Ryan Bundy convicted of assault for spitting at store employee
Ryan Bundy, son of Bunkerville rancher Cliven Bundy, was convicted of a misdemeanor assault charge this past month for spitting at an employee of a Mesquite shipping business.
The crime occurred after Ryan Bundy was asked to leave the store for not wearing a mask during the height of COVID-19 restrictions.
Judge Pro Tem Darryll Dodenbier found him guilty of the assault charge during a bench trial on Oct. 10 in Mesquite Municipal Court, court records show.
Cliven Bundy and his sons Ryan and Ammon were considered leaders of a 2014 armed standoff over a federal cattle roundup a few miles from the family ranch near Bunkerville. Charges against Cliven Bundy and his sons were dismissed in 2018.
Ryan Bundy also ran unsuccessfully for Nevada governor in 2018.
The recent assault conviction stemmed from a confrontation in December 2020, when an employee at the Mesquite Business Center asked Ryan Bundy to leave the store for not wearing a face mask, according to a copy of a citation from the Mesquite Police Department.
“Ryan became aggressive and spit at the employee Tim Galliher,” the citation stated.
Prosecutors accused Ryan Bundy of “yelling at the employees of, Mesquite Business Center, using foul language in front of customers, and stating ‘he hoped they catch COVID virus and die,’” according to a criminal complaint.
During a phone interview on Monday, Ryan Bundy denied stating that he hoped anyone would die. He said that the employee was “yelling and screaming” at him when he refused to wear a mask and that he spat on a counter that was “probably 10 or 15 feet away” from the man.
“That was my way of communicating that, hey, I’m disgusted with the way you’re treating me,” he said.
Ryan Bundy said he believes “COVID was a bunch of baloney, all of it from the get-go.”
The owner of Mesquite Business Center, who is Galliher’s father, declined to comment on the case on Monday.
Ryan Bundy initially was charged with misdemeanor counts of assault and disturbing the peace, but prosecutors dismissed the charge of disturbing the peace, court records show.
He represented himself during the bench trial and was fined $500. He said he plans to appeal the conviction, and he insisted that his actions did not amount to assault.
“I should have been more Christ-like and held my temper, but I was getting tired of all this COVID baloney,” he said. “I got a little hot, I’ll admit.”
Contact Katelyn Newberg at knewberg@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0240. Follow @k_newberg on Twitter.