Game wardens and other public employees--even those being hired out by private companies--should not be enforcing access permits. If the land is open to any kind of public access (permit or otherwise) then everyone they encounter should be assumed to be there legally, and their policy should be to check for game violations. If the land is totally locked up, then check for poachers and trespassers. But this corporate obstacle course of open to the select few, lease on one side of the road/permit on the other, or Columbia Timberlands permit in one sections/ St. Helens permit in another, or children under 18 are ok but over need their own paperwork, --none of this should be enforced by state employees with violations actual crimes. Its ridiculous and un-American.
game wardens are a law enforcement agency with the state and they can cite you for any violation they want--from traffic fines to domestic violence to poaching a bull elk...it was said by a Game Warden that came to our Hunter Education class that we were instructing that if they thought that you might be thinking of violating any of the state's laws that they could pull you over and reasonably search you...their jurisdiction superceeds anything