
The Bureau of Land Management said Saturday it will stop the roundup of cattle owned by Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy.
The BLM says the animals have been illegally grazing on public lands for 20 years.
The BLM announcement came a after rangers started gathering the animals from land near Gold Butte, Nev.
The agency says it is concerned about the safety of its employees and the public.
Earlier this week, BLM officers and supporters of the Bundy family were
involved in a scuffle. Cliven Bundy's son, Ammon Bundy, was shot with a
stun gun twice by federal agents. Another woman said she was thrown to
the ground by an officer.
With Bundy supporters pouring in from around the country, safety concerns began to grow.
BLM said it would not enforce a court order to remove the cattle and was pulling out of the area.
"Based on information about conditions on the ground, and in
consultation with law enforcement, we have made a decision to conclude
the cattle gather because of our serious concern about the safety of
employees and members of the public," BLM Director Neil Kornze said,
reports ABC News.
"We ask that all parties in the area remain peaceful and law-abiding as
the Bureau of Land Management and National Park Service work to end the
operation in an orderly manner," he said.
Clark County Sheriff Doug Gillespie brokered a deal to end the roundup,
reports CBS News Las Vegas.
Tea party groups and Libertarians had joined in the widening battle in recent days.
Elected officials in states ranging from Arizona to Washington were
rushing to Nevada on Thursday night after watching a startling video of
an angry clash
between protesters, including private militias, and U.S. Bureau of Land Management rangers, according to the
Las Vegas Review-Journal.
The 10-minute video showed Bundy's son Ammon being tasered and Cliven's
sister Margaret Bundy-Houston, a cancer survivor, being tackled to the
ground by a ranger.
"Watching that video last night created a visceral reaction in me," said
Arizona Rep. Kelly Townsend, a tea party Republican who drove from
Phoenix to take part in a protest rally in Bunkerville near Bundy's
160-acre ranch. "It sounds dramatic, but it reminded me of Tiananmen
Square. I don't recognize my country at this point."
Townsend is associated with a patriot group known as the Oath Keepers,
which advocates that its members, mostly current and former U.S.
military personnel and law enforcement officials, disobey any orders
that they are given if they believe they violate the Constitution.
The Arizona lawmaker told the Review-Journal that Bundy "may be in the
wrong as far as the law is concerned," but the manner in which the
roundup is being handled is "un-American."
The video showed law enforcement officers holding yellow tasers and
barking dogs as BLM trucks involved in rounding-up Bundy's cattle
attempted to drive through State Route 170 into Bunkerville
Nevada Republican Assemblywoman Michele Fiore called the footage
"horrifying," and said that she had been twice to the protest site in a
show of support, as well as to "protect our Nevadans and keep the
peace."
Fiore said, "I'm highly offended by the feds coming in as aggressively as they have.
But officials for the BLM have claimed that the high level of security
is necessary due to the ongoing violent threats from the Bundy clan and
their supporters."
BLM has shut down a 1,200-square-mile area while hired cowboys round up
900 cattle "trespassing on federal land that has been deemed a protected
habitat for an endangered desert tortoise.
Although federal authorities claim that Bundy has been illegally
allowing his cattle to graze on 600,000 acres of federal property for 20
years, the rancher says the land belongs to the state, and it's been
used by his family to graze cattle since the late 1800s.
Bundy
has compared the protest
to the 1992 standoff at Ruby Ridge, Idaho, and the 1993 raid on David
Koresh's Branch Davidian compound near Waco, Texas, which ended with
dozens of deaths.
"Mr. Bundy is breaking the law, and he has been breaking the law for 20
years," said BLM spokeswoman Amy Lueders. "He owes the taxpayers of the
United States over $1 million."
BLM rangers had rounded up more than 350 head of Bundy's cattle by Thursday.
The Oath Keepers' Facebook page instructed members planning to join the
protest to bring cameras and "film everything but not to wear military
camouflage or openly carry rifles," according to the Review-Journal.
"Any rifles people may have with them need to stay in the vehicles," the post said.
Fearing that the showdown could turn into an even more dangerous
situation, Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval warned, "Although tensions remain
high, escalation of current events could have negative, long-lasting
consequences that can be avoided."