(AP) — Residents of a remote county in eastern Oregon where armed men seized a federal wildlife refuge voted overwhelmingly Tuesday to keep in office a top local official who had denied the occupiers access to a government building. Harney County Judge Steve Grasty had faced the special recall election because he refused to let the activists, who said they were protesting federal land-use policies, use a county building to host a meeting. According to unofficial results 2,038 residents, or 70 percent of votes cast, opposed recalling Grasty; 861 residents, representing 30 percent of ballots cast, voted to remove him. More than two dozen occupiers were arrested amid the takeover, and one was shot dead at a roadblock confrontation with law enforcement officers. The recall petition had complained, among other things, that the judge had "purchased luxury automobiles with the taxes of people struggling to survive."