LAS VEGAS — Family members and other supporters took a Nevada rancher's grazing rights fight against the U.S. government to the sheriff in Las Vegas on Friday, filing reports alleging crimes by federal agents against people protesting a roundup of cattle from public land.
Rancher Cliven Bundy wasn't among those who filed handwritten complaints with the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department — the agency with jurisdiction over Bundy's ranch in the Bunkerville area and much of Clark County.
Sheriff Douglas Gillespie issued a statement saying the complaints would be investigated and the results shared with the Clark County district attorney and U.S. attorney for Nevada.
"We will then provide a response to the citizens who filed complaints as to the course of action taken," the statement said.
In encampments around the Bundy ranch, self-described militia members from around the country continue to camp with handguns on their hips and heavier weaponry within reach in a show of support for Bundy.
But no weapons were seen Friday among those who responded to his call for supporters and witnesses of a tense April 12 standoff beneath an Interstate 15 overpass — and lesser confrontations in preceding days — to file complaints against U.S. Bureau of Land Management police.
Ammon Bundy of Phoenix headed a delegation of three Bundy sons, two sisters and perhaps 15 other supporters who filed reports accusing Bureau of Land Management agents of wielding high-powered weapons, using attack dogs and stun guns, closing public lands, blocking roads, harassing photographers and threatening people.
Police said the Bundy family members were joined by about 40 other people. Twenty-two filed what the department called voluntary statements alleging acts such as impersonating a police officer, assault, threats, aiming a firearm, blocking road access and intimidation.