Updated 1:14 pm PST, Saturday, November 10, 2018 In this undated photo, Ammon Bundy receives a call from a former fellow inmate while picking Gypsy Lust apples in his orchard in Emmett, Idaho. Bundy calls himself a “sunlight kind of guy.” Before his family’s infamous standoffs near Bunkerville, Nevada, and Burns, Oregon, he was living in the dark, he told the Idaho Statesman. Now he’s got a new view on life that he’s eager to share, he said, and some Idahoans are eager to listen. (Kelsey Grey/Idaho Statesman via AP) less In this undated photo, Ammon Bundy receives a call from a former fellow inmate while picking Gypsy Lust apples in his orchard in Emmett, Idaho. Bundy calls himself a “sunlight kind of guy.” Before his family’s … more Photo: Kelsey Grey, AP File – In this Dec. 20, 2017 file photo, Ammon Bundy walks out of a federal courthouse in Las Vegas. It’s been nearly three years since Bundy, 43, led a group of protesters to occupy the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, first in protest of the government’s treatment of a fellow ranching family, then in protest of federal land ownership. Bundy said his priority now is spending time with his wife and six children. But remnants of the standoffs still bubble up each day. less File – In this Dec. 20, 2017 file photo, Ammon Bundy walks out of a federal courthouse in Las Vegas. It’s been nearly three years since Bundy, 43, led a group of protesters to… [Read full story]
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