Trespassing? Worth shooting a snowboarder?

czgunner

FNG
Joined
Nov 5, 2022
Messages
42
Location
Wyoming
Its called private property for a reason. Ask them to leave, if its a problem, call the sheriff. I don't think you need to point a weapon at somebody. I carry guns on my property, but never needed to point one at anybody.

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ben h

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jun 17, 2012
Messages
277
Location
SLC, UT
I guess this is a good reminder from my consealed permit class that if you do need to use your weapon there more than likely will be legal procedings/scrutiny following, so make sure it's warranted and worth it. This probably isn't the fight the land owner was looking for.
 

TaperPin

WKR
Joined
Jul 12, 2023
Messages
1,975
People have no respect for private property - and they don’t have the common sense to stay away from crazy old guys. The young tough guys I worked with told stories every other weekend of walking across private beaches and having lunch wherever they damn well pleased - I usually told them in many places I’ve lived the owner might meet you carrying a shotgun, and they’d pipe up they are packing so the owner can bring it on. Dipshits.

Why has an entire country embraced a mentality that stupid people are looked up to?
 

Drenalin

WKR
Joined
Nov 15, 2018
Messages
2,726
I watched the video but must have missed where he actually pointed his shotgun at the trespasser. Maybe someone can give me a timestamp to go back to and see that part...

I don't have a problem with the old man being on his own property with a shotgun. I don't have a problem with him confronting a trespasser. If I were going to confront a trespasser, best believe I'd be armed because you don't know anything about the other person or their intent (though the trespasser's intent in this video might be somewhat obvious, you also don't know whether or not he's armed or how he might react). People are stupid, crazy, and potentially doped out of their frickin' minds.

Whether the old man did anything illegal or not, he didn't do anything wrong in my opinion. It's too bad the person who obviously was doing something both illegal and wrong is being made out as the victim.
 
Joined
Nov 14, 2020
Messages
1,029
The old guy has a right to be irritated and to yell and to bring the law to bear against the trespassers. But death is not an appropriate penalty for trespassing.

One of the reasons our nation is a free nation is that we have a respect for the law. Break the law be prepared to face the penalties. There are specific legal penalties for trespassing . The trespasser should have to face those penalties.

The land owner crossed the line when he threatened to shoot the trespasser. He also committed unprovoked battery. He should have to face the penalties for breaking the laws that he did. There is no court, judge or LEO in the nation that will accept your level of anger as a defense. “Your honor, this been happenin‘ a lot and I was just so steamed I had to shoot somebody!!” Good luck with that.

The other thing that comes into play in some states is red flag or domestic violence laws. Use a gun to escalate a situation and law enforcement is looking at you and wondering if theres an applicable law to take your gun.
 

TaperPin

WKR
Joined
Jul 12, 2023
Messages
1,975
You know that old saying to beware of the crazy guy with a backhoe - that’s only funny because crazy old guys with backhoes have been burying bodies since the backhoe was invented. I can point to a lot where an entire car was buried for a decade before someone figured it out. Lol

Nobody wants to learn from the past - Darwin awards are free for the taking.
 

Amos Keeto

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Dec 13, 2023
Messages
276
I'd say that's a bit extreme, but I'd also say, the old fart got his point across.

When you start getting some age on you, wrestling with some young whippersnapper ain't a good idea!
 
Joined
Jul 17, 2018
Messages
1,296
Location
NW Arkansas
He got 25 years in prison and the other guy died. All for a gravel bar that may or may not have been within his property line, but even if it was, the public has the right to use on rivers like the Meramec. Dumb.
Agreed. I didn’t live around there anymore when it happened, but still have family in the area. That is the crazy thing. Everyone in that area should know if you buy a piece of property in the Meramec and it had a gravel bar, expect people to be on it all summer. Not saying what is right or wrong, but just stating the obvious. None of those city folks floating the river care or even understand.
 

Dogone

FNG
Joined
Dec 25, 2023
Messages
26
Cool, how often do people trespass on your acreage? What do you say to them when they trespass?
Hunters trespass frequently. I am NOT an idiot. I do not scream and curse or call the cops. I generally let them stay and only ask them to leave if I have a good reason. My 3000 acres has a lot of good hunting too. Some of you need to grow up and cheer up.
If I ever caught some of you on my land I would be glad to give you a taste of your own medicine.
 

hoot504

FNG
Joined
Jul 4, 2021
Messages
76
Despite having stand your ground laws in Utah, this guy would have lost badly in court if he used deadly force. Those rules apply when you are defending yourself in a genuinely dangerous situation, not standing in the path of a ski bro decked out in Go Pros. For all the whining on here about the rights you’re entitled to on your own piece of property, pointing a gun at someone snowboarding across your front drive just isn’t reasonable. Using the gun on said trespasser would land you in prison for probably the rest of your life, and in my opinion for good reason. See the article linked prior where the guy got 25 years to life for killing someone on his driveway.
 
Joined
Jul 1, 2023
Messages
64
Location
CA
I guess OnX will appeal to the skiing/snowboarding community now as well. "Know where you stand (and snowboard)"
It 100% does. I know several friends who do not hunt and have onX for backcountry


For backcountry slope aspect geography allows you to make better informed decisions when it comes to winter descents and stability. Mostly used by high level skiers who are planning technical ascent/descents in remote backcountry areas.

In this situation ( big cottonwood canyon) the landowner is upset that skiers are using his property as an egress point for side country.
The snowboarder is not local (from Fresno CA) , has an Ikon ( multi resort pass) & entered side country 1500’ and a mile or so away @ Brighton ski resort and now is attempting to exit via this landowners property
Obviously it happens a lot as the landowner was waiting with a shotgun.

the snowboarder exited the ski resort with limited plan and ended up trespassing. Not intentionally or maliciously. But because he travelled downhill and ended up in a ski resort neighborhood.

If he would have planned a route ( using Onx) could he have circumvented this ?
Definitely but he was also causally skiing an easy non technical run. He may have followed friends or he may just have been attempting this line for the 1st time.

Ask anyone who skis, rides enduro, hunts, wheels, fishes, paraglides, any sport where you are on the move and it’s inevitable that at some point at some time,

That you egress or ingress via private property. It happens we try to minimize it or are not aware of it. But it happens




1-ski in/out development is all over the west. And Utah has built a lot in the past 20 years. The onus is on Ikon resorts, winter sports enthusiasts, and landowners to come up with a solution. Ikon is a multi billion dollar business and Utah is world renowned as a winter sports destination. It seems like this is a problem that was going on for a long time. Truthfully the snowboarder is lucky he didn’t get shot. The landowner seemed emotional and unstable.

2-the landowner is definitely getting charged, probably a fine, and possibly jail time. It’s going to affect his life significantly.
 
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