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Thread: CA Fish and game inspections

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    Default CA Fish and game inspections

    Very interesting video, I'd love to see falconry inspections challenged one day. Thanks for putting this together.

    https://youtu.be/C_4Q0CBdCXk
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    Quote Originally Posted by ericedw View Post
    Very interesting video, I'd love to see falconry inspections challenged one day. Thanks for putting this together.

    https://youtu.be/C_4Q0CBdCXk
    Yikes. Thanks for the reminder of why I will never EVER live in California. Tough enough to go visit my wife's family down there for short periods.
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    This is Michigan's law on the matter. It sounds the same as California's doesn't it?

    "Inspections may be made without advance notice at any reasonable time of day. Inspections must be conducted in the presence of the falconry permit applicant."
    Isaac

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    Quote Originally Posted by BestBeagler View Post
    This is Michigan's law on the matter. It sounds the same as California's doesn't it?

    "Inspections may be made without advance notice at any reasonable time of day. Inspections must be conducted in the presence of the falconry permit applicant."
    "Applicant" might be the key word there.
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    The date stamp is 2013 and appears to be as all States had.......open public meetings to the new State regs changing over from the Feds........so is this what is really is a discussion. Or a recent post 2 years old of New proposed Falconry regs that had to be made and adopted by Jan 2014. Also, most assigned permits allow for such inspections. It was also on the Federal regs and simply carried over.
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    Yea, I have a grasp of our falconry regs, past and present.

    I think the scary point of the video and statements made by the commissioners is that the CA Fish and Game is under the opinion that their right to unwarranted searches extends well beyond falconry, that they somehow are extended more power than Law Enforcement.

    It seemed to me that they believe if someone buys all necessary licenses to go deer hunting that they could show up on your doorstep the next day for an inspection.

    I understand the video is a few years old, just the first I had seen it. Scary stuff.
    Eric Edwards

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    I've joined this group: www.thecavalrygroup.com To protect our rights.
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    A good lawyer could put them in their place. Honestly its just like the rest of the falconry regs. Just one cocky person with deep pockets could undo a lot!
    To quote Frank Bebee, the regulations that govern falconry do nothing to protect raptors but serve to protect the rights and privileges of special intrests groups.
    Until someone with resources dose something about it we are all subject to the bully. No matter where you live.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Hawkmom View Post
    I've joined this group: www.thecavalrygroup.com To protect our rights.
    Wish I knew about this group a few years ago.
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    Quote Originally Posted by goshawkr View Post
    Yikes. Thanks for the reminder of why I will never EVER live in California. Tough enough to go visit my wife's family down there for short periods.
    Isn't that why the call it the "Left Coast"? With due respect to those who live there, CA may have better falconry conditions than I do here but it would never be on my list of places to move. Though our regs are pretty crappy here, our regulators are not blatantly in favor of using the constitution to wipe their asses either.
    Ron N1WT Vermont

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    Quote Originally Posted by rkumetz View Post
    Isn't that why the call it the "Left Coast"? With due respect to those who live there, CA may have better falconry conditions than I do here but it would never be on my list of places to move. Though our regs are pretty crappy here, our regulators are not blatantly in favor of using the constitution to wipe their asses either.
    Ron,

    It's not just the left coast... Does your state game department have the power to search private property without a warrant or probable cause? As far as I know all state game departments have declared the power to do so in falconry regulations. I am willing to bet that nothing in any state law authorizes such a violation of privacy.

    This is not strictly a falconry issue, administrative agencies of all types have overreached thier authority and created regulation that extends beyond the law. This is simply more repugnant in that it involves the rape of one of our core Constitutional rights.
    Troy

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    Quote Originally Posted by WILL HUNT View Post
    Ron,

    It's not just the left coast... Does your state game department have the power to search private property without a warrant or probable cause? As far as I know all state game departments have declared the power to do so in falconry regulations. I am willing to bet that nothing in any state law authorizes such a violation of privacy.

    This is not strictly a falconry issue, administrative agencies of all types have overreached thier authority and created regulation that extends beyond the law. This is simply more repugnant in that it involves the rape of one of our core Constitutional rights.

    Troy,
    I am infuriated as much as anyone else about governmental overreach when it comes to privacy. I don't fear terrorists nearly as much as politicians and megalomaniacal law enforcement officials with paramilitary capabilities.

    Having said that, the court will support the position of CA F&W simply because when you sign up for the permit you are essentially giving permission for that search to occur. Signing up for the permit is somewhat akin to waiving your Miranda rights. I don't agree that you should have to grant that permission and waive your 4th amendment rights but that is another issue altogether.

    Unfortunately we live in a society which is increasingly willing to sacrifice their constitutional rights in an attempt to make someone else responsible for protecting them from the boogie man. I don't know how old you are but when I was a kid our television poked fun at the totalitarian Soviet and Nazi regimes with actors having bad accents saying "your papers please". It is unfortunate that we are moving in that direction and it is no longer funny. You and I are horrified by what is taking place while the vast majority of people are more concerned about the fact that they can't watch TV via 4G all the way to work.

    Ron
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    Quote Originally Posted by rkumetz View Post
    Troy,
    I am infuriated as much as anyone else about governmental overreach when it comes to privacy. I don't fear terrorists nearly as much as politicians and megalomaniacal law enforcement officials with paramilitary capabilities.

    Having said that, the court will support the position of CA F&W simply because when you sign up for the permit you are essentially giving permission for that search to occur. Signing up for the permit is somewhat akin to waiving your Miranda rights. I don't agree that you should have to grant that permission and waive your 4th amendment rights but that is another issue altogether.

    Unfortunately we live in a society which is increasingly willing to sacrifice their constitutional rights in an attempt to make someone else responsible for protecting them from the boogie man. I don't know how old you are but when I was a kid our television poked fun at the totalitarian Soviet and Nazi regimes with actors having bad accents saying "your papers please". It is unfortunate that we are moving in that direction and it is no longer funny. You and I are horrified by what is taking place while the vast majority of people are more concerned about the fact that they can't watch TV via 4G all the way to work.

    Ron
    Are you familiar with the frog in the cooking pot concept? Many of the changes we're seeing today didn't happen overnight!
    Dan McCarron
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    Quote Originally Posted by wyodjm View Post
    Are you familiar with the frog in the cooking pot concept?
    No but it sounds interesting. Do tell!
    Ron N1WT Vermont

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    Quote Originally Posted by rkumetz View Post
    No but it sounds interesting. Do tell!
    Put a frog in a pot of hot water and it will jump out. Put a frog in a pot of water at room temperature and gradually turn up the heat, and it will sit there and cook to death. Apparently not noticing the change until it's too late.
    Dan McCarron
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    Quote Originally Posted by wyodjm View Post
    Put a frog in a pot of hot water and it will jump out. Put a frog in a pot of water at room temperature and gradually turn up the heat, and it will sit there and cook to death. Apparently not noticing the change until it's too late.


    I attribute it to having screwed up priorities. We respond to fire calls all the time where the dwelling is a mutilated single wide leaning on the blocks with the door hanging off and the whole place is a shambles with the kids eating bags of M&M candies for supper but they have a 60" plasma TV and 4 different game consoles. I have to think it is the same thing. People do not value their freedom. In many ways I think that the terrorists won the moment that we started to change the way we go about our lives because some of us are afraid of them.

    Some people are not all that bright and that is not their fault. Others are simply apathetic and that is a far more reprehensible quality.

    To paraphrase Aldo Leopold, I am glad that I will not be young in a world without freedom.
    Ron N1WT Vermont

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    Quote Originally Posted by rkumetz View Post


    I attribute it to having screwed up priorities. We respond to fire calls all the time where the dwelling is a mutilated single wide leaning on the blocks with the door hanging off and the whole place is a shambles with the kids eating bags of M&M candies for supper but they have a 60" plasma TV and 4 different game consoles. I have to think it is the same thing. People do not value their freedom. In many ways I think that the terrorists won the moment that we started to change the way we go about our lives because some of us are afraid of them.

    Some people are not all that bright and that is not their fault. Others are simply apathetic and that is a far more reprehensible quality.

    To paraphrase Aldo Leopold, I am glad that I will not be young in a world without freedom.
    I'm a big fan of Aldo Leopold. My father used to say "If you don't know where you're going, any road will take you there "

    I'm really glad I got to personally trap, man, train, and fly all the passage golden eagles I wanted. At a high level, in classic style that I'll never forget. It's a shame future American falconers won't have the same opportunities.

    All my best Ron and Merry Christmas.
    Dan McCarron
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    Quote Originally Posted by rkumetz View Post
    Troy,

    Having said that, the court will support the position of CA F&W simply because when you sign up for the permit you are essentially giving permission for that search to occur. Signing up for the permit is somewhat akin to waiving your Miranda rights. I don't agree that you should have to grant that permission and waive your 4th amendment rights but that is another issue altogether.



    Ron
    I disagree since the Ca Supreme Court has already looked at this claim of authority by F&G as was stated in the video. Below are the findings of the CA Supreme Court Justice in People v. Maikhio:

    "Section 1006 is derived from former section 23 of the original Fish and Game Code as enacted in 1933 (Stats.1933, ch. 73, § 23, p. 396). Former section 23 provided in relevant part: “The commission shall inspect regularly (1) all boats, markets, stores and other buildings, except dwellings, and all receptacles except the clothing actually worn by a person at the time of inspection, where birds, mammals, fish, mollusks, or crustaceans may be stored, placed, or held for sale or storage....” (Italics added.) In providing for the regular inspection of the specified locations, former section 23 was evidently intended to authorize game wardens to conduct repeated inspections of places where fish and game were likely to be kept for sale or storage, and was not primarily directed at more ad hoc, in-the-field stops of noncommercial anglers and hunters by game wardens seeking the display of required licenses or any fish or game that have been caught or taken."

    There is no way a judge will find this authority is intended to search the homes and business of every citizen in the state without cause or warrant.
    Troy

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    Quote Originally Posted by WILL HUNT View Post
    I disagree since the Ca Supreme Court has already looked at this claim of authority by F&G as was stated in the video. Below are the findings of the CA Supreme Court Justice in People v. Maikhio:

    "Section 1006 is derived from former section 23 of the original Fish and Game Code as enacted in 1933 (Stats.1933, ch. 73, § 23, p. 396). Former section 23 provided in relevant part: “The commission shall inspect regularly (1) all boats, markets, stores and other buildings, except dwellings, and all receptacles except the clothing actually worn by a person at the time of inspection, where birds, mammals, fish, mollusks, or crustaceans may be stored, placed, or held for sale or storage....” (Italics added.) In providing for the regular inspection of the specified locations, former section 23 was evidently intended to authorize game wardens to conduct repeated inspections of places where fish and game were likely to be kept for sale or storage, and was not primarily directed at more ad hoc, in-the-field stops of noncommercial anglers and hunters by game wardens seeking the display of required licenses or any fish or game that have been caught or taken."

    There is no way a judge will find this authority is intended to search the homes and business of every citizen in the state without cause or warrant.
    I agree that simply having a fishing or hunting license does not confer any implied waiver of one's 4th amendment rights.

    I base my previous statement upon the premise that if you have any sort of license to do business (let's say you are a restaurant) the permitting authority may stipulate that they can inspect your place of business without giving notice. In the case of a health inspection I am not sure that I disagree with that line of thinking.

    In a similar fashion if you are hold a falconry or breeding permit would the court not support the idea that your "place of doing business" (which in most cases is our homes) as indicated on your permit is not fair game for an inspection?

    I am not saying that I agree with this or that I think it is a good idea but I have observed that our courts tend to be more and more inclined to side with intrusive government actions on the basis of allegedly insuring the welfare of the public.
    Ron N1WT Vermont

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    Quote Originally Posted by rkumetz View Post
    I agree that simply having a fishing or hunting license does not confer any implied waiver of one's 4th amendment rights.

    I base my previous statement upon the premise that if you have any sort of license to do business (let's say you are a restaurant) the permitting authority may stipulate that they can inspect your place of business without giving notice. In the case of a health inspection I am not sure that I disagree with that line of thinking.

    In a similar fashion if you are hold a falconry or breeding permit would the court not support the idea that your "place of doing business" (which in most cases is our homes) as indicated on your permit is not fair game for an inspection?

    I am not saying that I agree with this or that I think it is a good idea but I have observed that our courts tend to be more and more inclined to side with intrusive government actions on the basis of allegedly insuring the welfare of the public.


    #1006 makes no mention of ANY permit to be a requirement for inspection (although as the Supreme Court indicated it was clearly intended to inspect commercial fish processing plant and commercial fish markets, which are businesses that deal in wild harvested meat products), if you choose to ignore the intent of the legislator and the opinion of the Supreme Court then your claim is that this authority is for everybody, including hunters, fisherman, office workers, Supreme Court Judges, factory workers, EVERYBODY. I might add that sport falconry which was not a recognized sport in 1933 when this code was enacted is a personal endeavor (not a business).
    Troy

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    Quote Originally Posted by WILL HUNT View Post
    #1006 makes no mention of ANY permit to be a requirement for inspection (although as the Supreme Court indicated it was clearly intended to inspect commercial fish processing plant and commercial fish markets, which are businesses that deal in wild harvested meat products), if you choose to ignore the intent of the legislator and the opinion of the Supreme Court then your claim is that this authority is for everybody, including hunters, fisherman, office workers, Supreme Court Judges, factory workers, EVERYBODY. I might add that sport falconry which was not a recognized sport in 1933 when this code was enacted is a personal endeavor (not a business).
    First let me say that it is MY opinion that they do not have the right to inspect nor do they have the right to stipulate that searches without probable cause are a requirement of a permit.

    What I am saying is that in 1933 the courts were less activist and more prone to digging in their heels on the grounds of protecting both the letter and spirit of the constitution - in essence to err on the side of protecting the rights of the individual. I am sorry to say that I do not believe that the same case would, in 2015, yield the same result. The new mantra of the left leaning activist court is that the interests of the masses always outweigh those of the individual which was not the mindset of those who wrote and signed the Constitution and Bill of Rights.

    Perhaps I am simply more cynical than you are. It probably has something to do with watching the news while I ate my breakfast this morning listening to endless diatribes on how the government needs to disarm us and make sure that we can't use encryption software to send emails that they can't read. That kind of stuff makes me cranky. I was taught that though I may disagree with someone's opinion it is my obligation to die if necessary to defend their right to say it. Why? Because that and our other rights are sacred. Where did that mindset go?

    Cranky guy signing off.....
    Ron N1WT Vermont

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    Quote Originally Posted by rkumetz View Post
    I agree that simply having a fishing or hunting license does not confer any implied waiver of one's 4th amendment rights.


    In a similar fashion if you are hold a falconry or breeding permit would the court not support the idea that your "place of doing business" (which in most cases is our homes) as indicated on your permit is not fair game for an inspection?
    I think you would might want to review the following CA Court opinion which is the very case the CFWS staff used as proof that these inspections are allowed. Its REALLY FUNNY that this is what the staff claim justifies home inspections of falconers and that this is posted on the departments web site.

    BETCHART v. DEPARTMENT OF FISH & GAME [158 Cal.App.3d 1104]
    Hunters are required to be licensed. By choosing to engage in this highly regulated activity, there is a fundamental premise that there is an implied consent to effective supervision and inspection as directed by statute.
    Wild game hunting is not a commercial enterprise (as are the liquor and firearms industries). Nevertheless, hunting takes place in "open fields" whether publicly or privately owned; this is a convincing factor that plaintiff's expectation of privacy while hunting is unreasonable. [7] Open field sites are regarded as so public in nature that searches are justifiable without any particular showing of cause or exigency. (People v. Dumas (1973) 9 Cal.3d 871, 882 & fn. 10 [109 Cal.Rptr. 304, 512 P.2d 1208].) "This hierarchy of protection arises not from the application of differing constitutional standards to various locales, but rather from an application of a single standard of reasonableness to all places in accordance with a fundamental understanding that a particular intrusion into one domain of human existence [such as the home] seriously threatens personal security, while the same intrusion into another domain does not."
    The entries by the wardens are for the purpose of regulating and managing a state-owned resource……………The warrantless entries by authorized fish and game personnel onto open fields constitute only a minimal intrusion into the private use of the property. Such entries are permitted where game is present and hunting occurs. The inspections may not exceed the specific limited purpose of enforcing wild game regulations, absent probable cause.
    Troy

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    Quote Originally Posted by rkumetz View Post
    First let me say that it is MY opinion that they do not have the right to inspect nor do they have the right to stipulate that searches without probable cause are a requirement of a permit.

    What I am saying is that in 1933 the courts were less activist and more prone to digging in their heels on the grounds of protecting both the letter and spirit of the constitution - in essence to err on the side of protecting the rights of the individual. I am sorry to say that I do not believe that the same case would, in 2015, yield the same result. The new mantra of the left leaning activist court is that the interests of the masses always outweigh those of the individual which was not the mindset of those who wrote and signed the Constitution and Bill of Rights.

    Perhaps I am simply more cynical than you are. It probably has something to do with watching the news while I ate my breakfast this morning listening to endless diatribes on how the government needs to disarm us and make sure that we can't use encryption software to send emails that they can't read. That kind of stuff makes me cranky. I was taught that though I may disagree with someone's opinion it is my obligation to die if necessary to defend their right to say it. Why? Because that and our other rights are sacred. Where did that mindset go?

    Cranky guy signing off.....
    The Supreme Court citing FGC #1006 was in 2011 (: It is ironic that in 1933 when #1006 was written that raptor were not protected and shot as vermin.

    Judge Low in BETCHART v. DEPARTMENT OF FISH & GAME who determined that such home inspections by f&G would be threat to citizens personal security was 1984. His words are still on the departments web site today (:
    Troy

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    Quote Originally Posted by rkumetz View Post
    I agree that simply having a fishing or hunting license does not confer any implied waiver of one's 4th amendment rights.

    I base my previous statement upon the premise that if you have any sort of license to do business (let's say you are a restaurant) the permitting authority may stipulate that they can inspect your place of business without giving notice. In the case of a health inspection I am not sure that I disagree with that line of thinking.
    And the Health Department has no "authority" to create regulation that would allow them to force a home inspection of your kitchen. Which is a great example of what has taken place in falconry. They created regulation but no basis of authority exists in the law.
    Troy

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    Quote Originally Posted by WILL HUNT View Post
    And the Health Department has no "authority" to create regulation that would allow them to force a home inspection of your kitchen. Which is a great example of what has taken place in falconry. They created regulation but no basis of authority exists in the law.
    Agreed but under normal circumstances you don't have a permit for your kitchen either. I would love to be confident that the courts would uphold our right to privacy today as they did 31 years ago but the judicial climate has changed more than global warming. The assertion they use to justify this
    (in my opinion unlawful) search is that they are managing game animals
    (or in our case birds of prey) which are the property of the state and as such they can check on their property the same way you look in on your kids while they are sleeping.

    As I read it, the key is this sentence "The inspections may not exceed the specific limited purpose of enforcing wild game regulations, absent probable cause." I would interpret this as saying that the only thing that
    law enforcement (aka the wardens) may be looking for is things that would be a violation of the game laws such as a stockpile that exceeded the limits, species with no legal take, etc. It excludes things like the property owner's pot plants, bomb making supplies and other things which are not relevant to the game laws.

    I assume that the decision in that case had something to do with some lower court decision where someone was convicted of a hunting regulation? It appears that this decision upheld that earlier decision.
    Ron N1WT Vermont

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    [QUOTE=rkumetz;364265]Agreed but under normal circumstances you don't have a permit for your kitchen either. I would love to be confident that the courts would uphold our right to privacy today as they did 31 years ago but the judicial climate has changed more than global warming.

    Building permits are typically required for kitchens. Nothing in statute authorizes administrative agencies to invade the privacy of the home because one is in possession of a state permit. EXAMPLE: Driving requires a permit but nothing in law authorizes LE to come to your home and submit your vehicles and papers to searched, additionally the state and US Constitutions forbid it just as they do for falconry.

    The assertion they use to justify this
    (in my opinion unlawful) search is that they are managing game animals
    (or in our case birds of prey) which are the property of the state and as such they can check on their property the same way you look in on your kids while they are sleeping.


    That a is laughable. Birds in lawful possession by falconers are not a state resource. Nothing in law indicates the birds are not our property. AFC disputed this issue with USFWS several years ago when they attempted to write in regulation they they are not our property. The USFWS consequently publicly declared that they were mistaken and that the birds (wild and domestic bred) are our property. The matter is settled and I will not entertain all the "what if's" that one can imagine.

    As I read it, the key is this sentence "The inspections may not exceed the specific limited purpose of enforcing wild game regulations, absent probable cause." I would interpret this as saying that the only thing that
    law enforcement (aka the wardens) may be looking for is things that would be a violation of the game laws such as a stockpile that exceeded the limits, species with no legal take, etc. It excludes things like the property owner's pot plants, bomb making supplies and other things which are not relevant to the game laws.

    Yes, when they are inspecting a commercial cannery or fish processing facility etc. this is what they are restricted to look for. Not applicable to my office or home.
    Troy

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    [QUOTE=WILL HUNT;364271]
    Quote Originally Posted by rkumetz View Post
    Agreed but under normal circumstances you don't have a permit for your kitchen either. I would love to be confident that the courts would uphold our right to privacy today as they did 31 years ago but the judicial climate has changed more than global warming.
    Quote Originally Posted by rkumetz View Post

    Building permits are typically required for kitchens. Nothing in statute authorizes administrative agencies to invade the privacy of the home because one is in possession of a state permit. EXAMPLE: Driving requires a permit but nothing in law authorizes LE to come to your home and submit your vehicles and papers to searched, additionally the state and US Constitutions forbid it just as they do for falconry.

    The assertion they use to justify this
    (in my opinion unlawful) search is that they are managing game animals
    (or in our case birds of prey) which are the property of the state and as such they can check on their property the same way you look in on your kids while they are sleeping.


    That a is laughable. Birds in lawful possession by falconers are not a state resource. Nothing in law indicates the birds are not our property. AFC disputed this issue with USFWS several years ago when they attempted to write in regulation they they are not our property. The USFWS consequently publicly declared that they were mistaken and that the birds (wild and domestic bred) are our property. The matter is settled and I will not entertain all the "what if's" that one can imagine.

    As I read it, the key is this sentence "The inspections may not exceed the specific limited purpose of enforcing wild game regulations, absent probable cause." I would interpret this as saying that the only thing that
    law enforcement (aka the wardens) may be looking for is things that would be a violation of the game laws such as a stockpile that exceeded the limits, species with no legal take, etc. It excludes things like the property owner's pot plants, bomb making supplies and other things which are not relevant to the game laws.

    Yes, when they are inspecting a commercial cannery or fish processing facility etc. this is what they are restricted to look for. Not applicable to my office or home.
    I hope you don't think I am actually arguing with you. I believe 100% that the searches that CA says they can do (and those in the language of many falconry permits) are prohibited by the 4th amendment. On the other hand I also believe that DUI "checkpoints" (though I do not endorse driving while impaired) and seatbelt checks are also a violation of the same amendment. My refusal to accept the court will agree with us is based on the fact that the legality of those and similar searches have been upheld.
    Ron N1WT Vermont

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    [QUOTE=rkumetz;364272]
    Quote Originally Posted by WILL HUNT View Post

    I hope you don't think I am actually arguing with you. I believe 100% that the searches that CA says they can do (and those in the language of many falconry permits) are prohibited by the 4th amendment. On the other hand I also believe that DUI "checkpoints" (though I do not endorse driving while impaired) and seatbelt checks are also a violation of the same amendment. My refusal to accept the court will agree with us is based on the fact that the legality of those and similar searches have been upheld.
    Not at all Ron, were just talking. I am happy to discuss these points.

    In the case of DUI checkpoints at least there is an argument that the public saftey is a concern when one is driving a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol on public highways.

    By comparison the highway patrol can not randomly come to invade your home and check to see if you are under the influence of alcohol merely because you possess a driving license. Since being under the influence of alcohol is legal and there is no compelling concern for public saftey such an invasion of privacy is not permissible, just the same as the benign condition of bird ownership.
    Troy

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    [QUOTE=WILL HUNT;364274]
    Quote Originally Posted by rkumetz View Post

    Not at all Ron, were just talking. I am happy to discuss these points.

    In the case of DUI checkpoints at least there is an argument that the public saftey is a concern when one is driving a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol on public highways.

    By comparison the highway patrol can not randomly come to invade your home and check to see if you are under the influence of alcohol merely because you possess a driving license. Since being under the influence of alcohol is legal and there is no compelling concern for public saftey such an invasion of privacy is not permissible, just the same as the benign condition of bird ownership.
    If I am stopped to ask me if I have been drinking with no probable cause other than the fact that I am driving and it is Saturday night that is a 4th amendment no-no. You can draw a line between public safety and just about any search if you are willing to trample the constitution in the process. It is just simpler and more cost effective to stop everyone than to put enough officers on the road looking for people who are driving with the telltale signs of being impaired. In the case of the seatbelt checkpoints that one really ruffles my feathers. You are going to kick the crap out of my rights to make sure that I am not stupid enough to drive without a seatbelt? If you are stupid your being ejected at high speed through your windshield is what I like to call "evolution in action".
    Ron N1WT Vermont

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    [QUOTE=rkumetz;364275]
    Quote Originally Posted by WILL HUNT View Post

    If I am stopped to ask me if I have been drinking with no probable cause other than the fact that I am driving and it is Saturday night that is a 4th amendment no-no. You can draw a line between public safety and just about any search if you are willing to trample the constitution in the process. It is just simpler and more cost effective to stop everyone than to put enough officers on the road looking for people who are driving with the telltale signs of being impaired. In the case of the seatbelt checkpoints that one really ruffles my feathers. You are going to kick the crap out of my rights to make sure that I am not stupid enough to drive without a seatbelt? If you are stupid your being ejected at high speed through your windshield is what I like to call "evolution in action".
    No place is more sacred from government intrusion than the home. None.
    Troy

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    [QUOTE=WILL HUNT;364276]
    Quote Originally Posted by rkumetz View Post

    No place is more sacred from government intrusion than the home. None.
    That may be true but if we keep allowing activities which should be disallowed on 4th amendment grounds in the name of public safety we are
    eroding the base on which those rights are built: the interests of the masses do NOT outweigh those of the individual. As much as I like to be able to walk the streets, the recent application of "stop and frisk" policies is one of those cases where individual rights are being eroded.
    Ron N1WT Vermont

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    Agreed.
    Troy

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    I believe we are witnessing the firm establishment of a fourth branch of government, not grounded in legislative rule or regulation. And that evolving level of government is bureaucracy. Driven by policy.

    I'm not sure how the public can address it.
    Dan McCarron
    John 3: 16

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    Quote Originally Posted by wyodjm View Post
    I believe we are witnessing the firm establishment of a fourth branch of government, not grounded in legislative rule or regulation. And that evolving level of government is bureaucracy. Driven by policy.

    I'm not sure how the public can address it.
    Yes. I believe it begins with public awareness and protest.
    Troy

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    Quote Originally Posted by wyodjm View Post
    I believe we are witnessing the firm establishment of a fourth branch of government, not grounded in legislative rule or regulation. And that evolving level of government is bureaucracy. Driven by policy.

    I'm not sure how the public can address it.
    How is that not just the executive branch?
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