evil_smurf wrote:So what could happen to me in a federal court? Just a nice fat fine?
Interesting question. Contrary to popular belief,
there is no law against carrying a firearm on federal lands. The National Park Service, Corps of Engineers, etc., bans on firearms are effected through "codifying" their agency policies by entering them as Rules in the Code of Federal Regulations. Congress didn't pass any such laws, but they give broad authority to make rules, and some bureaucrats use that authority to make their own laws.
The CFRs, if they do not conflict with or exceed the enabling legislation, constitute federal law.
But, here's something I've found: unless there is an underlying law, there is no penalty prescribed.
I won't go out on the limb and say a federal magistrate would not impose any kind of penalty. I am not a lawyer, merely a lowly DoJ employee studying the USC and CFR for my own edification. There are all sorts of "administrative fines" imposed without any specific statutory authority. The TSA "fines" come to mind.
I once watched a ridiculous scene play out. My Theta Chi alumni association meets every year for a campout and reunion. We reserve a portion of Richland Creek Wilderness Area campground, in the Ozark National Forest in north-central Arkansas. We pay a special use fee to reserve the campground, so that we can be loud and obnoxious and drink too much and play poker until the wee hours, and otherwise pretend it's 1982, and we're 20 years old and bulletproof.
Hey, we all need a break now and then!
Anyway, we've been at this for 25 years now. We have established a good record of leaving the campground cleaner than we found it. The old rangers know us, and stop by to make sure everything is okay, and that we have plenty of trash bags (because we
do clean up!)
A few years ago, one of the brand new rookie Possum Police, aka, Pine Cone Cops, aka USFS LE Rangers, stepped out of his truck and almost hit the ground; his badge was weighing so heavy on his chest, I don't know how he could stand up straight.
He marched around barking orders about how we had to clean up after ourselves, while his much older partner followed quietly behind with a wink-wink, nudge-nudge. He knew we'd been at this a while, and he trusted us.
Then Junior Birdman whipped out his ticket book and cited one of the brothers for --drumroll, please-- urinating on a tree. At a wilderness campground. Where there is no plumbing.
Guess that answers the question of what the bear does in the woods, eh?
The specific code cited was "unauthorized deposit of bodily waste", just as if he'd dumped an RV holding tank into a pristine trout stream. Please!
(It was handled quietly, and the older ranger came back the next day and told my friend to tear up the ticket.)
All of that was off topic, and an entirely different section of law. But... yeah, you could possibly have to answer a summons. But I don't believe there is any penalty attached.
IANAL. I am sharing my limited knowledge. You are responsible for your own research. Yada yada yada.
Kevin