Bundy and the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. After watching federal agent use a stun gun on a woman Curtiss founded 3% of Idaho to stand against government overreach. And so it came to pass on Jan. 9 that Curtiss, 41, arrived at the armed protesters' encampment in Oregon's Malheur Wildlife Refuge with a troop of rifle-toting men who set up a "security perimeter." They were there, he said, to ensure no one got hurt.

* Holding signs that read "Birders against bullies," protesters took to the street in Bend, a two-hour drive from where a group of occupiers have held the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge for two weeks. While refuge supporters have become increasingly vocal, the Bend gathering was the first held to send a clear message to occupiers at the refuge 30 miles outside of Burns. Several other protests are planned across the state on Tuesday, Jan. 19.

* In other developments:

Follow The Oregonian/OregonLive team from the scene today on Twitter:

Les Zaitz @LesZaitz

Kelly House @Kelly_M_House

Mark Graves @markwgraves

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