The Longest Armed Standoff In America May Finally Be Over

“We can’t believe anything they say and we can’t believe anything y’all reporters say,” an unidentified armed woman told reporters gathered outside John Joe Gray’s compound on Friday.

Fire engulfs the Branch Davidian compound near Waco, Texas, April 19, 1993. Eighty-one Davidians, including leader David Koresh, perished as federal agents tried to drive them out of the compound. A few weeks earlier four agents from  the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms were slain in a shootout at the site, and six cult members were found dead inside. Hearings into the raid and its aftermath are scheduled to open in the House of Representatives Wednesday, July 19, 1995. (AP Photo/Ron Heflin)
Fire engulfs the Branch Davidian compound near Waco, Texas, April 19, 1993. Eighty-one Davidians, including leader David Koresh, perished as federal agents tried to drive them out of the compound. A few weeks earlier four agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms were slain in a shootout at the site, and six cult members were found dead inside. Hearings into the raid and its aftermath are scheduled to open in the House of Representatives Wednesday, July 19, 1995. (AP Photo/Ron Heflin)

Gray, a 66-year-old carpenter with alleged ties to anti-government militia groups, has not left his fortified Trinity, Texas, property since January 2000, after he was accused of assaulting a Texas State Police trooper during a traffic stop. Trinity is a small city located about 60 miles south of Dallas.

When Gray failed to appear in court to face those charges, a warrant was issued for his arrest. In response, Gray and his family armed themselves and began regularly patrolling their wooded 47-acre compound, according to Dallas-Fort Worth’s WFAA-TV.

Henderson County Sheriff Ray Nutt — a former Texas Ranger who was in Waco during the raid on the Branch Davidian compound that left nearly 100 people dead — allowed Gray to hide in plain sight. The siege at Waco, he said, was one of the factors behind that decision.

“The sheriff at that time made the decision not to go in because of the danger of injuring the children that was out there and the danger of his people getting hurt,” Nutt told The Huffington Post. “When I took office in 2009, they had been out there all that time and they hadn’t been a danger to anybody, so my decision was to do the same.”

However, what neither the sheriff nor Gray knew until last week was that former District Attorney Douglas Lowe had dropped the case against Gray before he left office in 2014.

“It had been going on for 15 years, and somebody just had to make a decision that it was time to say it’s over,” Lowe told The Dallas Morning News of his decision to drop the charges.

For whatever reason, Nutt said the district attorney’s office failed to notify either side of the development. The sheriff first learned of it when he was contacted by local media last week.

“I had no idea, [but] I think the prosecutor looked at the case and did what he thought was right,” Nut said. “Gray’s been in a self-imposed prison anyway.”

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