World & Nation
Cliven Bundy and his family still graze cattle on Nevada rangeland where armed protesters and federal agents held a standoff.
Opinion
To the editor: So, Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy can continue to graze his cattle on public land without paying the required grazing fees to the federal government that law-abiding cattle owners now pay.
Far-right activist was found guilty of one count of misdemeanor trespassing and one count of delaying a law enforcement officer after a two-day trial.
A federal judge in Las Vegas set rancher Cliven Bundy and his sons free Jan. 8.
Police say far-right activist Ammon Bundy has been arrested after allegedly refusing to leave a hospital in connection with a child-welfare case.
The weight of a heavy sentence landed in the quiet federal courtroom Wednesday morning, leaving Gregory Burleson occasionally stroking his graying beard and his attorney pleading unsuccessfully for leniency.
It started four years ago, when Cliven Bundy and his sons refused to pay federal grazing fees and stared down government agents in an armed standoff outside their Nevada ranch.
Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy and his sons repeatedly violated court orders to remove their cattle from public land while inciting and escalating an armed standoff with government agents near their Bunkerville ranch more than three years ago, federal prosecutors told a Las Vegas jury Tuesday.
Three years later, Cliven Bundy’s cattle are still grazing on federal land.
California
Angelenos can hail a robotaxi with the Waymo One app starting Tuesday. There are about 100 taxis in the Los Angeles fleet — but they don’t drive freeways.