4.6 • 853 Ratings
🗓️ 27 May 2022
⏱️ 95 minutes
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BHA Podcast & Blast, Ep. 132, Corner Crossing in Wyoming with Ryan Callaghan, Liz Lynch and Jared Oakleaf
Most of us have been following the case: four hunters from Missouri who used a homemade ladder to cross from one section of public land to the next without setting foot on private land…and the hard-fought court cases that ensued in Carbon County, Wyoming. It’s a case that may define public access to public lands for decades to come. Yet it is more than that. It’s about the resurgence of privatization of public assets in America, a harsh echo from the Gilded Age. It’s a reminder that plutocracy never sleeps, that the public trust is never truly safe and that, as Frederick Douglass said best, “Power concedes nothing without a demand.” Come listen to this discussion, recorded live at BHA’s 11th annual North American Rendezvous with MeatEater’s Ryan Callaghan and Liz Lynch and Jared Oakleaf of the Wyoming chapter of BHA: It’s a deep dive into the Wyoming corner crossing case, 200 years in the making. It’s a story of old range wars, land giveaways and ancient doctrines of law. Explore with us the possibilities that “bruising someone’s airspace with the points of one’s hips or shoulders” can be an offense worthy of full-bore prosecution…at least in the eyes of some folks.
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0:00.0 | Hello everybody, Hal Herring, Back Country Hunters and Anglers, |
0:03.4 | podcast and Blast. |
0:05.1 | Today is a podcast recorded live at rendezvous, |
0:09.3 | mid-May. |
0:10.7 | And I want to show you a short intro. This is the Corner Crossing Podcasts and as we say in the |
0:17.6 | what you're about to hear is the case 200 years in the making from land giveways to |
0:22.0 | railroads to the unlawful enclosures acts through on and |
0:26.7 | on and on to this kind of pivotal case that we find ourselves discussing today. A short update in two weeks, things are going |
0:37.2 | fast, changing fast, not going fast, they're moving fast, they're changing fast, |
0:42.0 | and one of the things that changed was there is a civil case involved here |
0:48.6 | of the landowner versus the four Missouri hunters. |
0:53.8 | And that civil case was requested |
0:56.6 | to be brought down from the federal level |
0:58.8 | to the state level. |
1:01.1 | But because it involves public lands, |
1:05.0 | it's being lands of Bureau, Land Management, the Checker Board, |
1:08.0 | within this 51 square mile private area, |
1:12.0 | that federal judges decided to leave the civil case in |
1:17.4 | federal court. That is where backcountry hunters and anglers had hoped to see it. |
1:23.5 | They had filed an amicus brief asking for that |
1:28.0 | to retain the case in federal court. |
1:31.6 | So that's basically good news and that's where it has the best |
... |
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