The anti-government activists who took over a federal wildlife refuge in Oregon are going to face federal charges when the siege is over, the local sheriff told NBC News on Wednesday.
“The (FBI) has assured me that those at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge will at some point face charges,” Harney County Sheriff Dave Ward told NBC News.
Ward did not go into specifics. A representative for the FBI, which has kept its cards close to the vest during the now five-day drama, told MSNBC there is “no information regarding arrests” and said he could not confirm Ward’s assertion.
Meanwhile, the group’s ringleader Ammon Bundy gave no indication when they would end the standoff.
“There is a time to go home, we recognize that,” he told reporters at the facility Wednesday. “We are not quite there yet.”
Bundy chuckled a bit when asked about the phony Ammon Bundy who caused a stir on Twitter when he compared the occupiers to civil rights icon Rosa Parks.
“First of all, I don’t have a (Twitter) account,” he said. “But from what I hear, he’s been doing a pretty good job.”
Earlier, 54-year-old occupier LaVoy Finicum said he’d sooner die than go to a federal prison.
“I have been raised in country all my life,” Finicum, an Arizona rancher, told NBC News on Tuesday. “I have no intention of spending any of my days in a concrete box.”
Jon Ritzheimer, 32, of Phoenix, warned the other heavily-armed occupiers huddled around a campfire and eating pizza that the feds were coming for Bundy, his brother Ryan Bundy, and Finicum.
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“If you see that man taken down,” he said, gesturing to Finnicum, “if you see that man lose his life, you know what to do.”








