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U.S. Constitution Title: SUPREME COURT RULES AGAINST FEDS! The Environmental Protection Agency cannot issue a drive-by decision that a parcel of land is a protected wetlands and prohibit the owner from using it, and then refuse to hear any challenges to such decisions. So says the U.S. Supreme Court. The decision today came in the case of the Sackett family of Priest Lake, Idaho. Mike and Chantell Sackett bought a piece of land in a residential subdivision that was about two-thirds of an acre, purchased the appropriate building permits and started work on their dream home. Then the EPA arrived, ordered them to restore the land to its pristine condition, protect it for years and then go through a ruinously expensive application process to request permission to use their own land. Further, the EPA, in collusion with the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, told the couple they could not even challenge the decision unless they went through that expensive process. The high court today said the EPA must provide a process through which a challenge to its decision can be addressed in a meaningful way. The law firm working on behalf of the Sacketts called the decision a precedent-setting victory for the rights of all property owners. The EPA previously had threatened the couple with fines of up to $75,000 per day for failing to follow the agencys intrusive compliance plan through which federal officials not only effectively seized control of the land, but also the couple, by demanding their paperwork records and other detailed information. Damien Schiff, principal attorney for the Pacific Legal Foundation, which represented the couple without charge, had argued the case at the Supreme Court on Jan. 9. He said the implications of the decision are clear. EPA is not above the law, he said. Thats the bottom line with todays ruling. This is a great day for Mike and Chantell Sackett, because it confirms that EPA cant deny them access to justice. EPA cant repeal the Sacketts fundamental right to their day in court. And for that reason, it is a great day for all Americans, for all property owners, and for the rule of law. He continued, The justices have made it clear that EPA bureaucrats are answerable to the law and the courts just like the rest of us. EPA cant try to micromanage people and their property it cant order property owners to dance like marionettes while denying them any meaningful right to appeal to the courts. It cant threaten property owners with financial ruin and not have to justify its threats to a judge. And it cant issue lazy, drive-by wetlands edicts about private property. It will have to put in some honest work and use credible science, because the regulators must be able to justify their wetlands orders in a court of law, he said. Constitutional Chaos: What Happens When the Government Breaks Its Own Laws Schiff said, Rest assured, while todays ruling strengthens everyones individual rights and property rights, and everyones access to justice, it does not weaken legitimate environmental protection one iota. Regulators will simply have to be professional and thorough, not careless and slipshod, when they issue wetlands orders. In the case of urgent pollution threats, EPA will still have the power, as it does now, to seek an immediate court injunction. But when there is no emergency, EPA cant start ordering property owners around and threatening them with tens of millions of dollars in fines, as with the Sacketts without first doing some genuine due diligence. EPA will have to be prepared to show a reviewing court that its wetlands regulations are really necessary not just a power trip. Mike Sackett said he and his wife were subjected to hell by federal bureaucrats. We are very thankful to the Supreme Court for affirming that we have rights, and that the EPA is not a law unto itself and that the EPA is not beyond the control of the courts and the Constitution, he said. The EPA used bullying and threats of terrifying fines, and has made our life hell for the past five years. It said we could not go to court and challenge their bogus claim that our small lot had wetlands on it. As this nightmare went on, we rubbed our eyes and started to wonder if we were living in some totalitarian country. Now, the Supreme Court has come to our rescue, and reminded the EPA and everyone that this is still America, and Americans still have rights under the Constitution. We want to thank Pacific Legal Foundation for defending us, without charge! Without Pacific Legal Foundation, this day would have not come, and this court ruling that vindicated the rights of all Americans against bureaucratic bullying, would not have happened. The family bought the small parcel in 2005 in an area surrounded by other homes. The EPAs decision, without hearings or notice, that it was a wetlands was accompanied by threats of fines and penalties. The Sacketts wanted to challenge the EPAs decision, but the agency refused to hold a hearing, and then the 9th Circuit Court said they had no right to judicial review at that point. The court said the couple would have to pay for a years-long wetlands permit process first. That process could have cost 12 times the value of the land, the legal team working for the Sacketts said. When the case was argued in January, justices suggested the EPA actions were outrageous and very strange. Samuel Alito said that the scenario was one that most homeowners would say cant happen in the United States. And Elena Kagan said it was a strange position for the government to adopt in insisting that the property owner has no right to a hearing on such an order. Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. turned the question back on Malcolm Stewart, the government attorney assigned to defend the EPAs actions. What would you do if you received this order? he asked. Stewart wouldnt answer. Alito also noted it was very strange for a system that would require a party to apply for a permit to build on wetlands when the fact being challenged was whether the land was wetlands. Mike and Chantell Sackett Justice Antonin Scalia called it the high-handedness of the agency when the EPA demanded the couple turn their land into a protected preserve, installing vegetation that wasnt there before they started their project. The government did not contest the recitation when Alito summarized what had happened: You buy property to build a house. You think maybe there is a little drainage problem in part of your lot, so you start to build the house and then you get an order from the EPA which says you have filled in wetlands, so you cant build your house. Remove the fill. Put in all kinds of plants. and now you have to let us on your premises whenever we want to
you have to turn over to us all sorts of documents, and for every day that you dont do all this you are accumulating a potential fine of $75,000 and by the way, there is no way you can go to court to challenge our determination that this is a wetlands until such time as we choose to sue you. Justice Ruth Ginsburg noted that the couple had sought a hearing from the EPA over the controversy, and the EPA said no. Chantell Sackett had described for a congressional hearing recently the shock when they found federal EPA agents on their land, ordering them to stop foundation work, restore the land with non-native species, fence it, guard it for several years and then request a permission to continue their home project that in all likelihood would be denied. Bullying, Chantell said. Thats what the EPA does. They came into our life, took our property, put us in limbo, told us we cant do anything with it, and then threatened us with fines, she said. They use intimidation and we as American people, my husband and I, are fed up. Were scared. They cant be allowed to do this, she continued. Its wrong. This is why we are suing the government, the EPA. Officials with the EPA repeatedly declined to respond to a WND request for comment. WND was referred to a Justice Department office, which also declined to respond. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 7.
#3. To: Mad Dog (#0)
One other issues I wish they had addressed was feral bureaucracies being able to levy fines. These buraucracies are BUREAUCRACIES,NOT COURTS! Not only that,but they are bureaucracies of no appeal or review. I personally know of a real estate company that owned some land near a canal that was popular with fishermen that liked to park their cars along the road and sit in lawn chairs or stand by the canal and fish. The canal bank eroded to the point where the parking was reduced,so somebody dumped a few dump truck loads of sand there WITHOUT the real estate company's permission,and then somebody else reported them to the EPA for filling wetlands. EPA inspectors came in and saw the fill and then contacted the real estate company and told them "We are going to start fining you x-thousand dollars in fines every day until the land is restored,inspected,and approved,starting today." It ended up costing them over 20,000 dollars by the time they hired someone to dig up and haul off the sand and get somebody from the EPA back over there to inspect and approve the sand removal. And this is land the real estate company will never be able to sell because it is too narrow to build on. It is just a small part of a multi-acre tract they bought.
. As a westerner almost all of my life I have had lifelong experience dealing with these feral agencies. I couldn't agree with you more pete. OVER 90% of Alaska is OWNED or controlled by the feral gooberment. We deal with these mutts every day. DC is a VERY long way from Alaska. I'm pretty sure that the founders would not be happy with the current state of affairs.
I'm pretty sure they would be horrified to the point they would be calling for another revolution.
I'm pretty sure they would be horrified to the point they would be calling for another revolution. "Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security."
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