Robert G. James
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Robert G. James is a United States District Court judge, Western Division of Louisiana, and was one of the judges involved in a 2006 water rights legal case, Normal Parm v. Sheriff Mark Shumate.
In this case, on August 29, 2006, James has ruled against his own appointed Magistrate Judge James D. Kirk, who wrote that Federal law "...entitles the public to the reasonable use of navigable waters for all legitimate purposes of travel or transportation, for boating, sailing for pleasure, as well as for carrying persons or property for hire, and in any kind of watercraft the use of which is consistent with others also enjoying the right possessed in common." The result is that it is now considered criminal trespass for the American boating public to fish, or hunt on the Mississippi River and other navigable waters which periodicly flood in the US without permission.[1] Strictly interpreting Federal law, James said that "the public has no 'right to fish and hunt on the Mississippi River.'" [2] The original case was the result of the arrests of several anglers who were fishing in Mississippi River floodwaters, which had covered the private property of the Walker Cottonwood Farm. [3]