HALF MOON BAY -- Pete McCloskey hadn't been to Martin's Beach in 65 years, but he had no trouble remembering where the kegs were stationed during his last visit.

"We had a beer bust here," said the former congressman and war hero, pointing to the spot where he and about 30 other Stanford University freshmen spent a pleasant afternoon in 1947.

How many kegs qualify as a bust? "I don't know," he said. "There was enough."

McCloskey, 85, returned to the crescent-shaped beach on a foggy Thursday morning in an unusual dual role. He was both a protester and a principal in the law firm that is suing the coastal property's owner to reopen a private road that winds down to the shore from state Highway 1. McCloskey figured his defiant stroll might get him arrested -- instead he and several surfing advocates got a sheriff's escort.

"The sheriff says, 'Hell, no, we're not going to arrest you,' " explained McCloskey, who later spent several minutes leaning against a blue-on-white sheriff's SUV, shooting the breeze with a deputy.

The small protest was designed to ratchet up the pressure on the furtive owner of the 89-acre property, publicly listed as Martins Beach LLC but presumed to be Silicon Valley venture capitalist Vinod Khosla. The new owner bought the land in 2008 for $37.5 million and immediately locked a gate at the top of the road, an act that ended a nearly century-old tradition of fee-based public access to the beach.


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