Politics & Government
Oregon Standoff Trial: Ryan Bundy Calls His Wife to the Stand
Jury also hears from an informant for the FBI.

The trial of seven people charged in connection with the 41-day armed occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge continued Monday with defendant Ryan Bundy calling his wife to the stand. Bundy is acting as his own lawyer.
"How are you?" Ryan asked.
"Missing you," Angela Bundy replied. "How are you?"
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"Good,: he answered.
Angela Bundy told jurors that they had been married a long time and he is a wonderful husband and father.
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"i could cite things all day long that he does for other people," she testified.
In slightly more significant, testimony, an informant for he FBI, Terri Linnell gave jurors a sense of day-to-day life on the refuge. She spent nearly two weeks there.
Linnell testified that she was recruited by the FBI from their San Diego Office and was paid $3,000 for her work though she said she didn't know when she started that she would be paid.
She said that she never saw any illegal activity at the refuge and that drugs and alcohol were forbidden. Linnell testified that she she never saw three of the defendants - Shawna Cox, David Fry, and Neil Wampler - handle a firearm.
She spent some of her time on the refuge cooking breakfast for people.
"Everyone was told to pitch in," she told jurors.
During cross-examination, she was asked about information she had told the FBI that some of the occupiers had discussed taking over another federal building in Burns.
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