The Federal Government's 175,000 Pages of Regulations Turn the Rule of Law Into a Cruel Joke
Trump rightly decries the "absurd and unjust" consequences of proliferating regulatory crimes.

After mountain runner Michelino Sunseri ascended and descended Grand Teton in record time last fall, his corporate sponsor, The North Face, heralded his achievement as "an impossible dream—come true." Then came the nightmare: Federal prosecutors charged Sunseri with a misdemeanor punishable by up to six months in jail for using a trail that the National Park Service described as closed, although it had never bothered to clearly inform the public of that designation.
Sunseri unwittingly violated one of the myriad federal regulations that carry criminal penalties—a body of law so vast and obscure that no one knows exactly how many offenses it includes. An executive order that President Donald Trump issued last week aims to ameliorate the injustices caused by the proliferation of such agency-defined crimes, which turn the rule of law into a cruel joke.
The Code of Federal Regulations "contains over 48,000 sections, stretching over 175,000 pages—far more than any citizen can possibly read, let alone fully understand," Trump's order notes. "Worse, many [regulations] carry potential criminal penalties for violations."
How many? As Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch and co-author Janie Nitze note in their 2024 book on "the human toll of too much law," even experts cannot say for sure, although "estimates suggest that at least 300,000 federal agency regulations carry criminal sanctions today."
At the federal level, in other words, regulatory crimes outnumber statutory crimes—another uncertain tally—by a factor of roughly 60 to 1. Since the latter category has exploded during the last century, that is no small feat, but it is what you might expect when unaccountable bureaucrats are free to invent crimes.
"Many of these regulatory crimes are 'strict liability' offenses, meaning that citizens need not have a guilty mental state to be convicted of a crime," Trump notes. "This status quo is absurd and unjust. It allows the executive branch to write the law, in addition to executing it."
Trump said prosecutors generally should eschew criminal charges for regulatory violations based on strict liability and focus on cases where the evidence suggests the defendant knowingly broke the rules. Trump also instructed federal agencies to "explicitly describe" conduct subject to criminal punishment under new regulations and prepare lists of regulatory violations that already can be treated as crimes.
Given the enormous volume and range of federal regulations, that last requirement is a tall order. But if the agencies that issue those regulations cannot specify all of the violations that can trigger criminal penalties, what hope does the average American have?
Those penalties may not be readily apparent, because "you need to consult at least two provisions of law to identify regulatory crimes," GianCarlo Canaparo, a senior legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation, explained in Senate testimony this month. A regulation that says "Swiss cheese must have holes throughout the cheese," for example, says nothing about criminal prosecution, which is authorized by a separate provision of the U.S. Code.
Canaparo noted other examples gathered by Mike Chase, author of the comical yet accurate book How to Become a Federal Criminal. It is a federal crime, for instance, "to sell a tufted mattress unless you have burned 9 cigarettes on the tufted part of it," "to submit a design to the Federal Duck Stamp contest if your design does not primarily feature 'eligible waterfowl,'" and "to sell a small ball across state lines unless it is marked with a warning that says, 'this toy is a small ball.'"
Getting a handle on this bewildering situation will require more than prosecutorial restraint, a matter of discretion that is subject to change at any time. Canaparo argues that Congress should eliminate "excess federal crimes," add mens rea ("guilty mind") requirements to provisions that lack them, and recognize a defense for people who did not realize their conduct was unlawful. As he notes, rampant overcriminalization makes a mockery of the old adage that "ignorance of the law is no excuse."
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The author fails to mention the Administrative Procedure Act, which legalized all these regulations. It provides strict procedures that must be followed. When the agency implementing the regulation doesn't follow the procedure, or doesn't make the regulation consistent with the statute that authorizes the regulation, courts toss out the regulation. This plagued Trump during his first term as he tried to avoid the APA and just issue decrees.
Everyone should use this post to start studying AI.
With USAID gone and with lawsuits ahead Media Matters had to start cutting corners somewhere.
Bullshit, we've been harrassed mistreated , threatened, and worse by the IRS and here we are in bankruptcy.
the Administrative Procedure Act
-------------------------------------------------------------
Introduced in the Senate as S. 7 by Patrick McCarran (D–NV)
Signed into law by President Harry S. Truman [D]
Passed by the 79th Congress - House [D] & Senate [D]
charliehall.
Is.
Full.
Of.
Shit.
Note to whatever fed is assigned to me: I have never gone beyond any boundary, posted or not, on any trail on public federal land.
Admittedly shit's snot very well posted, butt I see that You OFTEN go beyond the boundaries of benevolence, balance, and honesty!
JS;dr
VD;dr. VD (Venereal Disease) is some BAD shit! Go see the Dr. if you've got the VD!!! THAT is why I say VD;dr.!!!
(Some forms of VD also cause bona fide mental illness… THINK about shit! VD is NOTHING to "clap" about!)
Opposing those who oppose endless laws (and criminal punishment without trials) may ALSO be evidence of some sort of bona fide mental and-or spiritual illness… SEE THE DOCTOR!!!
JS;dr
Now THIS is WORLD-SHATTERING news! Have Ye yet called the National Enquirer, Alex Jones, The Midnight Star, The Onion, and Dear Flabby?
This article is counter to the narrative, therefore it does not exist.
What's the article about, Scamcastic? Do you even know?
I'll tell you this, the EO is counter to YOUR narrative and therefore it does not exist.
This goes back to FDR and Woodrow Wilson, ONe anti-semitic and the other racist.
Things Congress will never do:
1. Limit their terms in office
2. Restrain spending
3. Limit regulations
Now stop wasting our time with how it "ought" to be; any "solution" to these problems will have to be novel to the point of being revolutionary; otherwise it's just going to be business as usual and more and more taxes and regulations imposed on the citizenry.
Fish rot from the head
Biden was a doddering poorly spoken lazy old fart in office
Biden was super-generous in giving out our money.
Biden added regulations everywhere, it was what destroyed any good effects from his Inflation Reduction Act
Okay, but where were you when the horribly failing Inflation Reduciton Act was pased. Several top flight economists have said that of course it would fail. Small and midsize businesses were going to do NONE of what Biden wanted because he added endless DEI and environmental and free speech codicils on the bill. I worked for years in business. Nobody is going to risk their entire business in a row with IRS or EPA or OSHA.
WHERE WERE YOU?
"You didn't complain when Democrats [insert red herring here] you hypocrite! That means you can't complain about Trump and makes whatever he does ok!"
This is illogical might use it for my students.
You are doing the very thing you criticize. Plus you don't take any stand on something you claim is a big issue. THis is funny, the kids will love it
WHY is shit "illogical" to ape twat the apes are saying, in a naked manure, stripping away their falsehoods, and revealing twat they are REALLY saying? Good for the goose is good for the gander!
WHERE WERE YOU when Idi Amin was practicing cannibalism? I didn't hear SHIT from You, then, at that bat-shit-crazy time, so shit's OK when MY TEAM does shit, and Ye are a HYPOCRITE if Ye then criticize MY cannibalism!!!
(THIS is how we make moral-ethical-spiritual PROGRESS, Cumrades!!!)
Poor sarcbot.
If you're asking the Reason authors, they were fairly prolific in their articles about the adverse consequences of the misnamed "Inflation Reduction Act".
That is true. However those same articles also criticized Trump and his CARES Act. Because criticism of Trump negates criticism of Biden, on net their articles were actually criticism of Trump.
They were attempting to "yes but" and pin Biden's wrongdoing as Trump's, which as a Democratic Party superfan made you delighted.
But it's only bad now when you can blame the person heading the Executive, not 4 years ago when the dude who spent 50 years growing that register was in charge. No, then you needed every one of those pages to go after him even if you had to make up shit beyond the bounds of law or fact. GFY you Marxist propagandist.
That is not the tone of this article at all. It's a celebration that Trump is taking a small step toward reining in these ridiculous regulations (along with a whine that it's still just a small step and that a lot more is needed).
Trump is trying to do something good?
This article does SNOT exist! (Sarcasmic taught me well!)
Perhaps you are Sarcasmic's sock.
Snot "perhaps", butt FOR SURE, Ye are PervFectly Satan's Sock!
Yeah, Reason has been pretty consistent in their stance on regulatory rule making stuff. They certainly have their biases and blind spots (or issues they don't want to touch), but they aren't wrong about everything.
I guess it's a good thing we now have an Administration willing to De-Regulate then huh?
Demon-Craps have been trying to de-regulate abortions for a LONG time now! Twat is Trump doing for us in THIS category?
Don't you mean "Demon-Craps have been trying to" STEAL $ for abortions...
...It wasn't that 'LONG' ago...
Catholic Demon-Craps created the Pro-Life lobby.
Republican Justices wrote Roe v Wade.
It's not within the Executives job description to "doing for us" (?funding?) on personal subjects. It's the job of the Supreme Court to uphold the 4A and 13A (where the blame sits) or Post Roe v Wade a problem of YOUR STATE politics at this point.
I didn't expect Reason to mention this, and certainly didn't expect Sullum to.
Kudos.
Just wondering, but how many of the federal regulations with criminal penalties are going to be violated by individuals acting on their own and how many by employees of businesses as part of their jobs? In the latter, it would typically be the corporation that would face the criminal penalties. For instance,
United States v. Tribar Technologies, Inc..
I quickly found this database that the DoJ set up, apparently a couple of years ago, that provides information on significant criminal prosecutions of corporations.
Is this executive order going to make it harder to prosecute individuals criminally for violating stupid regulations that shouldn't exist? Or is it going to make it harder to prosecute corporations for violating important ones, like the one I linked?
Or will it do both? In which case we'd have to wonder if the latter is the real purpose of the EO and the former is the public justification for doing the bidding of corporate special interests.
^ This pile of steaming lefty shit supports murder as a preventative measure:
JasonT20
February.6.2022 at 6:02 pm
“How many officers were there to stop Ashlee Babbitt and the dozens of people behind her from getting into the legislative chamber to do who knows what?...”
Fuck off and die, asshole.