Militant spokesman Robert "LaVoy" Finicum is dead and the top leaders of the occupation of Malheur National Wildlife Refuge were taken into custody after law enforcement officials stopped them Tuesday afternoon about 20 miles north of Burns.

Ryan Bundy, 43, of Bunkerville, Nev., suffered a minor gunshot wound and was taken into custody in the stop about 4:30 p.m. along U.S. 395 conducted by the FBI and the Oregon State Police.

Bundy and four others were charged with conspiracy to impede federal officers, a felony, at the traffic stops.

Three other people associated with the occupation were later arrested separately on the same conspiracy charge.

Here is the list of those arrested, beginning with those traveling with Finicum to a public meeting in John Day when their vehicles were stopped.

Ammon Bundy

Ammon Bundy

The main public face of the occupation is Ammon Bundy, the 40-year-old son of Cliven Bundy, whose 2014 standoff with federal officials in Nevada over $1 million in unpaid grazing fees and penalties made national news.

In 2014, Bundy blocked a truck trying to leave federal lands with his father's cattle, which rangers had seized because the family had not paid the grazing fees that other ranchers must pay.

A video of the encounter shows Ammon Bundy lunging at a federal ranger holding a police dog. The dog snapped at Bundy, who then kicked the dog twice, the video shows. Federal rangers used a stun gun to keep Ammon Bundy away. He was not arrested.

Jon Ritzheimer

Jon Ritzheimer

Ritzheimer, 32, surrendered to police Tuesday in Arizona, authorities said. He gained national fame for complaining in a video about the delivery of sex toys to the refuge in response to the occupiers' plea for supplies.

Until the occupation, Ritzheimer, was most widely known for the anti-Islam protests he organized in 2015 in Phoenix, drawing hundreds of people and garnering the attention of the FBI. He sells anti-Islam T-shirts through his apparel company, Rogue Infidel, and also advertises his services as a motorcycle mechanic.

Military records show Ritzheimer was in the Marine Corps Reserves from 2002 through 2014, serving two tours in Iraq as a motor transport driver. He lives in the Phoenix suburb of Peoria with his wife, Rachel, and two daughters.

Joseph O'Shaughnessy

Joe O'Shaughnessy

O'Shaughnessy, 43, was arrested by Oregon State Police in Burns. Known in militia circles as "Captain," O'Shaughnessy is from Cottonwood, Arizona, authorities said. Public records also show recent addresses around Phoenix and in a suburb of Chicago.

O'Shaughnessy appears in Facebook photos with the occupation's core planners in December. He is also pictured next to Cliven Bundy during the 2014 standoff in Bunkerville, Nevada. O'Shaughnessy has been active in militia groups along the U.S.-Mexico border, his social media accounts show.

Arizona court records show weapons misconduct charges in 2007 that were later dismissed. O'Shaughessy served 10 days in jail in 2009 after he failed to appear in court on traffic charges that included failure to display a foreign license plate, having no valid driver's license, no proof of insurance and no functioning brake lights, court records show.

Pete Santilli

Pete Santilli

Santilli, 50, an independent broadcaster known for his aggressive manner and support for the occupiers' cause, was also arrested in Burns, authorities said. He had been live-streaming reports about Ammon Bundy's arrest earlier in the day. He got his start as a self-described "shock jock" in 2014, when he showed up at the Bundy ranch in Bunkerville, Nevada, during the 2014 standoff.

Police in Newtown, Ohio, stopped Santilli in December, saying he was seen driving 20 miles per hour in a 50-mile-per-hour zone and was believed to be texting, the Cincinnati Enquirer reported. He was detained for 45 minutes because police were alerted that he was on a national watch list but was later cleared of suspicion of being on the list, the newspaper reported. Police found a loaded gun at the feet of Santilli's female passenger, the Enquirer reported.

Santilli was charged with illegally carrying a concealed weapon, the Enquirer reported. "Because of death threats I receive because of my views, I need to carry a gun," he told the newspaper.

He said at the time that he was on his way to Oregon. In videos since his arrival in Burns, Santilli said he was unarmed because his gun is still in police possession in Ohio.

Santilli had recently moved to Ohio from Southern California, where he had been licensed as a security guard since 2003.

-- The Oregonian

Photography by Thomas Boyd, Mark Graves, Beth Nakamura and The Associated Press.