Question: The marbled murrelet is a rare seabird that nests only in old-growth forests on the West Coast. Logging has destroyed so much of its habitat that its numbers in California have declined from 60,000 to between 2,000 and 5,000. Pacific Lumber Co. wanted to harvest trees from 137 acres of land it owned in the Owl Creek forest in California. It originally received approval to log, on the condition that it would cooperate with regulators to protect the murrelet. But the company sneaked in one weekend and cut down trees before it had done anything for the murrelet. Caught in the act, it promised no more logging until it had a plan to protect the birds. This time it waited until the long weekend over Thanks giving to take down some more trees. Finally, a federal court ordered a permanent halt to any further logging.
There was no evidence that the company had harmed the murrelet. Had it violated the law?