The rules at Kokohead are obviously different from other parks such as Kapiolani as the rules are in place to prevent sudden DEATH or serious injury.
Sure, and so are the rules that are in place at a beach, national parks, museums, a basketball court or even a public pool they are all different, and many of them are there to prevent death or serious injury; you could just as quickly break your neck or hurt yourself running around a pool! There are administrative regulations, procedures, and guidelines that govern the implementation and creation of those 'rules'.
You can argue the legal aspects of rules and laws but in this case there are obvious sudden consequences that are farther reaching than any argument - getting killed by another person's stupid mistake is a high risk at Kokohead if you don't follow the rules.
So because something is unsafe and dangerous, the rules that govern due process should be discarded? Hrmmm. That sound distinctly similar to the arguments that people make against CCW and why some people shouldn't have guns at all. No joke, you do understand that this is the same line of thinking that is used against pro-gun entities and individuals in court right now? I understand the end result for safety, and I don't disagree with it at all - but there are processes to get something to happen. Kokohead does not have that process in place, and they should; they like to do things how they want to do them, and not necessarily how the rules, regulation, and precedent says it should be done. However, it's Hawaii, so what can we really expect?
I've seen, and been on the receiving end of some threats from Mike of being banned from the park for so called 'violations' that are wholly unrelated to anything affecting public safety. We had discussions with corporate counsel and the Director, and those issues were resolved favorably for me. What KK is missing is that there is a huge difference from being removed temporarily and being banned. If I go into a public place yelling and screaming, say the legislature, they will likely kick me out,and that would probably be legit. However, I could come back the next day and probably repeat the process. To "ban" someone takes far more effort, and if it's a public place that you are being 'banned' from, then they have specific guidelines that should be met under the constitution.
Some things that happen to ban someone:
1.) They have to be informed of what they did (generally in writing);
2.) They get a hearing, where evidence is presented against them;
3.) they get an appeal process.
Sex offenders are banned from many public parks in the interest of public safety. It's not punitive to them, but safety for others. Likely the same effect could be had with a shooter who continues to violate the rules. One issue is that even sex-offenders aren't supposed to be banned from their places of education, college, church etc. With the minimal places that one can exercise their 2nd Amendment rights, and in light of Ezell, I don't know how that would affect a judges reasoning if it removed the only place a shooter could train (since that element was found to be corollary to the right of self-defense).
This whole issue would very likely be a case of first impression since most places do not have public shooting ranges, but there are some basic legal tenets that would be very instructive for the issue.