
The Regenaissance Podcast How a Ranching Family Faced and Beat a Federal Criminal Indictment - Charles & Heather Maude | #104
Charles and Heather Maude are fifth-generation ranchers in South Dakota who farm home raised beef and pork direct-to-consumer. In this episode they describe their family history on the land, their early lives in agriculture, and the events that led to a criminal indictment by the United States Forest Service over a disputed boundary fence.
The episode documents their personal background, the mechanics of Western land use, and a detailed account of how a civil land issue escalated into a federal criminal case.
Key Topics
- Federal criminal indictment over a land dispute
- How the case escalated from civil to criminal
- Legal strategy and case dismissal
- Impact on family, finances, and rights
- Precedent for ranchers and landowners
What You'll Learn
- How a ranching family faced and beat a federal criminal indictment
- How a routine land boundary issue escalated into criminal charges
- How federal land enforcement works in practice for ranchers
- The personal, financial, and legal costs of a criminal case
- Why this case matters for landowners and producers
Connect with Charles & Heather
Timestamps
00:00:00 Why this story matters
00:03:00 Heather’s ranch upbringing
00:09:00 Charles’s family land history
00:15:00 Growing up ranching
00:24:00 Marriage and the Atlas Blizzard
00:33:00 Ranch community and shared labor
00:35:00 Forest Service fence dispute begins
00:41:00 Meetings with federal officials
00:52:00 Civil dispute turns criminal
01:05:00 Impact of the indictment
01:22:00 Washington D.C. and case dismissal
01:27:00 Media and political pressure
01:34:00 Precedent for landowners
01:50:00 Land stewardship and politics
02:08:00 Final reflections
