Story highlights
NEW: Cliven Bundy has been arrested
NEW: Protesters -- on purported phone call live streamed on YouTube -- say they'll exit the refuge
The FBI says it surrounded the refuge after an occupier rode outside the barricades in an ATV
No shots have been fired and negotiations are continuing, the FBI says
The armed occupiers of a wildlife refuge in Oregon say they will turn themselves in on Thursday morning, hours after Cliven Bundy – the father of protest leader Ammon Bundy – was arrested by federal agents.
Oregon siege: What the armed group wants and why
Cliven Bundy announced on Wednesday he was heading to Oregon, according to a Facebook page for his Nevada ranch. In 2014, he came to the national spotlight in a showdown with the federal Bureau of Land Management over grazing rights for his cattle.
“It’s time!” the Facebook post said. “Cliven Bundy is headed to the Harney County Resource Center in Burns Oregon.”
But Bundy was taken into federal custody in Portland after landing early Thursday, the FBI said.
The Bundy ranch’s Facebook page posted a statement that Bundy was arrested for charges “related to his standoff with the U.S. Bureau of Land Management in 2014.” The post continued, “The charges include a conspiracy charge to interfere with a federal officer … and a weapons charge.”
Bundy’s son, Ammon, was one of the leaders of the occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge. He was arrested last month.
During a purported live stream of a conference call Wednesday night between protesters, activists and conservative Nevada lawmaker Michele Fiore, the occupiers said they were prepared to leave.
The audio was live-streamed on YouTube.
Fiore told those on the call that Mike Arnold – Ammon Bundy’s lawyer, who Fiore said was in the car with her – spoke with the FBI. She said the agency promised it would stand down Wednesday night and allow her to be at an FBI checkpoint when the occupiers surrendered.
CNN affiliates based in Portland are reporting that Fiore is on her way to the refuge.
When asked about the deal, Beth Anne Steele with the FBI told CNN that she was not able to comment.
Surrounded
The live stream started after the FBI on Wednesday surrounded those occupying the refuge.
According to the agency, one of the remaining occupiers rode outside barricades at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge. When agents tried to approach him, he sped back to the refuge.
After that, the FBI said agents “moved to contain the remaining occupiers by placing agents at barricades both immediately ahead of and behind the area where the occupiers are camping.”
The FBI said no shots were fired.
“The FBI has negotiated with patience and restraint in an effort to resolve the situation peacefully,” Bretzing of the FBI said.
Four people are believed to be still occupying the refuge.
‘God has put us on this path’
Earlier on the call, the occupiers seemed concerned that the FBI planned to move in Wednesday night and that it would lead to their deaths. At times, they seemed to fatalistically embrace that outcome.
When one woman – presumed to be Fiore – asked two of them about their families, a man responded, “God has put us on this path. Our families are already taken care of; they weren’t in our lives much before all this because God made sure we didn’t have that to weigh us down so that we could do this.”
The people on the phone could be heard debating conditions for which they’d be willing to leave the refuge.
At one point late Wednesday night, more than 66,000 people were listening.
Wednesday marks day 40 of the occupation.
Ammon Bundy and others started out demonstrating against the sentencing of Dwight Hammond and his son Steven, ranchers who were convicted of arson on federal lands in Oregon.
But a January 2 march supporting the Hammonds led to the armed occupation of the refuge building, with protesters decrying what they call government overreach when it comes to federal lands.
Bundy and other members of his group were arrested during an incident along a highway last month.
At the same time, law enforcement officers shot and killed LaVoy Finicum, one of the protest group’s most prominent members.
CNN’s Andy Rose, Dave Alsup and Tina Burnside contributed to this report.