US Biden EPA makes first-ever climate change arrest - The EPA increased the number of penalties for polluters this fiscal year

The Biden administration has made a precedent-setting arrest related to anti-climate change activities this fiscal year, highlighted in a new report that shows a ramped-up enforcement effort against environmental offenses.

On Thursday, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued a final report on enforcement efforts under President Biden, which detailed how climate-related penalties were enforced this fiscal year.

The EPA worked to implement the American Innovation and Manufacturing (AIM) Act, which requires the agency to reduce hydrofluorocarbons, a synthetic compound commonly used for refrigeration or air conditioning, by 85% by 2036.

The AIM Act led to the arrest of Michael Hart, of San Diego, in March on charges related to "smuggling potent greenhouse gases," highlighted in the EPA report. The charges marked the first-ever greenhouse gas-related arrest issued under the AIM Act, but according to an EPA press release from earlier this year, "it will not be the last."

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An Environmental Protection Agency sign is seen on a building in Washington, D.C., on July 12.
(Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto
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Additionally, the EPA reported issuing $1.7 billion in administrative and judicial penalties, the highest level since 2017.

The agency’s environmental enforcement efforts also saw 1,851 civil cases concluded, 121 criminal defendants charged, and it issued more than 225 million pounds of "pollution reductions" in "overburdened communities," according to the report. As of the end of 2024, there are about 480 open criminal investigations on environmental programs.

The results reflect a 3.4% increase in civil cases and a 17.6% increase in criminal charges compared to 2023, The Associated Press reported.

In the FY 2024 report, the EPA also noted that collaborative efforts on the "implementation of EPA’s national priorities" led to a "12% increase in criminal leads opened because of referrals from EPA Headquarters and regional offices."

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President Biden speaks about the results of the 2024 election in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 7.
(Andrew Harnik)


"In Fiscal Year 2024, EPA’s enforcement and compliance assurance program produced its strongest results since 2017, focusing on efforts to combat climate change and tackling some of the nation’s most significant environmental threats to our shared air, water and land," David M. Uhlmann, assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance, said in a statement. "The progress made under the Biden-Harris Administration has sent a clear signal that polluters will be held accountable and that protecting communities from harm is a top priority."

The agency zeroed in on six areas of priority for FY 2024 as part of their National Enforcement and Compliance Initiative: mitigating climate change, exposure to PFAS, working against communities from coal ash contamination, reducing air toxics in overburdened communities, increasing compliance with drinking water standards and chemical accident risk reduction.

Biden has made issuing green energy projects a focus of his administration, most recently handing out billions of dollars to fund climate-related projects in the remaining months of his term before President-elect Trump steps into office.

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The AIM Act led to the arrest of Michael Hart, of San Diego, in March on charges related to "smuggling potent greenhouse gases," highlighted in the EPA report. The charges marked the first-ever greenhouse gas-related arrest issued under the AIM Act, but according to an EPA press release from earlier this year, "it will not be the last."
Burn the coal, pay the toll
 
Gee, I sure wonder how the Democrats lost power with awesome policies like this?

Sure, we might not be able to afford food, but at least people who "smuggle potent greenhouse gases" can get what they have coming to them as they get thrown in prison for 30 years. Thank goodness we're keeping dangerous people like that off of the streets.
 
He was smuggling Freon from Mexico to sell on Facebook marketplace. Probably for contractors and mechanics to run old air conditioner units. A lot of grandstanding for some small fry but zero for East Palestine?
Yes. It’s especially funny that it’s in San Diego where air conditioning is not really necessary (outside of industrial applications and poorly designed new build townhomes). It’s almost as if they were pressured to make some kind of arrest and found one poor sap they could do it to.
 
Pardons? Trump?

The wack-a-mole game the eco/greens and the state are playing with air conditioning continues. This is like the 3rd or 4th different time they have banned the next thing that they pushed/forced them to use last time.

These ghouls and other globalist elites, don't just want you living in bug nests, locked in 15 minute bug hives, they want you without heaters and air-cons as well. This has been a goal of green and eco tards for decades.
 
Before I even opened it I knew it would be for some dude fucking with Refrigerant.

Fun fact: you wanna know why old cars have AC that are ice cold immediately? It's because they used R-22 instead of R-410a or R-123yf like modern cars.

To be fair, hydroflourocarbons are actually terrible for the environment. Due to the presence of chlorine they fuck up O3 molecules real good causing serious damage to the ozone layer. It isn't some cockamamey bullshit like muh CO2.

The thing I've always wondered is why they can't just repair the ozon layer using some kind of plane with a bunch of Ozone machines.

Edit: To the people who are concerned about this being some weird stretch of the law, it kinda isn't. It's been on the books for quite a while now (over 20 years) that you aren't allowed to handle certain refrigerants without certification. Granted it usually isn't enforced strictly and the certification methods are very very loose. People don't typically get arrested or even fined for mishandling refrigerants unless they are being absolute retards doing shit like venting ammonia or smuggling R-22.

Just remember when handling refrigerant always use Fieldpiece™ manifold gauges and hoses for best results! ( or Testo if you're poor).

What you should be worried about is if they start dictating everything must be heat pumps.

To any kiwis who have AC. BEFORE calling an HVAC company.
1:check your fuse (located on the control board typically in the indoor unit, typically purple)
2: Check your capacitor, these go out regularly. Use the Microfarad setting on a multimeter, if the reading between the common terminal and others (typically labelled Herm and Fan if there are 3) does not add up to the listed microfarad on the capacitor it is bad
3: Check the contactor. You should be getting 12 volts on the terminals on the sides (with your thermostat calling for cooling) and be getting 120v coming into the bottom and out of the top. If you notice the contator making a chattering sound and the button/plunger is not pushed in then it's bad most likely.

These are common problems that cause AC to stop working and are easy to fix yourself if you know literally anything about electricity. Thank you for abiding my tism.
 
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Before I even opened it I knew it would be for some dude fucking with Refrigerant.

Fun fact: you wanna know why old cars have AC that are ice cold immediately? It's because they used R-22 instead of R-410a or R-123yf like modern cars.
What’s retarded about this is that it’s a closed system. The refrigerant never needs to be replaced except if the unit is damaged or needs repair. But necessitating these new refrigerants means old units and parts get thrown out, neglected, and leak.
 
What’s retarded about this is that it’s a closed system. The refrigerant never needs to be replaced except if the unit is damaged or needs repair. But necessitating these new refrigerants means old units and parts get thrown out, neglected, and leak.
Most systems still using R-22 outside of cars are so old they're really not worth repairing. At least to my knowledge. Apparently the AIM act seeks to replace 410A too which is gay because their reasons are Muh global warming. But R22 actually is bad for the environment. What's sad is that R22 wasn't really responsible for the vast majority of CFCs, its was dumb 80s thots spraying hair spray full of good old CFCs.

The old equipment leaking is a problem for sure. If the EPA was at all smart they'd incentivise reclamation of R22 instead of putting bounties for people venting which are never claimed.
 
Most systems still using R-22 outside of cars are so old they're really not worth repairing. At least to my knowledge. Apparently the AIM act seeks to replace 410A too which is gay because their reasons are Muh global warming. But R22 actually is bad for the environment. What's sad is that R22 wasn't really responsible for the vast majority of CFCs, its was dumb 80s thots spraying hair spray full of good old CFCs.

The old equipment leaking is a problem for sure. If the EPA was at all smart they'd incentivise reclamation of R22 instead of putting bounties for people venting which are never claimed.
Well to add fuel to the bullshit fire, Mr. Hart didn’t even get arrested for CFCs, he got arrested for HFCs, and the environmental impact on that is basically unknown at this point. The law is based on shaky science.
 
Our government in a nutshell

Overbearing and cruel against all the wrong targets.

This is the same system, writ large, that thought it was "justice" to confiscate someone's pet squirrel and cut it's head off to save the other squirrels from rabies it didn't have.
 
The AIM Act led to the arrest of Michael Hart, of San Diego, in March on charges related to "smuggling potent greenhouse gases," highlighted in the EPA report. The charges marked the first-ever greenhouse gas-related arrest issued under the AIM Act, but according to an EPA press release from earlier this year, "it will not be the last."
Lemme guess, smuggling in something perfectly legal in Mexico? And widely used there? Seeing "San Diego" made that my first thought. Can't say it was freon, but it wouldn't shock me...

CBP: Bringing freon from Mexico is illegal

...maybe this guy was trying to sneak in an amount so retarded even Customs couldn't look they other way?
 
Lemme guess, smuggling in something perfectly legal in Mexico? And widely used there? Seeing "San Diego" made that my first thought. Can't say it was freon, but it wouldn't shock me...

CBP: Bringing freon from Mexico is illegal

...maybe this guy was trying to sneak in an amount so retarded even Customs couldn't look they other way?
R22 is legal to own and use in the US too, you just need a cert to buy it. I'm betting this guy didn't have a cert and didn't declare he had R22 in his posession.
 
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