Sunseri navigates a sheer section of the route (Photo: Connor Burkesmith)
Trail runner Michelino Sunseri, who skipped a switchback during his 2024 fastest known time attempt in Grand Teton National Park, was found guilty of leaving the designated trail, a federal judge ruled. Court documents obtained by 国产吃瓜黑料 note that while jail time will 鈥渘ot be imposed,鈥 the endurance athlete could face a potential ban from the park and a fine of up to $5,000.
鈥淭he Defendant is adjudged GUILTY,鈥 wrote federal magistrate judge Stephanie A. Hambrick of Wyoming in her September 2 verdict. Sunseri left 鈥渢he Garnet Canyon Trail to use the shortcut of the Old Climber鈥檚 Trail,鈥 violating on designated trails and prohibiting shortcuts in certain areas,聽according to the verdict.
In an email to 国产吃瓜黑料, Sunseri鈥檚 legal team at Pacific Legal Foundation said it will appeal the decision.
鈥淲e respectfully disagree with the magistrate judge鈥檚 ruling. It reifies the enormous claims of power by park superintendents to write federal criminal law. This is well beyond any power the Constitution contemplates for inferior officers鈥攖hose not confirmed by the Senate鈥攖o have. We will appeal,鈥 Michael Poon, an attorney at Pacific Legal Foundation, told 国产吃瓜黑料.
Sunseri broke the speed record in 2024 for ascending and descending the 13,775-foot Grand Teton trail in 奥测辞尘颈苍驳鈥檚 Grand Teton National Park, completing the ascent and descent in two hours, 50 minutes, and 50 seconds. He edged out the previous time set by Andy Anderson in 2012 by just two minutes.
But official chronicler rejected Sunseri鈥檚 record after his GPS track showed he cut a switchback while descending.
The revelation didn鈥檛 just ignite an ethical debate over cutting switchbacks and setting speed records鈥攊t also put Sunseri in hot water legally. For cutting off-trail, Sunseri was subsequently charged by the National Park Service with a Class B misdemeanor.
Sunseri鈥檚 guilty verdict was issued exactly a year after his botched record.
Sunseri took Old Climber鈥檚 Trail, an informal shortcut on the Grand Teton that cuts the 13.1-mile out-and-back route by about a half-mile.
For decades, the informal cut-through was commonly used by climbers descending from the peak. Even so, signs have been placed at the bottom and the top of the shortcut as early as the 1980s, according to testimony from former record holder Bryce Thatcher. Galen Woelk also testified that the signs were there in the 1990s and 2000s
鈥淐losed for regrowth,鈥 reads the bottom sign, facing downhill. A sign at the top of the cut faces uphill, reading 鈥渟hortcutting causes erosion.鈥
After ultra-runner Kilian Jornet cut switchbacks in his own record attempts in 2012, lawmakers updated the legal code in 2022 to criminalize cutting switchbacks.
The code Sunseri violated, , states that a park superintendent 鈥渕ay restrict hiking or pedestrian use to a designated trail or walkway system鈥 and specifies that 鈥渓eaving a trail or walkway to shortcut between portions of the same trail or walkway, or to shortcut to an adjacent trail or walkway鈥 is illegal.
Sunseri鈥檚 legal team says it is appealing his guilty verdict, arguing that the case is an example of government overreach. They add that the trail hadn鈥檛 been properly marked closed in the downhill direction Sunseri was traveling.
鈥淭he U.S. Attorney and the National Park Service claim that Michelino broke the law because the Grand Teton superintendent had ordered that foot travel be restricted 鈥榳hen traveling through signed revegetation and restoration areas,鈥欌 wrote Pacific Legal in a .
鈥淭he only indication in the direction he was traveling was a small sign off to the side of the trail that said 鈥榮hortcutting causes erosion鈥欌攏o mention that the trail was closed.鈥
Additionally, Sunseri鈥檚 lawyers argue that the trail closure is unlawful because it stems 鈥渇rom an unconstitutional delegation of legislative power.鈥
鈥淥nly Congress can decide what behavior is and isn鈥檛 criminally prohibited, and it cannot delegate that authority away. If Congress wants to define behavior as criminal, it must do so itself, or at the very least, set clear limits that dictate how and why officials can do so,鈥 reads the case summary.
Sunseri鈥檚 defense said the athlete was offered several plea deals, all of which either banned him from the park or required him to admit guilt.
鈥淭hese mountains mean everything to Michelino,鈥 Pacific Legal wrote. 鈥淎greeing to give up such an integral part of his life because of a law he didn鈥檛 know he was breaking was unthinkable.鈥
Correction note: A previous version of this article stated NPS staff formally closed and marked the shortcut. On September 8, 2025, this story was updated to specify that the legal code was changed in 2022 to criminalize cutting switchbacks.