http://www.huffingtonpost.com/josh-horwitz/baltimore-and-grants-pass_b_7203042.html
Provocateurs flocked to the scene, hoping to provoke a bloody
confrontation. Armed protestors descended on the government office,
claiming injustice and demanding accountability for the government's
actions. Having already received innumerous death threats via telephone,
government leaders elected to close the office to protect the safety of
employees and visitors alike. Their ability to maintain the rule of law
hung in doubt.
Does this sound like a scene from the recent riots in Baltimore to you? If that's what you're thinking, you're mistaken.
The
events described above actually took place 2,800 miles away last week
in Grants Pass, Oregon, where a band of gun-toting insurrectionists have
gathered in response to a dispute between local miners and the Bureau
of Land Management (BLM). The co-owners of the Sugar Pine mine, Rick
Barclay and George Backes, claim to have surface rights to the plot of
land, in addition to mining rights (which are not in dispute). BLM
notes that the surface rights to the land were ceded to them by previous
owners in 1961 and states,
"[Barclay and Backes] had ...begun putting up a house on public land;
and had failed to file appropriate mining plans with the BLM."
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