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Subscribe to the Unwritten Law Podcast! https://nclalegal.org/media/unwritten... In this episode, NCLA Litigation Counsel Casey Norman joins Mark Chenoweth and John Vecchione to unpack BASE Access, et al. v. National Park Service, a remarkable case about whether a federal agency can criminalize BASE jumping in national parks without any clear authorization from Congress. For nearly 50 years, the National Park Service has treated BASE jumping as a crime—even though the regulation they rely on was written in the 1950s to prevent cargo drops, not recreational jumping. Casey explains the nondelegation challenge, the vagueness problem, the strange double standard with hang gliding, and why a federal judge in Houston is pressing the government to rethink its outdated criminal rules. If you care about the Constitution, criminal law, or just enjoy wild outdoor sports, this episode has something for you. Unwritten Law is a podcast produced by the New Civil Liberties Alliance (NCLA), hosted by Mark Chenoweth and John Vecchione. This show dives deep into the world of unlawful administrative power, exposing how bureaucrats operate outside the bounds of written law through informal guidance, regulatory “dark matter,” and unconstitutional agency overreach. For over a century, unlawful administrative power has gradually displaced the Constitution’s avenues for lawmaking and justice. Although we still enjoy the shell of our Republic, there has developed within it a very different sort of government—a type, in fact, that the Constitution was designed to prevent. The unconstitutional Administrative State is the focus of NCLA’s concern.