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An attorney widely known for his involvement in President Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election told WyoFile on Sunday why he will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to consider Fred Eshelman’s failed corner-crossing lawsuit.

John Eastman, an attorney well-practiced in Supreme Court cases and perhaps most famous for joining Rudy Giuliani on stage at the Jan. 6, 2021, “Save America” rally in Washington, D.C., explained his reasoning in an email. 

“The decision [by the 10th Circuit] effectively takes an easement on private property without compensation, in violation of the Takings Clause of the Constitution,” Eastman wrote WyoFile. “That, and because it affects so much private property, makes it an extremely important case for the Supreme Court to review.”

“We know there was fraud … “we know dead people voted.”

John Eastman

The U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled earlier this year that four hunters did not trespass on Eshelman’s ranch after corner crossing to hunt on public land surrounded by Eshelman’s property. The wealthy North Carolina resident and owner of Carbon County’s Elk Mountain Ranch petitioned the Supreme Court to take up the case.

The hunters never set foot on Eshelman’s land, but did pass through the airspace above his property. The businessman sued the hunters in civil court to stop them from corner crossing.

In his petition for a writ of certiorari, Eshelman’s attorneys said the 10th Circuit ruling “steamrolls state law, takes easements, and revolutionizes property law affecting up to 150 million acres of private land.” Some 2.4 million acres of public land in Wyoming and 8.3 million acres nationwide would be “corner locked” and inaccessible if corner crossing is ruled illegal, according to the digital mapping company onX.

Conservative think tank

“[W]e plan to file an amicus curiae brief on behalf of the Claremont Institute Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence in support of the petition for writ of certiorari in the above-referenced matter,” Eastman wrote hunters’ attorney Ryan Semerad on Friday.  

Semerad provided a copy of the email after a request from WyoFile. He has said the Supreme Court does not need to take up the issue, and the 10th Circuit decision should stand.

Eshelman alleged three Missouri men trespassed in 2020 and four in 2021 to hunt near his roughly 22,000-acre ranch. The hunters stepped only on public land when hunting on federal, state and municipal property surrounded by Eshelman’s Elk Mountain Ranch.

The legal fight emerged from the checkerboard landscape of alternating public-private square-mile sections in southern Wyoming. The pattern is a relic of the railroad grant era of the 1800s and covers a swath of the state, 40 miles wide and about 200 miles long.

John Eastman and Rudy Giuliani at the “Save America” rally in Washington, D.C. on Jan. 6, 2021. (C-Span screengrab)

Hunters Bradly Cape, Phillip Yeomans, John Slowensky and Zachary Smith successfully fought Eshelman’s suit — and misdemeanor criminal charges — arguing they were protected by the 1885 Unlawful Inclosures Act. That law seeks to preserve public access to public land in the West.

The 10th Circuit decision that the hunters did not trespass applies to Wyoming, Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Utah and parts of Yellowstone National Park in Montana and Idaho. A ruling from the Supreme Court would institute legal uniformity across the country.

Briefs due Monday

Eastman and others who want to inform the Supreme Court whether it should hear Eshelman’s appeal are scheduled to file their opinions by Aug. 18. The Wyoming Stock Growers Association, the Wyoming Wool Growers Association, the Montana Stockgrowers Association and United Property Owners of Montana have indicated that they will join the fray.

The court on Friday granted the hunters an extension. They now have until  Sept. 17 to file their rebuttal.

Eastman’s conservative Claremont Institute is a think tank and advocacy group whose mission is “to restore the principles of the American Founding to their rightful, preeminent authority in our national life.” The group’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence, of which Eastman is the founding director, fights to uphold property rights, among other things.

Eastman is a member of the Bar of the Supreme Court, according to his email letterhead. He has represented more than 20 parties in front of the Supreme Court and represented amici curiae in more than 100 cases in that venue, according to his bio on the Claremont Institute website.

He was a clerk for Justice Clarence Thomas from 1996 to 1997, according to his bio.

Chapman University honored him for faculty excellence in scholarly and creative activity (2013), Franciscan University gave him the St. Thomas More Award (2010) and the J. Reuben Clark Society of Orange County gave him the J. Reuben Clark Award (2010), Eastman’s bio states.

2020 presidential election

Eastman is widely known for his role in advocating that then-Vice President Mike Pence had the authority to challenge states’ electoral votes that gave Joe Biden the victory in the 2020 election. At the Jan. 6, 2021 “Save America” rally on the Ellipse with Giuliani, he championed unproven allegations of voter fraud.

“We know there was fraud,” he said, “we know dead people voted.”

Shortly thereafter, rioters stormed the Capitol.

Eastman’s actions tangled him in a cobweb of legal trouble. The State Bar of California in 2023 charged him with 11 disciplinary counts alleging he planned, promoted and assisted Trump’s alleged strategy to overturn the 2020 election results. The California Bar had earlier warned it was investigating Eastman for “moral turpitude, dishonesty, and corruption.”

The Department of Justice and the State of Georgia indicted Eastman for his role in the 2020 election. Judge Tanya Chutkan dismissed the federal action, and the Georgia cases have been paused.

Eastman lists his California and Washington, D.C. licenses to practice law “temporarily inactive.” He has challenged the California charges and asked, unsuccessfully, that his license be reactivated.

Angus M. Thuermer Jr. is the natural resources reporter for WyoFile. He is a veteran Wyoming reporter and editor with more than 35 years experience in Wyoming. Contact him at angus@wyofile.com or (307)...

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  1. Eastman’s irrelevance and shaded jaded judicial accomplishments render him unworthy of news coverage. Especially in WyoFile.

    So why are we reading this ?

  2. “whose mission is “to restore the principles of the American Founding to their rightful, preeminent authority in our national life.” “
    A catch all, meaningless mission statement that basically says “we intend to interpret the constitution in our favor as it fits whatever we are proposing”.

  3. Yes, Colorado is already Blue, and this corner crossing issue is all about the rich landowners from other states having more rights and the ability to overthrow long established traditions. That plus Trump wanting to sell off public lands should convince more than a few Wyomingites that the worm should turn.

  4. I voted for Trump but this is an embarrassment. No because of his/her money gets to deny access to public land. Eschelman has been whining for years now-because he can’t restrict the access to the public. A fly-over reduced his property value? Who believes this schmuck? Go back to NC.

  5. Gordon,
    Although I got a chuckle from your appraisal of this guy, he certainly has a proven track record before the Highest Court in the Land.
    Specific to this topic of “corner crossing”, there are many big money interests now aligning with the uber wealthy pharmacist from the East to get the 10th Circuit decision overturned and shut the American People out of Public Land access once and for all.

    Historically, big money attorneys have a significant success rate for winning cases.

  6. Shilling for billionaires like usual. Let’s hope he doesn’t try to overthrow the government this time

  7. As desperate as Eshelman is, I’d bet that even he’s embarrassed by this clowns endorsement. Wow, Eshelman, you sure draw out the loonies! Thanks for the entertainment and I’ll see you this antelope season in your region as I have a tag and will definitely cross some corners. Come out say ‘howdy’, Fred

  8. I think the songwriter Steven Sondheim had a premonition about The Eshelman clownage when he wrote “Send in the Clowns”

    Don’t you love farce?
    My fault, I fear
    I thought that you’d want what I want
    Sorry, my dear
    But where are the clowns?
    Quick, send in the clowns
    Don’t bothеr, they’re herе

  9. I don’t care if you’re an “R”, “D” or “I” in the 2024 presidential election, this whack job contended that Kamala Harris, BORN in Oakland, California USA was not a U.S. Citizen. As this corner case progresses the nut bags come out of the woodwork.

  10. even the crookest SCOTUS justice will laugh at the joke that John Eastman is. Fork tongued Karen Budd Falen has more clout than this joker

  11. If Trump wades in on this in an attempt to influence SCOTUS to help out his rich friends, he may very well see a bunch of western states turn BLUE overnight. People want and need access to there public lands.

  12. Regarding Mr. Eastman, where do we start? A buddy of Clarence Thomas – a buddy of Rudy Guiliani – indicted on several counts of election fraud – Barred from practicing law in several states – an apparent fanboy of Fred Eshelman. Yep, a real winner who’s probably destined for prison. He oughta’ run for president!

  13. Wow, an insurrectionist fan wants to “F” over 300+ million public land owners. Shocking…only an endorsement from Guiliani could make this situation richer

  14. If the average hunter/outdoorsman could get past the false “democrats want to take your guns” stuff, they would see that the GOP is anti public lands, anti conservation, anti outdoors and anti access on everything.

    1. Alex Smith.

      Democrats do very much want to take our guns away AND the GOP very much wants to privatize our Public Lands.