No, in Tennessee, game wardens (officers from the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency, or TWRA) cannot enter private property without a warrant.
A significant court ruling changed this. In a case involving landowners challenging TWRA practices (such as installing surveillance cameras on private land without permission), the Tennessee Court of Appeals ruled in May 2024 that warrantless searches and entries onto private property by game wardens violate the Tennessee Constitution (Article 1, Section 7, which protects against unreasonable searches and seizures).
- Ask that girl out.
- Shoot the shot.
- Start that business.
- Relocate and start afresh.
- Quit that job.
- Take the risk.
When you’re 85 years old and on your deathbed, you’re not gonna wish you had fewer crazy stories.
DC is family friendly again! Day and night my wife and I walked with our sons all over town. We saw members of the National Guard and they were always so kind. We were blown away by how safe everything felt. Our kids were able to run and roam, even at night. Never once did we feel unsafe. A major contrast to just a year ago when we had to uber everywhere and kept our kids next to us at all times.
@elonmusk@grok I am a premium+ subscriber and it says I hit my image limit. I've only requested a few images but it gives me hundreds per request. What are the limits? How can I reduce the results given per request?
Driving out of Nashville last night and my sons spotted @Starlink group 11-11 ! They couldn’t believe their eyes! @elonmusk@SpaceX thanks for helping keep their eyes on the stars instead of iPads.