Finally — President Trump Pardons the Hammonds

Hammonds 1President Trump signed full pardons on Tuesday for Oregon cattle ranchers Dwight Hammond Jr. and son Steven Hammond, whose long-running dispute with the federal government ended with prison sentences for arson — and later inspired the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge occupation.

It added: “Dwight Hammond is now 76 years old and has served approximately three years in prison. Steven Hammond is 49 and has served approximately four years in prison. They have also paid $400,000 to the United States to settle a related civil suit.”

As for when the pair might be freed from federal prison, that event seems imminent: Larry Matasar, a Portland, Ore., attorney who represents the Hammonds, tells NPR that he spoke to the Office of the Pardon Attorney about sending the proper paperwork to the prison. A representative of that office within the Justice Department said he’s “expecting the Hammonds to get out today,” Matasar said.

The Hammonds were convicted in 2012 of setting fires that spread on government-managed land near their ranch. The elder Hammond was initially sentenced to three months in prison, while his son was ordered to a year and one day behind bars. But those sentences fell short of five-year minimums for arson committed against federal property. Prosecutors appealed, and the Hammonds were ordered to serve the full five-year terms.

Trump Walden 1In its statement Tuesday, the White House called the appeal “overzealous” and the resulting sentence “unjust.”

Saying that he and other attorneys involved in the case will try to expedite the Hammonds’ return to society, Matasar stated, “I am very happy for the entire Hammond family, who I have known and respected for 25 years. I hope that Dwight and Steven will soon be able to continue their work on the Hammond Ranch.”

Protesters who rallied to support the Hammonds included Ammon Bundy, who was part of the self-styled militia that broke into the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in 2016, beginning a 41-day standoff with the U.S. government over how it handles rangelands throughout the Western states.

 

The pardons were welcomed by the Oregon Farm Bureau, which describes itself as “a grassroots, nonprofit, nonpartisan organization.”

The OFB, which has advocated on the Hammonds’ behalf, said on Tuesday that their punishment was a case of “prosecutorial overreach and bureaucratic vendetta.”

Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., said, “I applaud President Trump for thoroughly reviewing the facts of this case, rightly determining the Hammonds were treated unfairly, and taking action to correct this injustice.”

Walden added that the Hammonds were “serving a mandatory minimum sentence that was established for terrorists” – referring to the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, which increased the penalties for using explosive or arson against federal property.

About the author

Comments

  1. What a freakin travesty.
    The increased penalty as written, is meant to address terrorist conspiracy.

Comments are closed.