RussR
En-Route
This.
Declaring an emergency only exempts a pilot from violations of the FARs…not any other law or regulation…like being shot down and disappearing the face of the earth and any know existence of your being…good luck.
The "of this part" provision has always made me wonder about how some things play out in real life. I admit to not having even attempted to research this, but for example, you are not night current and have passengers on board. You are planning to land a little after sunset (but legal so far). You enter the pattern and the gear won't come down. You declare an emergency, and by the time you run through all the troubleshooting, now it's more than an hour past sunset. You land.
Or, you have some scenario (fire maybe) that mandates you to land ASAP. But the nearest airport is IMC and you're not IFR current.
Or you're with another pilot. That pilot is flying and is current, but your flight review is expired. That pilot has some medical issue and you have to take over and land.
All of these involve emergency situations, but also involve violations of Part 61, which is not included in the emergency authority.
Now, certainly in all cases you do what you do to get down safely and worry about the rest later. And also certainly, typically no enforcement action would likely occur for these and similar situations.
But I'd be interested to hear if anyone knows of similar situations where there was an emergency but the pilot was violated for some other part of the FARs.