BURNS, Ore. — Three more suspects linked to the armed occupation of a federal wildlife refuge in Oregon surrendered Wednesday, hours after their jailed leader urged the handful of remaining militants to abandon the site they have occupied for more than three weeks.
After militant leader Ammon Bundy made his first court appearance in Portland on Wednesday, his attorney, Mike Arnold, read this statement from his client: "Please stand down. Go home and hug your families. This fight is now in the courts."
It was unclear whether the remnant of Bundy's followers still holed up at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge south of Burns was ready to heed his advice, but more arrests were made later Wednesday at a nearby checkpoint established by federal and state law enforcement officials, according to the FBI.
The FBI and Oregon State Police said in a statement Wednesday night that 45-year-old Duane Leo Ehmer of Irrigon, Oregon, and 34-year-old Dylan Wade Anderson of Provo, Utah, turned themselves in around 3:30 p.m. And 43-year-old Jason S. Patrick of Bonaire, Georgia, did the same a few hours later.
The men were described as being in contact with the FBI and officials said the men surrendered to agents on a road near the refuge.
As with Bundy and the seven others arrested a day earlier, officials said the men will each face a felony charge.
FBI officials also said they were working around the clock to empty the refuge of armed occupiers in the safest way possible.
Meanwhile, details began to emerge about the confrontation Tuesday on a remote highway that resulted in the arrest of Bundy and other leading figures in the group of occupiers, and in the death of militant Robert Finicum.