A little more detail.
I drew out the family tree (which is ridiculously difficult with polygamist families.)
1) Bundy and I related in about six ways, which is not surprising considering a branch of my family settled in St. George, Utah in the mid 1800s. It's only 45 miles from Bunkerville, NV.
2) Bundy's parents bought the current 160 acres from Bundy's mom's third cousin, so while remote, it's still family land, just not directly inherited. Some of the current news reports seem to forget that family includes maternal bloodlines.
3) Bundy's mother's mother's mother was named Mary Jane Leavitt, and she lived in the nearby town of Mesquite, NV. Mesquite is only about five miles from where Bundy currently lives which in farm terms is next door.
Mary was born in 1873 in Utah, and moved to Mesquite, NV in 1877 with her parents Dudley Leavitt (a Canadian) and Mary Huntsman (from Iowa). She married William Elias Abbott (Bundy's mother's mother's father), whose family had moved from Utah to Bunkerville in 1877 as well, in 1890 when she was 17 and he was 21.
Mary and WIlliam were not cattle ranchers, although it appears he had worked as a ranch hand when he was young. They raised melons (which Bundy does now on his 160 acres) and were extremely hard working people. Mary and William are considered the founders of the town of Mesquite and this a prominent statue in their honor. According to the historical marker on their statue:
[William] was on the town board, school board, board of directors of the grape farm, and chairman of the telephone committee. Will was involved in the building of a bridge between Mesquite and Bunkerville—and when completed—he was in charge of the Bridge Day. He was a judge, justice of the peace, farmer, delegate to the International Irrigation Congress, and amateur dentist, and with his wife, ran a hotel and café.
William championed the road-building cause He surveyed the original road between Las Vegas and Mesquite. He campaigned for and took charge of the construction of a road which was one hundred feet in width and a mile-and-a-half long.
4) Bundy's paternal side of the family moved from Illinois in 1916 to settle in Mt. Trumball, Arizona (better known as Bundyville.) Bundyville is about 50 miles from Bunkerville, and 55 miles to St. George, UT. They form a triangle. The Bundy's raised cattle in Arizona and grazed them on federal land until 1934 when the Taylor Grazing Act squeezed them out. They entire town collapsed in the 1940s, the Bundy family had to start over so they moved to Bunkerville and bought the current 160 acre lot in Bunkerville in 1948 from a distant relative. Bundyville (Mt. Trumball) became a ghost town.
Like any good sovereign, Cliven Bundy cherry-picked details from his family history, cobbled them together to make a pseudo legal argument out of them, combined them with standard Posse Comitatus and Sovereign theories, and then threatened violence when his fairy tale didn't work in court.
Demo.