BLM still harassing Jeanette Finicum a year following her husband’s killing by government agents
Rather than allow Jeanette
to take over the grazing allotments after LaVoy’s death, state BLM
representatives said she was not considered the heir to the allotments,
even though she was the widow of one. They told her the grazing permits
terminated upon his death and that she would have to start at square one
with the application process to graze her (their) cattle on the
allotment.
Locked out: Jeanette Finicum struggles with BLM after shooting death of her husband, LaVoy, by Oregon State Troopers
Her husband will never return to trail
the cows to winter range again, but Jeanette Finicum is determined that
she will get the job done, eventually.
Although she’s provided a check to fully
cover fines assessed over the last year, the Arizona rancher continues
to be locked out of both her winter and summer grazing ranges.
Jeanette, whose husband Robert “LaVoy”
Fincium was shot and killed by Oregon State Troopers last January, has
managed grazing decisions on their northern Arizona ranch alone since
his Jan. 26, 2016 death.
Pounding staples, doctoring sick calves
and putting out mineral are on Jeanette’s list of tasks to complete
throughout the year. Those are the easy jobs. She can soon add a much
more painful item to the list: filing suit against the Bureau of Land
Management. She plans to file suit within the next two weeks.
“My husband is dead because he went out to help the Hammonds. He stood for them and now they (the federal government) are trying real hard to make an example out of my husband. This is what will happen if you dare stand up. It’s like they are saying ‘you get in your place and don’t get out of it again or we’ll put you in solitary confinement or we’ll kill you.’ That’s what I see happening — innocent people are in jail right now.” Jeanette Finicum
The Finicums manage two separate grazing
permits – summer and winter. Their 16,000 acres of winter range is to be
grazed between Oct. 15 and May 15.
During the fall of 2015, LaVoy decided to
utilize one pasture of his of winter range that hadn’t been grazed in
six years. “The grass was really tall and he said, ‘I’m going to let the
cows use the grass.’” Although his range allotment agreement allows him
169 AUMs, LaVoy had never turned out more than 70 head of cows on his
winter range – in fact, many years it was less than that. He put his
cattle on this pasture about 40 days before Oct. 15.
In order to best utilize the grass, some
of the 70 cows remained on that pasture throughout the winter, and
others were moved “on top” to the “mountain” where the rest of the
winter range is located.
“As ranchers we take into consideration
all of these things – we want to use the grass in a way that is best for
the grass,” Jeanette said.
Jeanette explains that the land that she
and LaVoy always considered their “summer” range is actually a small
allotment that allows for maintenance of 35 AUMS year round, but they
only used the land in the summer.
“It wouldn’t serve that property well (to
graze it year round). We want to be good stewards of the range,” she
said. “I know there are bad apples out there but most ranchers want the
land to be well taken care of to be able to produce and stay healthy.”
The Finicums’ grazing fees have always
been paid in full, she explains. Before traveling to Oregon to join
protesters in opposition to the arrest of federal land ranchers Steven
and Dwight Hammond, LaVoy had announced his plan to begin to pay his
grazing fees to the county rather then the feds. He believed that
constitutionally the state and county should be managing the land. “He
made the announcement that he was no longer going to sign the contract,
but the contracts were still in effect.” Because of of LaVoy’s untimely
death, the contract remained intact and grazing fees were paid, Jeanette
said.
Jeanette said that the BLM fined her
trespass fees for the days the cattle were on the winter allotment prior
to Oct. 15, and fees continued to accrue, even after the Oct . 15
turn-out date came and went.
In an effort to reduce the trespass fees
to a more reasonable figure, Jeanette negotiated with the BLM throughout
the spring. It came to her attention that she would not be allowed to
use her “summer” range and she began to look for alternative pasture.
Finding none, she felt like she had “nowhere to go,” and finally decided
to dry-lot her cows and calves, taking them off winter range the first
weekend in July.
Although Tri-State Livestock News asked
Arizona state BLM representatives a number of questions relating to this
subject, their response was brief:
“The Bureau of Land Management has been
in contact with attorneys representing Jeanette Finicum and LaVoy
Finicum’s estate since May 2016, in an attempt to resolve fines
associated with a nearly year-long grazing trespass on the Tuckup
Allotment,” said Amber Cargile, director of communications for Arizona’s
BLM department.
Jeanette continued negotiations with the
BLM to not only lessen the trespass fines, but also to complete other
paperwork the BLM was calling for because they were not recognizing her
as the allotment owner.
Rather than allow Jeanette to take over
the grazing allotments after LaVoy’s death, state BLM representatives
said she was not considered the heir to the allotments, even though she
was the widow of one. They told her the grazing permits terminated upon
his death and that she would have to start at square one with the
application process to graze her (their) cattle on the allotment.
Jeanette said the BLM also told her that her grazing rights are not
“inheritable,” but she and her attorney disagree. “It is property and an
asset to our estate,” she said.
The BLM said an environmental impact
study would have to be conducted to determine whether or not she was
eligible to graze the allotments.
Jeanette’s attorney advised her that
under BLM rule 43 CFR 4110.2-3, the BLM is required to provide her two
years to meet any paperwork requirements, and must allow her to continue
to graze her cattle during those two years. Jeanette said she and her
attorneys brought this law to the attention of BLM representatives and
were told, “we don’t do it that way.”
“The BLM recognizes that Mrs. Finicum is a
personal representative of her late husband’s estate. The BLM has been
working with Mrs. Finicum and her legal counsel on issues related to
both the fees associated with her husband’s estate as well as the future
of the permit. Due to the ongoing nature of these discussions, we’re
not at liberty to provide additional details at this time,” said BLM’s
Cargile.
Jeannette drylotted the cows and calves
throughout the summer to avoid selling the entire herd. She worked to
meet BLM requirements, planning to turn her cattle out on winter range
at the proper time without incident. Fines of over $12,000 had mounted
over the trespass and when negotiations continued to dead-end, Jeanette
decided to pay those fines in full.
With a 50-mile trail to her winter range,
Mrs. Finicum had begun moving cattle on Oct. 13, planning to make about
15 miles per day until she arrived. Her mother in law had agreed to
deliver a check for $12,355.47, the amount of the trespass fines, and
her application required for the BLM’s environmental impact study. “I
was told we had a deal with the BLM,” she remembers.
About one full day into the trail, a
messenger arrived telling her that the BLM would not take her check and
that she would not be allowed to turn her cattle onto her BLM winter
range allotment.
“They said they weren’t accepting my
check I’m 14 miles into the middle of the desert with cows and calves
and nowhere to go,” she recalls.
“I had to find another range. My attorney
and I, at that point, were still trying to negotiate. We thought it
would be less than 30 days and I’d be back on my range. Finally my
attorney said, ‘Jeanette, this is ridiculous.’ They won’t even follow
their own laws, you need to do something, you need to move forward.”
So she decided to file suit.
Jeanette said her sister in law stepped in and offered pasture for her cattle for now.
While she and her late husband always
maintained a cordial working relationship with their local BLM office,
the state office has now been in communication with her regarding all of
these issues, Jeanette said. “My husband and I liked the local range
conservationists. We always got along with them. But their hands are
tied.” She said that the state BLM office only communicates vaguely,
such as offering to negotiate but not following through. “They say they
want to work with you but then they do nothing.
“They don’t want my cows back out there.”
She’s “a little angry,” at the whole
situation. “My husband is dead because he went out to help the Hammonds.
He stood for them and now they (the federal government) are trying real
hard to make an example out of my husband. This is what will happen if
you dare stand up. It’s like they are saying ‘you get in your place and
don’t get out of it again or we’ll put you in solitary confinement or
we’ll kill you.’ That’s what I see happening – innocent people are in
jail right now,” she said, referencing Steven and Dwight Hammond and
five members of the Bundy family.
LaVoy was shot to death during last
January’s protest headquartered on the Malheur Wildlife Refuge near
Burns, Oregon. While traveling with a caravan of peaceful protesters to a
community meeting about federal land issues in nearby John Day, Oregon,
state and federal officers arrested all members of the party except
LaVoy, who they killed after he exited his vehicle at a police stop
point. The Oregon State Police later claimed that LaVoy was reaching for
a weapon.
The Oregon State Police were cleared of
any wrongdoing in March when the local investigators determined that the
state troopers’ fatal shots were justified. But two shots from FBI
agents remain under investigation. Initially FBI agents denied taking
the shots toward LaVoy as he exited the vehicle with his hands in the
air, but it was later proven that the shells were deployed from FBI
weapons.
Jeanette said she has filed an intent to sue for wrongful death over LaVoy’s murder.
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