Is Every Government Employee a Cop Now?

by Greg Walcher on May 2, 2026

I don’t know anyone else who tracks the number of federal cops, but the watchdog group Open the Books occasionally reports on the burgeoning number of federal agencies with law enforcement divisions. The latest report, “The Militarization of Federal Bureaucracy” detailed the astonishing scope of federal police power. There are over 200,000 federal officers with guns, badges, and arresting authority, in a whopping 103 different federal agencies. The federal government has more law enforcement officers than America’s 25 largest cities combined.

Those 103 federal agencies – half of which are not primarily law enforcement – spent $3.7 billion on guns, ammunition, and military-style equipment between 2006 and 2023. The FBI and ICE have always had that. But the National Institutes of Health in suburban Bethesda, Maryland now has its own fleet of police cars with cops who carry guns and can arrest people. So do the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, Library of Congress, National Park Service, Forest Service, Fish and Wildlife Service, Marine Fisheries Service, Government Printing Office, and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).

It is BLM law enforcement that has raised hackles across the West lately, prompting a major federal court case with far-reaching implications. That’s because the BLM has gone far beyond deploying cops to enforce laws. The agency has created its own laws – not typical land management regulations but criminal laws – then sent their own cops to enforce them.

The current case is so over-the-top it’s hard to believe, but it’s real. BLM used Federal Land Policy Management Act (FLPMA) authority to classify ordinary traffic violations as criminal offenses, subject to $1000 fines and jail time. A man in Moon Rocks, Nevada named Gregory Pheasant was caught riding a dirt bike at night on BLM land – an area where dirt bikes are allowed – with a broken taillight. Moon Rocks, Nevada isn’t the middle of nowhere – it is the end of nowhere. Never mind that there was no traffic issue, because dirt bikes in the desert do not encounter traffic, so there was no safety issue. Never mind that in every single state, including Nevada, a broken taillight is a traffic

violation, carrying a civil fine. In Colorado it’s a $15 ticket. But Mr. Pheasant was not given a ticket. He was arrested. Charged with a crime. Threatened with jail time.

To be clear, when Congress passed FLPMA in 1976 it granted BLM authority to issue regulations enforced by criminal penalties on BLM land. The legal question is whether Congress had the right to do that. Delegating enforcement authority is routine and expected. Delegating regulatory authority is another thing. But granting the authority to make criminal laws is yet another, and that is the question now before the Supreme Court. Mr. Pheasant sued, challenging Congress’s authority to delegate to any executive branch agency the power to decide what is a crime. The federal district judge agreed with Pheasant and dismissed the case. But no one has more lawyers than the government – BLM appealed, and the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals sided with Congress and BLM.

Even though BLM’s rule is wildly out of synch with state law, the Nevada Attorney General is running for Governor and didn’t want to take on the BLM and its allies. So, the State of Idaho took up the cause, joining Pheasant’s appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. Idaho’s brief argues simply that, “The Constitution gives Congress the power to make laws and the Executive the duty to enforce them, but here Congress improperly handed the power to define crimes on public lands to the Bureau of Land Management.” Now joined by 20 other states, the plaintiffs explain that FLMPA allows BLM to make criminal laws on 245 million acres of public land without any meaningful limits, or even definitions, from Congress. The suit asks the Supreme Court to enforce the Constitutional requirement that elected representatives, not unelected employees, define criminal conduct, and to “restore the separation of powers the Founders designed.” The high court has yet to decide whether to hear the case.

I am a law-and-order guy. I think if a federal official sees someone breaking the law, something that threatens public safety, they should call the police. There are 3,144 counties in America and every one has a sheriff with a gun, badge, and arresting authority. They can easily handle traffic violations, even broken taillights. But they don’t get to make the laws, they enforce them. That’s the way it should work, at every level of government – even the BLM.  

{ 0 comments }

Passing the Bill to Find Out What’s In It

by Greg Walcher on April 29, 2026

The Colorado legislature can only meet for 120 days a year, every legislator can only introduce five bills, bills must be passed by the 90th day, new programs must have a sunset clause, all meetings must be public and documents available for everyone to read. Except for the exceptions. Forty states have similar constraints, because they understand that limiting the legislature’s size, scope, and time is one way to guard against legislative misbehavior.

The Colorado legislature, composed of exactly 100 members, limits senators and representatives to 5 bills each, implying that a maximum of 500 bills could be considered during any two-year session. But the legislature regularly considers 700 bills or more, because there are exceptions. The 5-bill limit does not include bills that come from committees rather than individual members, nor appropriation bills, nor any bills for which the leadership decides to make an exception. Worse yet, the leadership can wave all the deadlines and grant “late bill status” at their sole discretion.

That is the source of untold chicanery every year. The House and Senate both have a “Committee on Delayed Bills” composed of three people: the top two leaders of the majority party and the minority leader. Permission to wave deadlines and introduce legislation at the last minute requires approval of only two, so it has become a common tool for the majority party, often used to short-circuit the public process otherwise required.

This session, House Speaker Julie McCluskie (D-Dillon) has introduced 9 bills, for example. In addition, she has been posturing to introduce legislation that would change Colorado’s historic laws governing ownership of streambanks and riverbeds. Under Colorado law, the waters of the state belong to the people, but the land under rivers belongs to the adjacent landowner. This is an issue state leaders grapple with every few years, because some organizations demand the “right to float” on streams crossing private property.

A right to float may exist, but touching the streambeds or banks on private property, without permission, is trespassing. McCluskie’s anticipated legislation would change that, with potentially multi-billion-dollar economic consequences. It is an enormously complicated legal issue, about which Common Sense Institute recently published a series of three studies outlining the complexities. There is no simple one-size-fits-all solution, so conflicts in Colorado are resolved on a mediated case-by-case basis.

Before changing 150 years of private property and water law, the legislature must carefully weigh the possible costs of litigation, the constitutional requirement to pay for “taking” private property for public purposes, and the impact on the tax base of dozens of counties. Not to mention the difficulty of determining which stream segments are both private and floatable, for which there is no database. The Common Sense Institute studies also concluded that the value of property that might be taken under such legislation would be in the billions.

The current state legislature convened on January 8, 2025, met for 120 days, convened its second session on January 14, 2026, and must adjourn permanently by May 13. McCluskie had well over a year to draft and introduce legislation, schedule hearings, consider testimony on both sides, weigh the complex legalities, seek guidance from agencies, and talk to interested groups. Instead, she granted “late bill status” on the issue and has declined to circulate any bill language that anyone could examine. As of today, less than three weeks from adjournment, with both Houses deep into the final passage stage on almost all legislation, no bill text has been printed for anyone to see. No hearings, no witnesses, no votes.

Interest groups pushing to change the law have been lobbying for months, while also declining to share any specific text. The strategy is purposely designed to avoid public scrutiny and legal analysis, to bypass the legislative process. Rushing major legislation through at the last minute, before interested parties know exactly what it would do, is an affront to the democratic system. It is an insult to every legislator who must vote on it without the benefit of public discussion and debate.

Even with a short-circuited process, bills cannot pass both houses in fewer than 8-10 days. Even the clever late bill strategy has limits and McCluskie is quickly running out of time before the May 13 adjournment. She should end the speculative posturing and make it clear that there will be no end-run around the process. This issue is not going away. Legislation can be introduced at the beginning of the next session and go through the same public process as any other major new law.

The Constitutional 120-day limit on the Colorado legislature was intended to prevent precisely this kind of mischief.

{ 2 comments }

Jade Dragon Meets Green Energy

April 21, 2026

Green is an important color in Chinese culture. Jade symbolizes harmony with nature; the dragon represents transformation. Green tea symbolizes health; green bamboo implies resilience. And now, China wants to be known for its leadership of the global transition to green energy. But the transition does not include China – that image is fake, no […]

Read the full article →

Where Money Meets Power

April 15, 2026

I follow ups and downs of the environmental industry almost like a part-time hobby, for several reasons. For one, many environmental groups pretend to be local, grassroots activists, when in fact many are nationally organized and funded as part of a larger network. But also, their growth, influence, finances, and occasional declines offer fascinating insights […]

Read the full article →

Giving States a Seat at the Table

April 10, 2026

I attended a meeting recently about federal ownership of Western lands, and various proposals to transfer some of it to states. To settle a bet, I asked a popular AI tool how that might work, just to test its objectivity. It said, “Transferring public lands to state control can lead to significant challenges and risks […]

Read the full article →

NEPA Was Never Meant to be a Weapon

April 1, 2026

In 1970 when President Nixon presented to Congress “Reorganization Plan No.3,” no one foresaw the eventual result – some of history’s greatest environmental successes, and a virtual stranglehold on economic progress. America’s air and water are far cleaner today, automobiles emit virtually nothing, and many formerly polluted lands have been cleaned up. But the cumbersome […]

Read the full article →

Look What They’ve Done to Her Song

March 18, 2026

The New Seekers are best remembered for wanting to buy the world a Coke in their classic hit, “I’d Like to Teach the World to Sing.” But a year earlier, they first hit the charts with another standard, “Look What They’ve Done to My Song,” featuring the sad lyric, “It’s the only thing that I […]

Read the full article →

Greenpeace Judge Might Just Beat the Dutch

March 14, 2026

My granddad had a great expression when something was remarkable or astonishing: “Well, if that doesn’t just beat the Dutch!” It was a linguistic heirloom of the 17th Century when England and the Netherlands were commercial and naval rivals. Something had to be extreme to surpass even the Dutch, so that eventually became a common […]

Read the full article →

Cracking on About Wind and Solar

March 6, 2026

John Palsgrave, a linguist and tutor in Henry VIII’s court, illustrated a point by writing, “He cracked afore we came hyther that he wolde do marvaylles, but nowe he is shronke asyde no man can tell whyther.” The word “cracked” was often used in the Middle Ages to mean “boast,” as in “he cracked on […]

Read the full article →

Noble Bill Was a Noble Cause – Still Is

March 3, 2026

This Fall Colorado voters may see a ballot measure to change the way highway funding is spent, always a source of controversy and heated debate. For all but the most inner-city urban voters, though, the issue is a no-brainer if ever there was such a thing. Building, fixing, and maintaining the roads was the founding […]

Read the full article →