THIS 'CRIMINAL CABAL GOVERNMENT' LAND GRAB SHOULD NOT BE ALLOWED TO HAPPEN HERE IN AMERICA - IT IS HAPPENING TO OTHER AMERICANS - IT CAN HAPPEN TO YOU! STAND UP AND BE COUNTED AND TELL THESE CRIMINALS 'NO!' WHERE ARE THE MILITIA ON THIS? WHERE WERE THE OATH KEEPERS? PETE SANTILLI? COL ROY POTTER?
NEVADA FAMILY'S LAND STOLEN AFTER REFUSING 'GOVERNMENT' BUY OUT
AGENDA 21 OR AGENDA 2030 strikes again. Aka Smart Growth, Sustainable Development, no cars, no private property, no freedom!
Barbara Sheahan has described the Nevada property that’s been in her family for 130 years as priceless. Evidently, the government thought so, too.
Barbara Sheahan has described the Nevada property that’s been in her family for 130 years as priceless. Evidently, the government thought so, too.
The Sheahan’s Groom Mine property has for decades been an island of private property surrounded by the U.S. Air Force’s infamous Area 51 base.
“From our great-great-grandfather, to our grandfathers, to our fathers, they were raised there,” said Joe Sheahan, Groom Mine co-owner told Las Vegas Now. “This was their home.”
The property, which contains several outbuildings as well as a lead and silver mine, is surrounded by a government buffer zone meant to protect government secrets housed at Area 51. And the Sheahan family says they have done nothing to lead the government to believe they are interested in breaching those zones.
If the Sheahans have been good neighbors to the military installation, they have done so with a great amount of patience.
According to the family, since the government began conducting military tests near their property in the mid-1950s, a long list of harassing incidents has occurred.
“First, we really didn’t want to come public, but the Air Force has forced us into it. We want ’em to know what they have done over the last 60 years to our family is not acceptable,” said Dan Sheahan, Groom Mine co-owner.
“[Bullets] were fired over our property. The bullets, the cases dropped on the ground right there and then.” The family even claims that an errant bomb took out one of their structures.
“This has been like I said a 60-plus year nothing short of criminal activity on the part of the federal government, the AEC, Black Ops, CIA and you can go on and on,” said Joe Sheahan, Groom Mine heir.
Even with the government-caused headaches, the Sheahans never had any interest in selling their unique desert property.
“I have a geologist friend who I took out there, who’s just a buff, and he said it is literally almost priceless,” Barbara Sheahan told Las Vegas Now. “There is so much there, not only the ore which is in the ground that can be mined, but in all the intrinsic value of what’s on the land.”
That’s why the family rejected the federal government’s $5.2 million offer to buy the 400 acres.
“We are hopeful the family will accept our final offer to purchase roughly 100 acres of owned property and about 300 acres of unpatented mine claims for $5.2 million,” said Jennifer Miller, Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Installations said when the offer was put on the table. “We understand the landowners’ connection to the land, but we must also consider the demands of national security.”
Unfortunately, the offer was nonnegotiable (as so many things are when dealing with bureaucracy) and the federal government changed its tune after the Sheahans’ rejection.
In retaliation, federal officials condemned the Groom Mine property and ordered the family off the land. To add insult to injury, the government proclamation that the land was unsafe knocked the amount its rightful owners would be compensated (under duress) to just $1.5 million.
“There’s nothing fair, there’s nothing anything remotely close to that involved in this process,” Joe Sheahan told Las Vegas Now.
“But there never has been either, so it’s nothing new. But we would like to change it at least to get our stuff out and be paid the value,” Barbara Sheahan added.
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