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Report: White House considering pardon of ranchers who spurred Malheur occupation

President Trump is considering a pardon for two Oregon ranchers whose federal arson case was the springboard for the illegal 2016 takeover of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in eastern Oregon, several news outlets have reported.

The refuge occupation, which lasted 41-days and terrorized the community of Burns, Oregon, was engineered by Ammon and Ryan Bundy and their militia followers who, following the 2014 standoff with the Bureau of Land Management, had traveled the West to make a 鈥渉ard stand鈥 against the federal government.

They found their case with the Dwight Hammon and his son, Steven, even though the family rejected the Bundy鈥檚 offer for help and reported to federal prison to serve a five-year prison term.

But, amid a flurry of surprising pardons from President Trump, 聽reported last week that the White House is 鈥渘ow weighing whether to grant a presidential pardon鈥 to the Hammonds, who have received聽 鈥渟upport from ranching and farming groups, as well as some militia adherents [pushing] for clemency to send a signal that federal officials won鈥檛 engage in overreach out West.鈥

Dwight Hammond鈥檚 wife, Susie, told the last Wednesday that she hadn鈥檛 heard from the White House, only journalists, about a possible presidential pardon for her 76-year-old husband and 49-year-old son.

鈥淚 have a sense that things are moving forward and I have faith in our president,鈥 Susie Hammond told the Portland newspaper. 鈥淚f anyone is going to help them, he'd be the one.鈥

Late last month, a farm publication, Tri-State Livestock News, reported that a farm-lobbying group, Protect the Harvest, was circulating an online petition supporting the Hammonds. That petition, which had collected 4,000 signatures, was forwarded to the White House, urging the president to commute the Hammonds鈥 sentences. A commutation would result in their immediate release from prison but leave their felony convictions in place.

If a pardon or commutation comes, it wouldn鈥檛 be the first time Trump has used his presidential powers to attract the attention of the far-right and his political base.

In late May, Trump used his presidential pen to pardon conservative pundit and author Dinesh D鈥橲ouza, who pleaded guilty in 2014 to violation federal campaign finance laws.聽

Foreign-born himself, D鈥橲ouza defended 鈥渂irthers,鈥 including Trump, who spread the conspiracy theory that former President Barack Obama wasn鈥檛 really born in the United States and, therefore, illegally was elected.

That same 鈥渂irther鈥 theme was evident in Trump鈥檚 first presidential pardon granted last August to former Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio, who was up to his neck in the bogus conspiracy movement.

It was 鈥淪heriff Joe鈥檚鈥 unconstitutional racial profiling tactics that got him convicted of a federal crime 鈥 criminal contempt-of-court for ignoring a federal judge's order in a long-simmering racial-profiling case.

That didn鈥檛 stop Arpaio from being an early Trump supporter, providing a vocal endorsement at the 2016 Republican convention and backing Trump鈥檚 hardline, anti-immigrant views and his controversial plan to build a wall on the border with Mexico.

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