The leaders of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge occupation have been arrested, prompting the question: Is the Oregon standoff over?



For the moment, the remaining occupiers continue to inhabit the refuge. But police have cut off the refuge's headquarters and have encouraged anyone there to leave.



Police have set up a secondary roadblock about six miles away and threatened to arrest anyone but landowners who try pass.



The band of anti-government occupiers is dwindling, as some have taken police up on their offer and have left the grounds. Those include one of the last remaining leaders, Blaine Cooper.





Still, a meeting in the compound overnight led to a vote on whether to abandon the refuge or stay, and "the majority vote was to stay," said Jason Patrick, a former roofer from Georgia who has become the new leader of the group.



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Patrick spent time on the phone overnight with "Chris," the

FBI

negotiator who daily talked with Ammon Bundy, who oversaw the occupation before his arrest Tuesday night. Patrick said he asserted what Bundy has asserted - that government officials need to address the group's "redress of grievances" outlining complaints about government conduct and the prosecution of local rancher Dwight Hammond Jr. and his son, Steven.

As of midmorning Tuesday, it was unclear if that commitment had wavered.

-- Andre Meunier