Good post! I do agree and I probably didn't explain my position well. I do agree they broke the rules, however I don't feel they blatantly broke the rules and perhaps it was just ignorance (although we know that's not an excuse). They got permits for everyone in their group and it's a simple mistake to not understand that even though they did get permits, forming a supergroup of 7 is a violation. So IMO it's a completely different scenario than me and 7 of my friends sneaking into Mystery canyon this Saturday July 30th at 7:30AM without permits. In one case you have a person trying to do the right thing and maybe misunderstanding a simple context, and on the other you have a person like me thumbing his nose at authority and perhaps getting caught in the process, or perhaps not.
Further, when the NPS reached the parties, there were two in the canyon in one section up top needing rescue, 4 in the narrows, and one at the buses having called them out. Which matches their permits exactly. If you had medical training and ran across a separate group, would you not stay with them to aid while your group then went to get help? Would you accept a fine for leaving your group in an emergency situation to aid another human being? If there are only 2 people in a group and one gets hurt, is the other person not allowed to go and get help with another group, because of a single permit? How does the NPS prove they were even all part of the same group to issue a citation? They didn't catch them "red handed". The only reason is they probably admitted it.
So yes I agree they made a mistake (another of many that day), but their intentions were to do the right thing, and as near as I can tell they did not try to decieve the NPS when push came to shove. So the charge is BS IMO. I'm not advocating breaking the rules, I just like to understand people intentions and motives in the spirit of the law. No damage was done to the canyon, no extra people went through above the canyon limit that day. And we do both agree that 7 people vs 6 isn't a huge transgression. So the only conclusion is that slapping them with a $1000 fine is purely a vindictive move to cover the huge amount of rescues this party generated.
Anyways kinda out of our hands, but I think mercy is in order for this situation. Good thing I'm not a judge, I would be too "all over the board" on my rulings. :lol8:
Edit: But yeah I think the permit system is stupid, the rules are stupid, and generally thumb my nose at authority anyways. I think we don't have any "chips" to bargain with and they (nps canyoneering rule makers) really don't care about us, they will do what they want anyways, screw NPS. So i admit I'm biased in the first place. I just think to issue a citation you have to conclusively prove a violation and that was not done in this case. The party probably admitted guilt but that could be retracted because they were under duress almost seeing their friend die, yadda yadda yadda blah blah...