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ledhead36
01-31-2009, 08:41 PM
Watermen charged in illegal striped bass sales (http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/bal-te.sp.stripedbass31jan31,0,2826309.story)

State, federal investigators uncover extensive poaching ring in Md., Va.

By Candus Thomson January 31, 2009
State and federal investigators have broken up a black market involving watermen and fish dealers who sold millions of dollars' worth of striped bass, illegally taken from the Chesapeake Bay and Potomac River, to shops and restaurants across the country, according to court documents filed in federal court this week.

Four Maryland watermen, one Virginia waterman, two Washington fish dealers and an upscale Georgetown fish market have been named in criminal complaints, and officials said more are expected. In addition, two St. mary's County watermen were indicted by a federal grand jury last fall for their part in the poaching scheme, which law enforcement officials in Maryland and Virginia say is the largest ever.

The timing couldn't be worse for Maryland. On Monday, the region's fishing regulatory agency is to meet in Alexandria, Va., and state officials fear that the news could trigger harsh penalties that would cripple the multimillion-dollar commercial fishing industry in the Chesapeake Bay and drive up retail fish prices.

"These were fish pirates," said a high-ranking Virginia official, who asked not to be named because he was not authorized to speak about the case. "This was racketeering. Computers and records were seized. You're going to see some places go out of business."

The watermen and fish dealers have been charged under the Lacey Act, which prohibits the illegal taking of wildlife in one state for the purpose of selling it in another. Violations of the act carry a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000, plus potential forfeiture of the boats and vehicles used.

Yesterday at U.S. District Court in Greenbelt, criminal complaints were filed against these watermen: Thomas L. Crowder Jr., 40, of Leonardtown; John W. Dean, 53, of Scotland; Charles Quade, 55, of Churchton; Keith Collins, 57, of Deale; and Thomas L. Hallock, 48, of Catharpin, Va.

"It's news to me," Dean said when reached by phone yesterday. "It may be me. I don't know."

"There have been a whole bunch of plea agreements, but I can't talk to you about it," Crowder said.

Law enforcement sources said individuals have admitted to poaching as much as $1 million worth of fish each over five years.

Annually, Maryland's 1,231 licensed watermen account for about 2 million pounds of the 7 million pounds of striped bass legally caught commercially on the Eastern Seaboard. The poaching scheme described in court documents and by sources means that the state vastly exceeded its annual striped bass quota for five years.

Maryland's watermen are required to report their catch at one of about 30 check stations, which are run by volunteers holding fish dealer licenses. Each fish must be tagged before it is unloaded from a boat. The check stations send the information - number of fish and weight of the catch - to the Department of Natural Resources in daily phone calls and file more comprehensive in weekly written reports.

But insufficient tag monitoring and allowing fish buyers to run check-in stations created a loophole that was exploited, Maryland officials acknowledge.

"This is a time to be sad about the lawlessness on the bay," said Maryland DNR Secretary John R. Griffin. "There's not a whole lot you can do to sugar-coat it. We toughened the rules last summer, but that obviously wasn't enough. It's become clear we need even more accountability."

The DNR is proposing regulations to tighten monitoring and enforcement of the commercial catch.

Andy Hughes, chairman of Coastal Conservation Association Maryland, called the poaching "both alarming in its scope and tremendously disappointing in that it was not dealt with many years earlier."

"We can't bring back the striped bass that have been stolen from us, but we can learn a lesson," Hughes said.

The investigation began in 2003, when Maryland Natural Resources Police tipped the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to poaching in the bay and the river. Here's how the scheme worked, according to sources and court documents:

Watermen, like Joseph Peter Nelson, 69, and Joseph Peter Nelson Jr., 45, of St. Mary's County, received additional tags by filing false reports with the state about the number and weight of the striped bass they caught illegally in Maryland waters.

After reaching his Potomac River quota, the younger Nelson allegedly began using his tags designated for Chesapeake Bay use. From 2003 to 2006, he also used the commercial license of a waterman referred to in the indictment as "J.R." to secure more tags and falsify that catch.

Instead of carrying out transactions dockside, the indictment says, undercover officers from Virginia Marine Police posing as wholesale buyers took delivery of the fish from the Nelsons or unnamed men listed as unindicted co-conspirators at a private home in St. Mary's County, a walk-in cooler, a parking lot and near a bridge on a county road.

Other watermen joined the scheme, creating a supply of striped bass so vast that poachers and dealers brought workers into fish packing houses after hours to process the catch, sources say.

Both Nelsons have pleaded not guilty and contend that the statements they made to Maryland officers were made before they were read their rights. Louis Fireison, lawyer for the younger Nelson, said he could not discuss the case at this point. Lisa Lunt, lawyer for the elder Nelson, declined to comment.

To catch buyers, undercover officers peddled undersized, oversized and out-of-season striped bass.

Court documents show that for four years, beginning in April 2003, Robert Moore and Robert Moore Jr., who own Cannon Seafood Inc., in Washington, sold illegal striped bass and helped other unnamed people buy and sell fish.
Griffin said he hopes to see more joint enforcement efforts on the bay, an idea seconded by Rod J. Rosenstein, U.S. Attorney for Maryland.

"This is not the sort of case you can prove by looking at a fish once it's on a plate in a restaurant or somebody's kitchen. You have to actually be there when the fish are caught and when they're sold at the first stage," Rosenstein said. "I hope that this will be a model for other similar investigations because it's really critical that we join forces to pursue these kinds of cases."

DNR officials worry that this poaching scheme might eventually lead to Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission sanctions.

ASMFC Commissioner Pat Augustine of New York predicted that his fellow commissioners "will demand some form of punishment when this hits the table ... that could shut down commercial striped bass fishing in the Chesapeake. Maryland needs to come to the table eating humble pie."

cowherder
05-08-2009, 06:47 PM
Great job catching these guys! :clapping:

May 7, 2009
Capping a lengthy undercover investigation, Conservation Officers (http://www.njfishandwildlife.com/lawhome.htm) with the Department of Environmental Protection’s Division of Fish and Wildlife have cited eight people for illegally taking and selling river herring from South Jersey waters. Fishermen are allowed to take up to 35 herring per day, but are not allowed to possess more than 35 herring at one time, or sell herring, unless they hold certain commercial fishing licenses.

Herring are anadromous fish, meaning they live in saltwater, but return to fresh water to spawn in the spring. In recent years, herring migrations have precipitously declined, raising concern and prompting regulatory action by federal and state government. Since Colonial times, many populations of blueback herring and alewife, collectively known as river herring, have faced threats from commercial and recreational fishing, habitat loss from dam construction, silt and pollution – among others.

The National Marine Fisheries Service (http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/) identified a 90 percent decline in commercial landings of herring between 1985 and 2004, and those numbers have continued to decrease. The closure of river herring fisheries by Atlantic coastal states -- including Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Virginia and North Carolina -- and documented declines in river herring abundance have raised questions about the adequacy of current management of the species to promote healthy fish stocks.

Given the circumstances, the Delaware River Basin Fish & Wildlife Management Cooperative’s Fisheries Technical Committee in 2008 took regulatory steps to reduce the current daily limit of 35 river herring to 10. If approved in Pennsylvania, the regulation would take effect in 2010. A regulation to reduce the herring limit to 10 is also proposed for New Jersey’s fresh waters and would require anglers wishing to possess more than 10 fish to produce a receipt proving that they purchased the extra herring.

The seriousness of the decline is also reflected by a May 7 Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (http://www.asmfc.org/) approval of an amendment to the Interstate Fishery Management Plan for river herring. The amendment prohibits commercial and recreational fisheries for herring in marine waters beginning Jan. 1, 2012, unless a state or jurisdiction develops and submits for approval a sustainable management plan by Jan. 1, 2010. The amendment defines a sustainable fishery as "a commercial and/or recreational fishery that will not diminish the potential future stock reproduction and recruitment."

During the past several years in New Jersey, amateur harvesters have refined their gear and techniques to boost the size of their catch. However, as conscientious sportsmen witnessed anglers taking more than the 35 herring a day limit, they reported it to the DEP’s Division of Fish and Wildlife. Through information and surveillance, Conservation Officers learned that hundreds of thousands of herring likely have been illegally taken and sold out of the waters in Atlantic County. Anglers stockpiled many of these fish in holding pens, a violation of New Jersey’s possession limit.

Herring are prized as bait in the increasingly popular recreational striped bass fishery, and at a price tag of up to $5 a piece, the demand and profit incentives has fueled black market commercialization at the expense of the species.

In an effort to help protect this important wildlife resource, plainclothes Conservation Officers worked for more than 14 months alongside herring fishermen in Mays Landing in Atlantic County on the Great Egg Harbor River, and compiled evidence on at least 16 people for taking more than the legal daily limit of herring, having more than the possession limits and for illegally selling herring.


On May 3, Conservation Officers executed search warrants at three locations in Atlantic County, and wrapped up the undercover investigation, led by Lt. Greg Honachefsky by citing eight men with dozens of violations in connection with illegally catching and selling herring. Eight others were apprehended and charged last spring at the start of the investigation. All told, possible penalties for the violations exceed $33,000. The eight men cited this week are:


Peter May, 29, of Hutto, Texas, formerly of Mays Landing, was charged with possession of 350 river herring over the legal limit, unlawful use of a bait seine, and unlawfully screening a river.
Thomas Valiante, 49, of Galloway, was charged with possession of 270 river herring over the legal limit, unlawful use of a bait seine, and unlawful screening of a river.
Anthony Compton, 37, of Mays Landing, was charged with possession of 37 herring over the legal limit and conspiracy to sell wildlife illegally.
Victor Stott, 69, of Barnegat Light, was charged with 25 river herring over the legal limit.
Joseph Milza, 52, of Egg Harbor City, was charged with 31 river herring over the legal limit, unlawful sale of wildlife and conspiracy to unlawfully sell or purchase wildlife.
Mark Constantino, 19, of Egg Harbor Township, was charged with illegal sale of wildlife.
Thomas Vanzant, 24, of Brigantine, was charged with possession of 119 river herring over the legal limit, unlawful sale of wildlife, conspiracy to sell wildlife illegally, and failure to keep required records.
John Hoagland, 27, of Egg Harbor Township, was charged with possession of 125 river herring over the legal limit, unlawful sale of wildlife, conspiracy to illegally sell wildlife and failure to keep required records.
To report violations of fish and game laws, call the DEP’s 24-hour hotline at 877-WARN DEP (877- 927-6337). Information can be reported anonymously and will be kept confidential.

wish4fish
05-11-2009, 11:28 AM
i stopped fishing the delaware because the herring was going down in latest years, not worth it, now i see why.:burn: azzholes like this taking more than the limit, throw the book at the *****!http://stripersandanglers.com/Forum/images/icons/icon13.gif

stripermania
05-11-2009, 12:26 PM
It about time they catch some of those scumbuckets. I am tired off the good fisherman being blamed for the the other lamebrains do.

finchaser
05-16-2009, 06:58 AM
Probably nothing will happen this is the 3rd or 4th time they have caught Victor. Remember there are no marine judges,regular judges could care less as it's outside of there expertise :(. As it says possible penalties for the violations .

williehookem
05-16-2009, 10:50 AM
Probably nothing will happen this is the 3rd or 4th time they have caught Victor. Remember there are no marine judges,regular judges could care less as it's outside of there expertise :(. As it says possible penalties for the violations .


It kills me that these guys will get a slap on the wrist if what you said is true finchaser. That's why they keep doing it, they know the penalties will not be that bad if caught. :beatin:

DarkSkies
02-17-2010, 07:40 AM
I started this thread because there seems to be no shame anymore when people are caught poaching. It's no big deal, just part of doing business, no guilt. :don't know why:

Instead of separating different threads out for each state, let's realiize that poaching occurs in all states, and poaching of striped bass occurs in all EEZ coastal areas, not just in NC and VA.

The ASMFC posts records every year of people caught poaching. Feel free to locate those public records from the meetings and post them in this thread. Thanks people.

DarkSkies
02-17-2010, 07:43 AM
This first one comes courtesy of Bababooey, who originally posted it in the EEZ thread.
http://stripersandanglers.com/Forum/showthread.php?t=5801&page=8


Thanks. :HappyWave:




http://www.jdnews.com/news/illegal-7...s-efforts.html (http://www.jdnews.com/news/illegal-72738-bass-efforts.html)


Fishermen caught with nearly 3,000 pounds of illegal bass

February 12, 2010 5:45 PM

DAILY NEWS STAFF (http://www.jdnews.com/reporter-profile/dailynews-staff-239)

Coast Guard and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration personnel combined efforts Tuesday to stop illegal striped bass fishing off Oregon Inlet and found one vessel with illegally caught fish that had more than 2,900 pounds of fish aboard.

The economic pressures being felt nationwide and the meteorological conditions driving the striped bass population farther off shore into warmer waters have set the stage for a situation that may entice fishermen to break the law, according to a news release from the Fifth Coast Guard District.
In an effort to ensure the longevity of the striped bass population and maintain a level playing field for all fishermen, federal authorities are taking action.

On Tuesday, in response to multiple reports of commercial and recreational striped bass fishing within the Exclusive Economic Zone, the Coast Guard and NOAA conducted a joint effort to curtail this illegal activity.

Fishing for striped bass is permitted within state waters, but catching or possessing striped bass outside three nautical miles from shore is a violation of federal regulations. In an effort to catch fishermen participating in this illegal activity, the Coast Guard mounted a patrol within known fishing grounds off Oregon Inlet, using Station Oregon Inlet’s small boats with the assistance of additional boarding team personnel from Station Hatteras Inlet, the release said.

One of the boarding teams sighted the fishing vessel Lady Samaira as it was heading back into port. It was within the Exclusive Economic Zone when the team boarded the vessel to ensure compliance with both fishery and vessel safety regulations.
Their investigation revealed more than 150 striped bass aboard the vessel. The boarding team documented their findings and relayed all pertinent information to NOAA, the regulatory agency for such violations, for further guidance. As a result of the boarding team’s findings, NOAA asked the Coast Guard to direct the Lady Samaira to port where NOAA agents met the vessel.

When the vessel moored in North Carolina there were less fish aboard, approximately 100 striped bass. The fish, weighing in at almost 3,000 pounds, were abandoned by the vessel’s captain to the NOAA Office of Law Enforcement.

Typically, if less than 10 illegal fish are discovered, in addition to having to abandon their catch the master is levied a $100 fine per fish and the matter is closed. In this case, the NOAA OLE investigation continues, and the final action to be taken against the master or vessel has yet to be determined.

This case, while significant, is just one example of illegal striped bass fishing activity recently interdicted by federal, state, and local authorities, the Coast Guard said.

DarkSkies
02-17-2010, 07:54 AM
Feel free to post any others from the ASMFC meeting reports or other sites where these public records are listed.

The legal stuff:
Please be aware when a citation is written, the person it is given to is not a poacher until they're convicted or plead guilty in a court of law.

Let's try to keep a focus on that here, thanks.

DarkSkies
02-19-2010, 08:57 AM
Sent in by OGB, thanks!

Marine Region

*On 9/14/09 COs Scott and Swift conducted an evening patrol in Perth Amboy, Belmar, Avon and Point Pleasant Beach. The result of the patrol netted six summonses for possession of 15 undersized tautog, one summons for undersized crabs and a summons for an undersized striped bass.

*While responding to the seemingly endless complaints in Barnegat Light, on 9/26/09 CO Swift set up a surveillance along a path used by illegal fishermen and their accomplices. CO Swift observed a female carrying a backpack walking to a vehicle. CO Swift then observed two male fishermen walking up the path approximately 100 yards behind the female. He inspected the fishermen who possessed one legal tautog. When questioned by CO Swift, the fishermen initially denied knowing the woman with the backpack. CO Swift obtained the backpack which contained 7 undersized tautog. As CO Swift went back to his vehicle to write a summons, a local resident alerted him that the woman made several trips back and forth to the vehicle during the day. CO Swift went back to the subject’s vehicle and found an additional 9 undersized tautog. All three individuals were issued summons for possession of undersized tautog, possession of over limit tautog and interference.

*On 9/25/09 Lt. Fresco and CO Swift set up a surveillance on the Point Pleasant canal in reference to many ongoing complaints. One individual was observed running fish back to a vehicle and was apprehended with four undersized tautog and one summer flounder out of season. Another individual was also apprehended for running fish back to their vehicle with undersized scup and tautog. Later that day the officers met up with CO Dravis to conduct an inspection of the FV Paramount in Brielle. An individual fishing on that vessel contacted CO Dravis in reference to violations by patrons as well as their descriptions. Two individuals were apprehended with 27 undersized black sea bass.

*On 09/25/09 CO Jones was watching a fisherman on a jetty in Deal. The fisherman eventually packed up his gear and started to come off the jetty. At this time another fisherman arrived and started to walk onto the jetty. The original fisherman gave the new fisherman a wide berth and hid his bucket on the side opposite this fisherman's view so the new fisherman could not see into the bucket. CO Jones watched the fisherman walk onto the beach and then proceed up the beach passing the normal access location and go to a more remote access location further up. CO Jones arrived at the second access site and climbed out of his patrol vehicle. When the fisherman, who was now climbing stairs towards the parking lot, saw CO Jones standing at the top of the access, he quickly turned around, ran down a flight of stairs, and threw the bucket over the railing and into the weeds. CO Jones advised the individual to retrieve the bucket. At this time the fluke season had been closed for 21 days. CO Jones inspected the contents of the bucket and found five fluke. The fisherman was issued a summons for having five fluke during closed season.

*On 09/26/09 CO Jones walked the Keansburg Pier inspecting fisherman as he went. He encountered a father and teenage son who were attempting to leave. Both men walked past CO Jones as he tried to inspect them. CO Jones now had to get in front of both fisherman and stop them so he could conduct the inspection. The father kept his teenage son on the far side of him away from CO Jones. The father then showed CO Jones an empty bucket and said "no fish". The men then tried to walk away. CO Jones again got in front of both men and asked to see the contents of the soft-bodied cooler which the teenage son had strapped across his shoulder. The teenage son said "its' only drinks". CO Jones had the teenage son remove the top drink and plastic bag. Underneath the plastic bag CO Jones observed scup. Upon inspection CO Jones found the soft-bodied cooler held 40 porgies of which 39 were short.The father took responsibility for all the fish and the appropriate summonses were issued.

*On 10/01/09 CO Jones conducted surveillance of a fisherman fishing along the Arthur Kill in Perth Amboy. CO Jones observed the individual catch two porgies before the fisherman packed up his gear to leave. CO Jones arrived at the parking location as the fisherman was approaching his vehicle. Upon seeing CO Jones the fisherman walked to the passenger side of his vehicle and threw his bag of fish under the vehicle. CO Jones had the fisherman retrieve his bag of fish and upon inspection found that the bag contained 5 bluefish, and 37 porgies (scup). All 37 porgies were short. The appropriate summonses were issued.

*On 10/5/09 COs Soell and Swift set up surveillance on exits used by fishermen fishing on the Barnegat Light jetty. CO Swift observed two individuals with fishing equipment dragging a cooler to their vehicle. CO Swift inspected the cooler and it container 17 undersized tautog. Summonses were issued to both individuals for possession of undersized and over limit tautog. Meanwhile, CO Soell received a call from a local resident on another exit that a male and female were returning to their vehicle. The resident observed the female carry two buckets to their vehicle during the course of the day. The COs stopped the vehicle as they were leaving the area. When asked if they had caught any fish, the individuals showed the officers two buckets containing approximately 30 bergalls. CO Swift spotted a backpack in the vehicle and asked to inspect it. The backpack contained 10 undersized tautog. The male admitted to catching all of the fish and received a summonses for possession of 10 undersized tautog and 9 over bag limit.

That same evening, CO Swift observed a female walk to a vehicle with a backpack. When she returned to the path the backpack appeared empty. Approximately fifteen minutes later a male carrying a backpack and no apparent fishing equipment, returned to the same vehicle and proceeded to leave the area in his vehicle. The COs followed the vehicle which then stopped at a gas station. The COs questioned the male if he had been fishing and he replied that he did. When asked if he possessed any fish he stated, “no”. CO Soell asked if he had a cooler and permission to inspect it, to which the male consented. The cooler contained 40 tautog which were hidden under a jacket inside the cooler. The backpack he was observed carrying contained another 9 tautog. Out of a total of 49 tautog, 30 were undersized. The male was issued summonses for possessing 48 tautog over the limit and 30 undersized tautog. It turns out that all of these fish were caught utilizing hand lines. As a side note, the woman originally observed going to the vehicle was apparently left behind by the male and was observed by COs walking down the main roadway on Long Beach Island. Over the course of that patrol, 84 illegal tautog were seized.

*The National Marine Fisheries Service made a closure of the black sea bass recreational harvest season to federally permitted party and charter vessels, effective October 5th . On October 4th, prior to the federal recreational black sea bass season closure, CO Snellbaker organized a boarding of the charter vessel Capt Collet in Atlantic City. At 1600 hrs, CO Snellbaker, CO Nicklow and Lt. Canale boarded the vessel as they returned to the dock on Maryland Ave. The Conservation Officers encountered 15 patrons from Maryland and Washington, DC. When the inspection was complete, Officers, Snellbaker, Nicklow and Lt. Canale documented a total of 613 undersize black sea bass, 404 black sea bass possessed over the daily bag limit of 25 fish per person, 5 undersize scup, and 5 undersize fluke which were also possessed during the closed season for the charter. Although individual totals varied, violations per patron averaged 40 undersized fish and 26 fish over the limit. Officers issued a total of 32 summonses to the patrons of the CV Capt Collet for their violations. All of the seized fish were donated to the Atlantic City Rescue Mission.

*CO Petruccelli, assisted by NMFS Special Agent Jason Couse, apprehended the F/V Sonja H with several violations of New Jersey’s Commercial fishing regulations. On the evening of September 23, CO Petruccelli observed FV Sonja H enter its dock area in Cape May Harbor. While observing the vessel from an adjacent dock, CO Petruccelli was seen by the owner of H&H Fisheries LLC, Blair Hansen.

H&H Fisheries is the documented owner of the FV Sonja H. Mr. Hansen was able to warn the captain of the vessel, Jasen Hansen, about CO Petruccelli’s presence. Jasen Hansen immediately dumped illegal black sea bass and tautog overboard into the harbor. CO Petruccelli arrived to find black sea bass and tautog from the FV Sonja H floating in the water. With the assistance of the vessel captain, Jasen Hansen, CO Petruccelli retrieved most of the discarded fish. CO Petruccelli documented that the FV Sonja H landed 70lb of black sea bass during the closed commercial season, 35lb of tautog during the closed commercial tautog season, 17 undersize lobsters and the possession of 2 egg bearing lobsters. Additionally, a federal violation for failing to complete a Fishing Vessel Trip Report and a State violation for interference for the attempt to discard the illegal fish were documented. CO Petruccelli issued 9 summonses: four to the Vessel owner and five to the captain. Federal Charges for the logbook violation are pending.





A full list of all activities/violations including hunting/game law infractions can be found here:

http://njcoa.blogspot.com/ (http://njcoa.blogspot.com/)

DarkSkies
02-19-2010, 09:08 AM
Some more:


Marine Region

*CO Swift recently settled a case in Highlands Borough Court stemming from fillet permit violations observed by undercover officers on the party FV Elaine B II on 7/31/09. The mate and captain pleaded guilty and paid a total of $600.00 in penalties plus costs. The vessel also had its fillet permit suspended for a period of 60 days.

*CO Scott also settled a case in Middletown Township Court involving a commercial conch pot fisherman. The individual pleaded guilty to this second violation for placing of conch pots in a marked or charted channel. He paid a penalty of $750.00 plus costs.

*On 11/7/09, CO Soell settled a case in Barnegat Light Municipal Court involving an individual who was apprehended with 48 tautog over limit and 30 undersized tautog. This individual pleaded guilty and was assessed a penalty of $2340.00 plus court costs.

*On 11/15/09 District 7 COs conducted a plain-clothes operation at Barnegat Light SP jetty in response to complaints from local citizens of unlawful activity. The officers posing as fishermen, observed several instances in which fishermen deliberately attempted to conceal their illegal catches and avoid detection. Groups of fishermen would send out illegal fish with individuals in backpacks with no fishing equipment, while the rest of the group brought out legal fish and all the equipment. The carriers of the illegal catch would walk out to side streets along the beach to be later picked up by their counterparts or go to separate vehicles. A total of 15 individuals were apprehended by the officers with a total of 23 summonses issued. Summonses issued included: 2 summonses for possession of a total of 23 winter flounder out of season; 8 summonses for possession of a total of 23 tautog, over bag limit; 4 summonses for possession of a total of 10 undersized tautog; and 9 summonses for interfering with the duties of a CO.

*On 11/22/09 COs Scott and Swift observed a fisherman returning to the Neptune City ramp. They recognized this individual as a habitual marine fish violator who is currently awaiting trial on another case involving 47 summer flounder out of season. An inspection of the vessel revealed 6 undersized striped bass. Summonses were issued for 6 short striped bass and 2 over limit.

*CO Scott later inspected the charter fishing vessel, Right of Way II that just returned to the Belmar Municipal Marina in the Shark River, from a tautog fishing trip. The inspection was uneventful. A short time later, CO Swift while driving through the Belmar Marina parking lot, observed a well-dressed individual carrying a bag of three, large tautog. When questioned by CO Swift, this individual claimed he bought the fish from the Right of Way II. CO Swift took the individual back to the vessel to point out the seller, who turned out to be one of the patrons. A summons was issued to the patron for sale of tautog without a permit. Earlier that day while on boat patrol with USCG Sandy Hook, CO Scott inspected a sport fisherman in possession of 12 tautog, 6 over the daily possession limit. A summons was issued for the overage.

*CO Dravis conducted a dockside inspection of a sport fishing vessel in Brielle on 11/22/09. As he approached this vessel, he observed some of the three occupants scurrying around to fill out striped bass bonus tags. CO Dravis asked what they had caught and one of the fishermen stated they had 8 striped bass. At the time they had not filled out any of the bonus tags. When CO Dravis told them he was going to inspect the vessel’s fish holds, one individual told them they were also in possession of a summer flounder. The holds contained 8 striped bass and a 24 inch summer flounder. A summons was issued to the captain for not filling out the bonus tags and possession of summer flounder during the closed season.

DarkSkies
02-19-2010, 09:13 AM
Some more:

Marine Region Highlights

*Joint operations with NMFS agents and NJ COs were conducted in response to the black sea bass closure in federal waters. On 11/3/09 CO Scott along NMFS agents boarded the party fishing vessel Ocean Explorer in Belmar. Undercover agents aboard the vessel documented the vessel fishing for black sea bass in federal waters as well as short black sea bass filleted by the mate and hidden on the vessel. CO Scott issued a summons for undersized black sea bass to the mate. A federal case has been initiated for the closure and other violations.

*On 11/9/09 another joint operation for black sea bass enforcement was conducted aboard the party fishing vessel Dauntless in Point Pleasant Beach. Undercover agents documented this vessel fishing for black sea bass in federal waters. The agents also observed the mates filleting undersized black sea bass which were discarded as the vessel entered the Manasquan Inlet prior to docking. This is a violation of the requirements of the vessels state-issued fillet permit. When the vessel docked and the officers boarded the vessel, the patrons left behind 152 undersized black sea bass and 45 legal size black sea bass. Based on information supplied to CO Swift, three patrons were issued summonses for possession of undersized black sea bass. The vessels owner, captain and two mates were issued summonses for filleting undersized black sea bass and discarding carcasses prior to docking. Along with penalties ranging from $300-3000, a 60 day suspension of the fillet permit will be assessed upon conviction.

*CO Swift was provided information in reference to the party fishing vessel Queen Mary II keeping any striped bass that were caught on their annual Thanksgiving Day fishing trip. On Thanksgiving Day, COs Scott and Swift boarded this vessel as it returned to its dock in Point Pleasant Beach. The inspection uncovered five undersized striped bass carcasses. A summons was issued to the captain.

*On 11/28/09 CO Dravis inspected a recreational vessel named "Earley Bird" as it pulled into Southside Marina in Brielle. When the three occupants of the vessel observed CO Dravis at the dock they pretended they were having trouble docking the vessel and stated they would be going to a more sheltered slip on the other side of marina. As they pulled away, CO Dravis reacted by jumping off the dock onto the deck of the boat. CO Dravis found one bluefish and nine striped bass. Eight of the stripers measured less than 28 inches. The captain/owner of the vessel was written a court mandatory summons for possession of eight undersized striped bass and three over limit.

*CO Swift settled a case in Neptune City on 12/3/09 in reference to the FV Last Lady II where a $300 penalty was assessed and a 60 day fillet permit suspension for discarding scup carcasses prior to docking.

*On 12/3/09 COs Scott and Swift conducted a patrol of the Barnegat Light jetty in the Barnegat Inlet. Inspections were made as fishermen exited the jetty and returned to their vehicles. A total of 13 summonses were issued for possession of undersized tautog and possession of over daily bag limit of six tautog. A summons for interference with the duties of a Conservation Officer was issued to an individual who tried to elude detection by the COs. A total of 30 illegal tautog were seized by the officers.

*On December 18th at 2100 hrs Lt Canale assisted National Marine Fishery Service Special Agent Jason Couse with the boarding of FV Carol Marie at Lunds Fisheries in Cape May. The FV Carol Marie was landing a General Category sea scallop trip also known as a day scallop trip limited to 400lbs. The vessel which was identified as a result of their vessel monitoring system was observed entering the Hudson Canyon Closed area which is located 80 miles from the coast of NJ. Lt Canale and SA Couse inspected the vessel when it landed, interviewed the captain and crew about their recent, as well as their two previous trips into the closed area. Officers seized their catch of 400lb of sea scallops. During this investigation, while the crew was being identified, one crewman provided a false name, date of birth and social security number. Numerous warrants for this individual were identified. Officers turned the individual over to Lower Twp police for processing on the active warrants.

*On December 12th, weather conditions created blow-out conditions at low tide. Lieutenant Canale assisted CO Nicklow on a patrol of the dock areas along the bay-shore in Brigantine. CO Nicklow and Lieutenant Canale apprehended three commercial clammers harvesting clams within dock areas off of 17th St. South. Appropriate enforcement action was taken and all clams were returned to the water.

storminsteve
02-19-2010, 10:55 AM
Some more:


*CO Dravis conducted a dockside inspection of a sport fishing vessel in Brielle on 11/22/09. As he approached this vessel, he observed some of the three occupants scurrying around to fill out striped bass bonus tags. CO Dravis asked what they had caught and one of the fishermen stated they had 8 striped bass. At the time they had not filled out any of the bonus tags. When CO Dravis told them he was going to inspect the vessel’s fish holds, one individual told them they were also in possession of a summer flounder. The holds contained 8 striped bass and a 24 inch summer flounder. A summons was issued to the captain for not filling out the bonus tags and possession of summer flounder during the closed season.

You got to be freakin kidding me! They said they didn't fill out their bonus tags? That's one of the classic poaching lies! They didn't fill out their bonus tags because they use those tags every time they go out for bonus fish. They don't return them for new ones like they're supposed to, it's a lot easier to kill extra fish with just the blank tags. Then when they get stopped, they say they "forgot" to fill them out. What BS. I hope those CO's realized they were being flat out lied to.

That's an example right there why NJ bonus tags don't work and should be eliminated.

rip316
02-19-2010, 11:08 AM
Do any of you guys know what the penalties are for stripers and fluke. We were having this conversation at work the other day and one guy said it was $150 for one short fluke. Is this correct?

hookset
02-19-2010, 11:45 AM
I think the minimum penalty is $54 rip316, according to how I read the violations schedule. It looks like its $54 for anything other than striped bass, which would include fluke.
$124 for striped bass, and $124 for wanton waste of any fish. I learned something clicking on the link above. I did not know that you can be fined for wanton waste of fish, like tossing sea robins or skates. That is covered under the violations.




7:25-18.1(c)1 Take/possess 1 undersized marine fish $54
7:25-18.1(c)1.a Take/possess 1 marine fish over limit $54
7:25-18.1(c)1.f Possess 1 marine fish during closed season $54
7:25-18.1(c)2 Take/possess 2 undersized marine fish $84
7:25-18.1(c)2.b Take/possess 2 marine fish over limit $84
7:25-18.1(c)2.g Take/possess 2 marine fish during closed season $84
7:25-18.1(c)3 Take/possess 3 undersized marine fish $114
7:25-18.1(c)3.c Take/possess 3 marine fish over limit $114
7:25-18.1(c)3.h Take/possess 3 marine fish during closed season $114
7:25-18.1(c)4 Take/possess 4 undersized marine fish $144
7:25-18.1(c)4.d Take/possess 4 marine fish over limit $144
7:25-18.1(c)4.i Take/possess 4 marine fish during closed season $144
7:25-18.1(c)5 Take/possess 5 undersized marine fish $174
7:25-18.1(c)5.e Take/possess 5 marine fish over limit $174
7:25-18.1(c)5.j Take/possess 5 marine fish during closed season $174


7:25-18.1(d)1 Possess land or sell prohibited species of marine fish $54
7:25-18.1(d)2 Possess land or sell prohibited species of marine fish - two fish $84
7:25-18.1(d)3 Possess land or sell prohibited species of marine fish - three fish $114
7:25-18.1(d)4 Possess land or sell prohibited species of marine fish - four fish $144
7:25-18.1(d)5 Possess land or sell prohibited species of marine fish - five fish $174


09/01/04

Page 62


N.J.A.C. Payable

Amount
Pursuant to New Jersey Administrative Code
7:25-18.1(e)1 Possess parts or mutilated marine fish $54
7:25-18.1(e)2 Possess parts or mutilated marine fish (two fish) $84
7:25-18.1(e)3 Possess parts or mutilated marine fish (three fish) $114
7:25-18.1(e)4 Possess parts of mutilated marine fish (four fish) $144
7:25-18.1(e)5 Possess parts of mutilated marine fish (five fish) $174





7:25-18.1(f)1 Permitted vessels possess mutilated parts and/or removed skin from marine fish $54

7:25-18.1(f)2 Permitted vessels possess mutilated parts and/or removed skin from 2
marine fish $84
7:25-18.1(f)3 Permitted vessels possess mutilated parts and/or removed skin from 3
marine fish $114
7:25-18.1(f)4 Permitted vessels possess mutilated parts and/or removed skin from 4
marine fish $144
7:25-18.1(f)5 Permitted vessels possess mutilated parts and/or removed skin from 5
marine fish $174
7:25-18.1(h)1 Take/attempt to take/possess 1 striped bas or hybrid striped bass during closure $124
7:25-18.1(h)1(2) Take/attempt to take/possess 2 striped bass or hybrid striped bass during closure $224
7:25-18.1(h)1(3) Take/attempt to take/possess 3 striped bass or hybrid striped bass during closure $324





7:25-18.1(i)1 Take/possess 1 undersize hybrid striped bass $124

7:25-18.1(i)1(2) Take/possess 2 undersize hybrid striped bass $224
7:25-18.1(i)1(3) Take/possess 3 undersize hybrid striped bass $324





7:25-18.1(j)1 Possess 1 over the limit striped bass or hybrid striped bass $124

7:25-18.1(j)1(2) Possess 2 over the limit striped bass or hybrid striped bass $324
7:25-18.1(j)1(3) Possess 3 over the limit striped bass or hybrid striped bass $324





7:25-18.1(k)1 Mutilate 1 striped bass/ hybrids $124

7:25-18.1(k)1(2) Mutilate 2 striped bass/ hybrids $224
7:25-18.1(k)1(3) Mutilate 3 striped bass/ hybrids $324





7:25-18.1M Wanton waste of one marine fish $124

7:25-18.1M(2) Wanton waste of two marine fish $224
7:25-18.1M(3) Wanton waste of three marine fish $324


http://www.judiciary.state.nj.us/mcs/svbs_9-04/part2-b6.pdf

williehookem
02-19-2010, 12:56 PM
Wow those guys are busy!
And that doesn't include the hunting violations.


Central Region Highlights

CO Martiak recently reached a settlement in a case involving the unlawful possession of four alligators in Marlboro, Monmouth County. The owner of the four alligators, a repeat offender of unlawful wildlife possession, agreed in court to pay $16,500.00 for the illegal possession of the alligators. Included in the penalty was $2,400.00 for restitution to the State for the handling and relocation of the alligators.


On 12/2/09 CO Dravis inspected the FV Jaime Mae, a commercial otter trawl vessel, at the Point Pleasant Co-op dock. The vessel had just returned from an offshore trip targeting spiny dogfish and offloaded its catch. Among other species, they had off-loaded their 200 pound by catch limit of summer flounder. CO Dravis conducted an inspection of the onboard fish holds and observed two striped bass buried in ice within a large fish tote. CO Dravis dug further into the ice and found an additional 102 pounds of summer flounder and 36 pounds of winter flounder. CO Dravis issued summonses for exceeding the summer flounder by catch limit, possession of undersized striped bass and taking striped bass by means of a net. A federal verbal warning was issued for possession of winter flounder caught in federal waters. The illegal summer flounder were sold to the co-op and a check was seized by CO Dravis.

A case was recently settled concerning the party fishing vessel Big Mohawk. During the course of the investigation, undercover COs observed numerous violations aboard this vessel on August 15, 2009. Guilty pleas resulted in the collection of a total of $2,340.00 plus costs. The vessel also received a 60 day suspension of its fillet permit for the months of June and July 2010, during the intended recreational summer flounder season.

On January 2, 2010 Conservation Officers’ James and Petruccelli apprehended the FV Abracadabra for possession of black sea bass and summer flounder in excess of New Jersey’s commercial landing limit. The officers determined that the captain of the vessel had harvested and possessed double the landing limit of both species after a five day trip near the Hudson Canyon area of the Atlantic Ocean. The vessel landed and offloaded one day’s limit on January 1, 2010 then left the dock on the morning of January 2, 2010. On the 2nd, the vessel’s captain sailed the FV Abracadabra offshore in an effort to give the appearance of a harvest trip only to return to the dock in under 15hrs. Officers James and Petruccelli boarded the vessel upon its return to the dock, interviewed the captain and seized the excess fish landed. The appropriate State summonses were issued for the violations.


http://njcoa.blogspot.com/ (http://njcoa.blogspot.com/)

rip316
02-19-2010, 01:30 PM
Thanks Hookset.

DarkSkies
03-06-2010, 07:53 PM
As originally posted by Stripermania:

2-2010



8 Rock Hall men charged with rockfish poaching



Eight Rock Hall men were charged last week with rockfish poaching, the first arrests under a new system that imposes penalties based on the severity of the crime.

On Feb. 23, Natural Resources Police charged William Howard Beck, 43, with possessing striped bass greater than 36 inches and mutilating the tail to mask the size of the fish. Officers said they caught Beck when they checked J & J Seafood in Rock Hall and found striped bass with cut tails.

The next day, officers charged John Franklin Riggs, 43, with failing to check in striped bass during the required times. Officers said they found striped bass hidden in the cabin of his boat.

Riggs and Beck also are facing charges of failing to properly mark gill nets in the Chesapeake Bay (http://stripersandanglers.com/topic/environmental-issues/bodies-of-water/chesapeake-bay-PLREC000053.topic) and setting or maintaining an unattended striped bass gill net.

The arrests are part of a massive crackdown by the NRP on fish and oyster poachers that employs team patrols, high-tech surveillance equipment and sonar sweeps to look for illegal nets that are submerged. Officers seized approximately 16,500 yards of illegally anchored gill (approximately 55 nets) and 3,200 pounds of rockfish during the last week and half of February.

"Repeat offenders will not be tolerated," said Department of Natural Resources Secretary John Griffin (http://stripersandanglers.com/topic/entertainment/john-griffin-PECLB002104.topic). "We take these crimes against our public resources very seriously."

The new three-tier system, which went into effect Feb. 22, groups offenses by severity and sets penalties and points for each. Watermen accumulating 10 points will have their licenses suspended for 30 days. For extremely serious violations, DNR can suspend a license on a first offense.

If convicted, Beck may be subject to thousands of dollars in fines and at least five points on his license. Riggs will also face thousands of dollars in fines if convicted.

In December, Beck and Riggs were charged with oyster poaching and DNR subsequently suspended Beck's right to catch oysters for the season due to repeat offenses.

Also charged last week:

Lewis Herbert Cain Sr., 63, Christopher Wesley Lingerman, 37, and Joel Colon, 29, for possession of striped bass greater than 36 inches. Officers boarded a commercial fishing boat in Rock Hall Harbor on Feb. 23 and found three oversized striped bass hidden in a compartment under the deck of the boat. The maximum fine for a first offense is $1,000 and $2,000 for a second offense.

On the same day, officers found fish hidden in a forward compartment of a second boat and charged James Daniel Elburn, 51, Donnie Bartus Collier, 55, and William Bartus Collier, 81, with possessing striped bass greater than 36 inches. Elburn and Donnie Collier were charged with two counts of mutilating striped bass to mask the size of the fish and catching striped bass in excess of their daily catch limits. If convicted, they could be fined a maximum of $1,000 for a first offense and $2,000 for a second offense. Possessing mutilated fish is punishable by five points per violation.

Frankiesurf
03-06-2010, 09:09 PM
Here is a disgusting abuse of power.

http://www.newsday.com/long-island/nassau/dozens-pack-courtroom-in-support-of-east-end-fishermen-1.1793696

Dozens pack courtroom in support of East End fishermen
March 4, 2010 By MARK HARRINGTON mark.harrington@newsday.com


Two dozen East End fishermen and their families packed an East Hampton courtroom Thursday in support of two men charged with harvesting fluke and porgies without permits and out of season.

The men, brothers Daniel and Paul Lester of East Hampton, pleaded not guilty to numerous felony and misdemeanor charges Thursday. The brothers are sons of the late East Hampton fisherman Calvin Lester, who waged an unsuccessful battle against laws that ended a traditional type of commercial off-beach fishing of striped bass, known as haul seining, in the 1980s. Daniel Lester is an East Hampton harbormaster.

At a briefing after the arraignment yesterday morning, the men's lawyer, Daniel Rodgers of Riverhead, read a statement saying the state Department of Environmental Conservation, which brought the charges, was "attempting to regulate the commercial fishery into permanent foreclosure."

Rodgers charged the DEC has a "long history" of "harassing, browbeating and intimidation of local commercial fishermen," and added, "That is going to end."

He alleged the agency relies on "faulty and outdated" scientific data to set catch limits, and he asserted the DEC "lacks jurisdiction" over East Hampton fisheries. In a statement, the DEC suggested the fishermen's anger was misguided.

"We understand the concerns of the fishing industry and we share its concerns about the unfair federal quotas for some species," spokeswoman Maureen Wren said. "But it should be pointed out that DEC has led the fight for New Yorkers on this front. It would be in error to place the blame on DEC."

But Rodgers laid the blame squarely at the DEC's feet, and pointed to the abrupt end to Calvin Lester's career as a storied haul-seiner of striped bass.

Fishermen who showed up in support of the Lesters said regulations and enforcement are out of step and heavy-handed.

"The problem is, we in the fishing community are being made to pay a terrible price because of scientific uncertainty when these regulatory decisions are supposed to be made using the best available data," said Arnold Leo, secretary of the East End Baymen's Association, a fishermen's group.

He said the group plans to conduct an illegal haul of fish in the bay this spring to protest the rules. A chorus of lawmakers who attended a fishermen's rally in Washington last week vowed to change the rules. But environmentalists, marine scientists and regulators say the restrictions are working to rebuild fish stocks long depleted, and should not be weakened.

One fisherman who supported the Lesters said the laws are crippling their livelihood.

Jim Bennett, an East Hampton fisherman who attended the court appearance, said armed DEC enforcement officers "are always breathing down your neck" and "always out to get you."

"We have a right to go fishing in these waters," Bennett said. "They're trying to cut us out of an industry."


These people think they are entitled but have no concern for the impact they are having. Daniel lester is a harbormaster for East Hampton Town and still holds this position. I have spoken to a few people who know or have known this creep and they have all said he is a very unlikable guy just due to the fact that he feels that since his name is in the history of the east end that he can do no wrong. He is a disgusting representative of any type of fisherman including commercials.

nitestrikes
03-07-2010, 02:13 AM
Here is a disgusting abuse of power.

.

Jim Bennett, an East Hampton fisherman who attended the court appearance, said armed DEC enforcement officers "are always breathing down your neck" and "always out to get you."

"We have a right to go fishing in these waters," Bennett said. "They're trying to cut us out of an industry."


These people think they are entitled but have no concern for the impact they are having. Daniel lester is a harbormaster for East Hampton Town and still holds this position. I have spoken to a few people who know or have known this creep and they have all said he is a very unlikable guy just due to the fact that he feels that since his name is in the history of the east end that he can do no wrong. He is a disgusting representative of any type of fisherman including commercials.


Yeah, that sounds like twisted lawyer logic to me. The way that lawyer runs his mouth, if I lost my job I should be able to rob a bank because I have to support myself, right?:kooky:
They should have fired Lester, why is he more special than other guys?

Frankiesurf
03-07-2010, 10:59 AM
THinking about it, he is a civil servant. Generally there is no action unless he is convicted.

The funny thing is that he probably makes upwards of $100 grand a year and just tossed that away because he wanted to prove a point. Now he is really going to cry when he loses his job and must rely on fishing, that is if they don't take his permits. :laugh::laugh::laugh::laugh:

seamonkey
03-10-2010, 03:25 PM
I hope they get some huge fines!



Two Charged in Calvert with Illegal Possession of Rockfish
Calvert County – On March 2, 2010, the Maryland Natural Resources Police (NRP) charged Tony Allen Reynolds, age 38, and Benson Albert Jones Sr., age 61, with possession of striped bass during closed season.
NRP Officers observed Reynolds' boat "Sea Biscuit" docked in Fishing Creek in the town of Chesapeake Beach, where Reynolds resides. Officers observed Reynolds unloading crates of fish into a truck driven by Jones.
Officers inspected the fish and found 204 striped bass ranging in size from 12” to 17”.
It is illegal to possess striped bass after the closing of the striped bass gill net season, which closed on February 26.
A court date has been set for May 10, 2010 in Calvert County.

DarkSkies
03-12-2010, 07:03 PM
Some more that people sent in:

2008, lobster captain pays $68k in fines
http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/ole/news/news_NED_041008.htm



2009 NJMFC
Jan 2009 minutes
http://www.state.nj.us/dep/fgw/pdf/2009/minutes/mfc01-8-09.pdf
March 2009 minutes
http://www.state.nj.us/dep/fgw/pdf/2009/minutes/mfc03-5-09.pdf

basshunter
05-22-2010, 04:37 PM
Here is a disturbing article. :burn:



The Oceans' Pirate Fishermen

http://l.yimg.com/a/i/us/nws/p/time_logo_101.jpg (http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/time/brand/SIG=8rhvp9/*http://www.time.com)
http://d.yimg.com/a/p/rids/20100519/i/r1250566083.jpg?x=213&y=149&xc=1&yc=1&wc=410&hc=287&q=85&sig=.onMLtRZKlIN_xsl2amCFQ-- (http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/fishing-fleets/photo//100519/ids_photos_wl/r1250566083.jpg//s:/time/08599199117200)Reuters – A fisherman carries a yellowfin tuna out of his boat at the fishing port of Donggang, Pingtung county, …



By BRYAN WALSH Bryan Walsh – 2 hrs 59 mins ago
The oceans are being emptied of fish. A forthcoming United Nations report lays out the stark numbers: only around 25% of commercial stocks are in a healthy or even reasonably healthy state. Some 30% of fish stocks (http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/08599199117200#) are considered collapsed, and 90% of large predatory fish - like the bluefin tuna so prized by sushi aficionados - have disappeared since the middle of the 20th century. More than 60% of assessed fish stocks are in need of rebuilding, and some researchers estimate that if current trends hold, virtually all commercial fisheries (http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/08599199117200#) will have collapsed by mid century.

"Fisheries across the world are being plundered, or exploited at unsustainable rates," said Achim Steiner, the executive director of the United Nations Environment Programme. (Read: Will Killing Whales Save the World's Fisheries?) (http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/time/hl_time/storytext/08599199117200/36258108/SIG=120vhh8pg/*http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1880128,00.html)

In some respects, Steiner could have stopped at "plundered," because as much damage as the legal, commercial fishing trade has wrought on the oceans, it's the illegal trade that could spell their doom. Legal fishermen - the everyday farmers of the seas - have licenses they must protect and laws they must obey. But illegal fishing - often done on the high seas where regulations are lax and catch limits (http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/08599199117200#) can be exceeded with impunity, or in the coastal waters of developing nations, which lack the ability to fight back - abides by rules of its own. Now, a team led by Stefan Flothmann of the Pew Environment Group has published a study in the May 20 issue of Science showing just how hard stopping the illegal fishing scourge will be.

There are a lot of factors driving the rising global demand for fish. A growing global population needs ready sources of protein, and fish - generally low in fat and high in nutrients - is a natural. Plus, the worldwide explosion in the popularity of sushi means that even people who never liked fish before have developed a taste for it. Global seafood consumption has doubled over the past 40 years, and the sushi boom has tracked that trend. (See pictures of the tail of the tuna.) (http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/time/hl_time/storytext/08599199117200/36258108/SIG=11vlaq9af/*http://www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1807921,00.html)

But there's also a major problem with overcapacity - or the simple excess of fishermen - thanks to the $27 billion in subsidies given to the worldwide fishing industry each year. Those subsidies - especially the billions that go to cheap diesel fuel that makes factory fishing on the high seas possible at all--have created an industry bigger than the oceans can support. The U.N. estimates that the global fleet consists of more than 20 million boats, ranging from tiny subsistence outfits to massive trawlers. Together they have a fishing capacity 1.8 to 2.8 times larger than the oceans can sustainably support. Our tax money is essentially paying fishermen to strip mine the seas.

Cutting the subsidies or restricting the boats would go a long way toward solving the problem - but not if the illegal trade, which accounts for anything from 11 to 26 million tons of fish a year, or about one-fifth of the reported legal catch, can't also be brought under control. Steps in that direction have been taken. In November 2009, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) adopted the Port State Measurement Agreement (PSMA), which requires countries to close their ports to ships involved in illegal or unregulated fishing. The idea is simple: if illegal boats are denied ports where they can sell their catch and refuel, black market fishing should dry up. (Read: Caught in an Oil Storm [EM] The Plight of Gulf Fishermen.) (http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/time/hl_time/storytext/08599199117200/36258108/SIG=1206ncpa1/*http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1986836,00.html)

The effectiveness of the PSMA is what Flothman and his colleagues investigated in their paper, crunching data on port visits by boats between 2004 and 2009 that had been listed as possibly involved in illegal fishing and that had been targeted for sanctions. What they found did not impress them. The ports' records were in woeful shape, tracking the movement of only one-third of those boats during the six-year research period. The vessels frequently changed their names to elude regulators, and even if they were caught, port states enacted sanctions only about one out of every four times. On those occasions that ports in one region did crack down in any systematic way, the boats just moved to another region - a phenomenon known as leakage. "This illustrates that if port measures remain regional, the problem will shift elsewhere," the Science authors write.

Flothmann and his colleagues argue that much greater transparency is needed if illegal fishing is going to be stopped, and that may begin with getting even greater control over the legal fleet. Right now, for example, fishing boats (http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/08599199117200#) aren't required to have an identification code from the International Maritime Organization, the only globally recognized identifier for shipping. Establishing the requirement would help distinguish the good guys from the bad guys, particularly if the information is shared among all ports. "Accountability," Flothmann writes, "requires transparency." (Read a brief history of invasive species.) (http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/time/hl_time/storytext/08599199117200/36258108/SIG=122o7t1e2/*http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1963730,00.html)

He's right - but his work also shows why even in the best of situations, saving wild fish (http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/08599199117200#) will be so challenging. The oceans present the ultimate problem of the commons - they're vast, and most of the marine world lies beyond the control of any one country. Yet we're all dependent on the productivity of the oceans. "The connection between our health and the health of the oceans is clear," says Julie Packard, the executive director of the Monterey Bay Aquarium. "We have to commit to saving them." And the commitment to save the oceans begins with a recognition that we all share them.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/08599199117200

seamonkey
07-02-2010, 03:08 PM
Well it seems they are no longer prosecuting these cases in local courts, it's about time some stiff penalties were handed down!!:clapping::clapping::clapping:

http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/2010/July/10-enrd-769.html

Department of Justice
Office of Public Affairs
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, July 1, 2010



Jury Convicts District of Columbia Fish Wholesaler & Two Employees for Purchasing Illegally Harvested Striped Bass


WASHINGTON—Following a five-week trial, a fish wholesaler and two of its employees were found guilty with purchasing illegally harvested striped bass, known locally as rockfish, from the Potomac River in Virginia and Maryland from 1995 through 2007, the Justice Department announced today.

Ocean Pro Ltd. d/b/a Profish, one of the largest District of Columbia seafood wholesalers, its vice-president Timothy Lydon of Bethesda, Md., and its fish buyer, Benjamin Clough of Graysonville, Md., were all convicted of a felony conspiracy to violate the Lacey Act. Ocean Pro and Lydon were also convicted of three felony Lacey Act violations, and Clough was convicted of three Lacey Act violations and a felony false statement charge. The Lacey Act is a federal law that prohibits individuals or corporations from transporting, selling or buying fish and wildlife harvested illegally.

Profish and Lydon began buying striped bass from Virginia fishermen fishing on the Potomac River in 1995. Lydon and Profish agreed to buy striped bass that they knew was illegally harvested by seven fishermen between 1995 and 2007. Clough joined Profish in 2001, and he continued to knowingly purchase the illegally harvested striped bass through 2007. In total, the defendants purchased over 270,000 pounds of striped bass illegally harvested from Maryland and Virginia waters, with a fair market retail value over $1.6 million.

Evidence was also introduced at trial that they altered records regarding their striped bass purchases, and changed records indicating the harvest date on shellfish to make it appear that they were harvested more recently than they were.

Commercial striped bass fishermen are given a quota that they are allowed to catch each year. The fishermen are issued a set number of plastic tags that they are required to affix to every striped bass harvested. In addition, during certain times of the spring, commercial striped bass fishing is prohibited, or, if allowed, a maximum striped bass size limit is imposed that prohibits the harvest of striped bass over that size.

The quota restrictions and tagging requirements are designed to prevent the over-harvest of striped bass, and the seasonal closing and size restrictions are designed to protect striped bass while they are spawning and to protect the larger, sexually mature and more productive spawning fish.

These restrictions were implemented in the early 1990s following the crash of the striped bass fishery in the 1980s, which resulted in a moratorium on commercial striped bass harvest from 1985 to 1990.

Profish, Lydon, and Clough were willing to buy commercially caught striped bass, which were over the applicable size limit during the spawning season and did not have the required tags affixed. This allowed commercial fishermen to catch and sell more striped bass than they were allowed, and to catch and sell protected spawning striped bass from 1995 through 2007.

In early spring each year, striped bass (Morone saxatilis), known regionally as rockfish, enter the estuary or river where they were born to spawn, and then return to ocean waters to live, migrating along the coastline. Fish spawned from the Chesapeake Bay ecosystem contribute the greatest number of striped bass to the Atlantic coastal fishery, and the commercial fishery for Atlantic coastal striped bass is based primarily on migrations of fish born in the Chesapeake Bay area. Striped bass do not die after spawning. They may live up to 30 years and reach 50 pounds or more. The population of coastal Atlantic striped bass depends heavily upon the capability of older, larger, female striped bass to successfully reproduce.

The charges are a result of the investigation by an interstate task force formed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Maryland Natural Resources Police and the Virginia Marine Police, Special Investigative Unit in 2003. The task force conducted undercover purchases and sales of striped bass in 2003, engaged in covert observation of commercial fishing operations in the Chesapeake Bay and Potomac River area, and conducted detailed analysis of area striped bass catch reporting and commercial business sales records from 2003 through 2007.

To date, including these convictions, the task force has resulted in felony 22 felony convictions: fourteen fishermen from Maryland and Virginia, five individuals who operated seafood wholesale companies, and three seafood wholesale companies in Maryland, Virginia, and the District of Colombia.

These cases were prosecuted by the Justice Department’s Environmental Crimes Section and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Maryland.

lostatsea
07-02-2010, 03:43 PM
Good too hear it.

albiealert
07-02-2010, 05:21 PM
Now that the prosecution has some teeth, these guys may think twice next time.:thumbsup:

DarkSkies
07-03-2010, 11:06 AM
Now that the prosecution has some teeth, these guys may think twice next time.:thumbsup:


Good point Albie.

Finchaser talks about this all the time in the poaching posts. He correctly points out that there aren't many teeth in the system to really address the poaching problem. For years he has been saying that until they address this, poaching prosecutions are weak and ineffective.

People are happy to hear guys got busted. When it comes down to the court date, they plea out to a lesser charge and a minimal fine. Kind of like robbing a bank, and pleading out to spitting on the sidewalk as you left the bank, with other charges being dropped. :huh:

This is a significant change in policy. At least some folks are serious about seeing justice done. What's more significant is the press release, straight from the DOJ.

Now if the DOJ only started going after EEZ striped bass violations like they went after these guys, we would know they are truly serious about applying the law equally.

But hey, this is a start, so I'm happy to hear it. :clapping::clapping:

blitzhunter
07-03-2010, 11:21 AM
To date, including these convictions, the task force has resulted in felony 22 felony convictions: fourteen fishermen from Maryland and Virginia, five individuals who operated seafood wholesale companies, and three seafood wholesale companies in Maryland, Virginia, and the District of Colombia.

These cases were prosecuted by the Justice Department’s Environmental Crimes Section and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Maryland.

Ge get em boys!:clapping::clapping::clapping::clapping:

surferman
11-27-2010, 11:32 PM
I get so mad when I read this. The gov't should sink their boats or take them away!



ANNAPOLIS (November 27, 2010) – On November 24, the Maryland Natural Resources Police (NRP) charged Jerome William Janda, Jr., 55, from Tilghman, Md. with multiply striped bass (rockfish) violations after an investigation relating to illegal fishing activities in the Tilghman area.

On November 10 at approximately 2:35 a.m., NRP officers observed Janda Jr. and his fishing vessel exit Knapp’s Narrows without using his navigational lights and proceed to a pound net located on the south side of Poplar Island, Talbot County. The officers observed the occupants of the vessel fish the pound net and then docked at Lowes Wharf.

At approximately 4:00 a.m., the officers confronted Janda Jr. and the two other occupants on the vessel, Jerome William Janda, 3rd, 28, from Tilghman, and Burton Robert Curtis, 25, of an unknown address. The officers found the individuals loading untagged striped bass onto a truck. The Officers seized the 2,731 pounds of untagged rockfish.

Initially, the officers thought Janda Jr. was 1,784 pounds over his seasonal allocation limit according to the information noted on his allocation card. Subsequent investigation into the seafood dealer’s records indicated that Janda Jr. was illegally checking striped bass caught from a pound net as fish caught by a commercial hook and line fisherman. This record information indicated that Janda Jr. exceeded his quota by 7,568 pounds (2,273 fish). Janda Jr. would have obtained his limit on October 6 had the catch been check-in properly.

Commercial fisherman are allowed to catch striped bass by using three gear types; hook and line, drift gill nets, and pound nets. Each gear type has specific poundage of fish that can be caught by each gear during specific periods of the year. A striped bass pound net and striped bass drift gill net license can not be held by the same licensee at the same time. All commercially taken striped bass must be tagged and checked into a designated check-in station. Janda Jr. had a pound net license that had 3,760 pound quota. The 2010 pound net and hook and line season runs from June 1 to November 30. The last segment of drift gill net season starts on December 1 until December 31.

Janda Jr. was charged with 21 counts of using striped bass allocation permits assigned to another, 19 counts of using striped bass tags assigned to another, 14 counts of exceeding seasonal allocation limit of striped bass, one count of possessing striped bass greater than 36” commercial size, one count of possession of undersize flounder, one count of possession of untagged striped bass, and one count of operating a vessel at night without proper navigational lights.

Jerome Janda, 3rd was charged with one count of aiding and abetting exceeding seasonal allocation limit of striped bass and one count of possession of untagged striped bass.

A court date has been set for February 17, 2011 in the District Court of Maryland in Talbot County. The maximum penalty for each count is $1000 plus $1500 per each striped bass. The investigation is on-going and additional charges may follow.

Source: Maryland Natural Resources Police
Return to Headline News (http://www.thebassbarn.com/forum/%baseurl%)

hookedonbass
12-02-2010, 01:36 PM
This is the first time I remember them handing out actual prison time. Glad to see it!




http://www.fis.com/fis/worldnews/wor...id=39496&ndb=1 (http://www.fis.com/fis/worldnews/worldnews.asp?l=e&id=39496&ndb=1)

Illegal rockfish scheme investigation results in USD 1 million fines
http://www.fis.com/fis/gif/flags/32/us.png (http://www.fis.com/fis/companies/index.asp?l=e&country=us)UNITED STATES (http://www.fis.com/fis/companies/index.asp?l=e&country=us)
Wednesday, December 01, 2010, 15:30 (GMT + 9)
Ocean Pro Ltd (http://fis.com/fis/companies/details.asp?l=e&filterby=companies&company=Profish&page=1&company_id=135216&country_id=) (Profish) plus its vice-president and its fish buyer were sentenced recently in US District Court in Greenbelt, Maryland, for illegally harvesting striped bass for over a decade from the Potomac River. This has been called the largest ever commercial fish poaching plot in the Chesapeake Bay.

Timothy Lydon, a part owner and officer in Profish, one of Washington's primary seafood wholesalers, last week was sentenced to 21 months in prison and fined USD 60,000. Benjamin Clough, a fish-buyer for the company, was sentenced to 15 months in prison and fined USD 7,500.

Profish was sentenced to three years probation, fined USD 575,000, restitution in the amount of USD 300,000 and a special assessment of USD 5,000. Gordon Jett, a fisher who supplied the striped bass or rockfish, was sentenced to five months in prison, five months of home of detention and fined USD 4,572 in restitution.

All the defendants’ fines will go to the Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund and restitution will go to the Commonwealth of Virginia Marine Resources Commission (http://fis.com/fis/companies/details.asp?l=e&filterby=companies&company=Virginia%20Marine%20Resources%20Commission&page=1&company_id=152904&country_id=) and the State of Maryland Department of Natural Resources (http://fis.com/fis/companies/details.asp?l=e&filterby=companies&company=Maryland%20Department%20of%20Natural%20Res ources&page=1&company_id=57918&country_id=).
"When fishermen and fish wholesalers do not comply with the law, they imperil the entire fishery and adversely impact livelihoods of those in the fishing industry who abide by the law, and reap an impermissible economic advantage through their non-compliance," said Ignacia S Moreno, Assistant Attorney General for the Environment and Natural Resources Division of the Department of Justice. "The Chesapeake Bay watershed is a national treasure, and the striped bass fishery is an important resource that we must protect from plunder for our enjoyment and that of future generations."
Following a five-week jury trial, Lydon, Clough and Profish last July were judged guilty of purchasing illegally caught striped bass from the Potomac River in Virginia and Maryland from 1995-2007. All were convicted of conspiracy and violations of the Lacey Act, which prohibits the transport, sale or purchase of illegally harvested fish and wildlife.
In total, the defendants were sentenced to more than 140 months in prison, and total fines and restitution exceed USD 1,361,000.
A unit of federal and state lawyers as well as undercover officers investigated the black market operation for five years. It ended in 19 men and three corporations being convicted.
By Natalia Real
editorial@fis.com (editorial@fis.com)
www.fis.com (http://www.fis.com/)

DarkSkies
12-03-2010, 06:59 AM
This is the first time I remember them handing out actual prison time. Glad to see it!




http://www.fis.com/fis/worldnews/wor...id=39496&ndb=1 (http://www.fis.com/fis/worldnews/worldnews.asp?l=e&id=39496&ndb=1)

Illegal rockfish scheme investigation results in USD 1 million fines
http://www.fis.com/fis/gif/flags/32/us.png (http://www.fis.com/fis/companies/index.asp?l=e&country=us)UNITED STATES (http://www.fis.com/fis/companies/index.asp?l=e&country=us)
Wednesday, December 01, 2010, 15:30 (GMT + 9)
Ocean Pro Ltd (http://fis.com/fis/companies/details.asp?l=e&filterby=companies&company=Profish&page=1&company_id=135216&country_id=) (Profish) plus its vice-president and its fish buyer were sentenced recently in US District Court in Greenbelt, Maryland, for illegally harvesting striped bass for over a decade from the Potomac River. This has been called the largest ever commercial fish poaching plot in the Chesapeake Bay.

Timothy Lydon, a part owner and officer in Profish, one of Washington's primary seafood wholesalers, last week was sentenced to 21 months in prison and fined USD 60,000. Benjamin Clough, a fish-buyer for the company, was sentenced to 15 months in prison and fined USD 7,500.

Profish was sentenced to three years probation, fined USD 575,000, restitution in the amount of USD 300,000 and a special assessment of USD 5,000. Gordon Jett, a fisher who supplied the striped bass or rockfish, was sentenced to five months in prison, five months of home of detention and fined USD 4,572 in restitution.




I believe there's no parole in the federal system, so I think these people will have to do the time given.

For the decade of poaching they did, the sentencing is small. However, the fact that they were sentenced at all is significant. The gov't is trying to send messages to commercial poachers out there. I hope this one came through loud and clear. Thanks for posting this, guys.

nitestrikes
12-03-2010, 08:42 AM
1995-2007, that's 12 years of poaching. Lots of illegal fish. Glad they threw the book at them.

seamonkey
12-04-2010, 11:55 AM
:clapping: It's about time!

surferman
04-23-2011, 09:08 PM
Found this on another site.


Written by Kye Parsons
Dover Man Arrested for Commercial Fishing Violations

Posted: Apr 13, 2011 2:33 PM EDT
DOVER, Del.– Delaware Division of Fish and Wildlife Enforcement agents have arrested a commercial fisherman on charges related to illegally taken striped bass.

Paul A. Satterfield, 36, of Dover, was arrested and charged on April 7 with 53 counts of attempting to sell striped bass prior to having the fish lawfully weighed and tagged by an authorized weigh station.

Satterfield was arraigned in Justice of the Peace Court No. 7 in Dover and released on $26,000 unsecured bond, pending a May 25 preliminary hearing in the Court of Common Pleas.

Police say the illegally taken fish were documented as evidence and then sold by agents to a licensed commercial fish dealer for fair market value of $2,400. The funds were secured in evidence pending adjudication of the case.

seamonkey
08-20-2011, 05:06 PM
oyster poachers



Port Norris, Heislerville fishermen indicted for illegal oyster harvesting

Published: Tuesday, August 16, 2011, 4:23 PM


COMMERCIAL TWP. — A 15-count indictment returned by a federal grand jury in Camden released today reveals the arrest of four residents from Cumberland County and two from Maryland, as well as the seizure or restraint of 10 oyster fishing boats.

The indictment charges the six individuals and their two related companies with creating false reports and records of harvested oysters, trafficking in illegally harvested oysters, obstruction of justice, and charges five of the individuals and the two companies with conspiracy to commit those crimes.

The individuals charged were Thomas Reeves, Todd Reeves and Renee Reeves, of Port Norris; Kenneth W. Bailey, of Maurice River Township; Mark Bryan of New Market, Md.; and Pamela Meloney of Secretary, Md.

The charged businesses are Reeves Brothers, out of Port Norris, which is owned and operated by Thomas and Todd Reeves, and Harbor House Seafood, in Seaford, Del., which is co-owned by Mark Bryan.

According to the indictment, from 2004 through 2007, Thomas and Todd Reeves were oyster fishermen who owned the oyster dealer business Reeves Brothers where Renee Reeves worked.

The Reeves would create reports and records required by state and federal law that claimed they harvested fewer oysters than they actually did, and they would take more oysters from the Delaware Bay than they were allowed under New Jersey law, officials said.

The fair market retail value of the Reeves‚ illegal harvest during this time was well in excess of $600,000, and they over-harvested their quota in some years by as much as 90 percent.

Also alleged in the indictment, to help hide their illegal harvest, the Reeves, along with Mark Bryan and Pamela Meloney at Harbor House, would create and maintain records that falsely indicated the amount of oysters the Reeves actually sold to Harbor House.

To help prevent the discovery of their actions, Bryan and Meloney provided to law enforcement officers investigating the matter records of Harbor House's purchases from the Reeves that Bryan and Meloney knew were false, according to the state.

The indictment alleges that Bryan and Meloney created false records of Harbor House's purchases from another Port Norris area oyster fisherman, Kenneth W. Bailey.

Like the Reeves, Bailey is accused of creating in 2006 and 2007 reports and records required by state and federal law that claimed he harvested fewer oysters than he actually did, and he would take more oysters from the Delaware Bay than allowed under New Jersey law.

The maximum penalty for five of the obstruction of justice counts is 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine, for the individuals.

The maximum penalty for each of the remaining violations by the individuals includes five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. The maximum penalty for the corporations is five years of probation and a fine in an amount that is the greater of $500,000, or twice the gross gain, for each count.


http://www.nj.com/cumberland/index.ssf/2011/08/port_norris_heislerville_fishe.html

stripercrazy
08-20-2011, 05:47 PM
I want to see the poachers get nailed, but 2004-2007? That was 4 years ago and more. It appears that someone's ex wife or business partner may have gotten mad at them and dropped a dime.

basshunter
08-22-2011, 05:47 PM
The problem here is that they don't get 20 years in prison. They a fine with a slap on the wrist, then back to poaching they go.

bluesdude71
03-29-2012, 06:56 AM
This is the first time I remember them handing out actual prison time. Glad to see it!




http://www.fis.com/fis/worldnews/wor...id=39496&ndb=1 (http://www.fis.com/fis/worldnews/worldnews.asp?l=e&id=39496&ndb=1)

Illegal rockfish scheme investigation results in USD 1 million fines
http://www.fis.com/fis/gif/flags/32/us.png (http://www.fis.com/fis/companies/index.asp?l=e&country=us)UNITED STATES (http://www.fis.com/fis/companies/index.asp?l=e&country=us)
Wednesday, December 01, 2010, 15:30 (GMT + 9)
Ocean Pro Ltd (http://fis.com/fis/companies/details.asp?l=e&filterby=companies&company=Profish&page=1&company_id=135216&country_id=) (Profish) plus its vice-president and its fish buyer were sentenced recently in US District Court in Greenbelt, Maryland, for illegally harvesting striped bass for over a decade from the Potomac River. This has been called the largest ever commercial fish poaching plot in the Chesapeake Bay.

Timothy Lydon, a part owner and officer in Profish, one of Washington's primary seafood wholesalers, last week was sentenced to 21 months in prison and fined USD 60,000. Benjamin Clough, a fish-buyer for the company, was sentenced to 15 months in prison and fined USD 7,500.




Follow up on Profish. They appealed. The conviction stood :clapping:
:


NEWS March 28, 2012

Three judges for the 4th district appeals court, covering Maryland and Virginia and DC, upheld the conviction of Ocean Pro Industries for an illegal sale of striped bass. Judge Neimeyer, writing for the unanimous three judge opinion, said that Maryland and Virginia had sufficient interest in striped bass so as to be able to impose restitution payments on the company.

The summary of the opinion from Judge Niemeyer:

Oceanpro Industries, Ltd., doing business as "Profish, Ltd." ("Oceanpro"), a seafood wholesaler in the District of Columbia, and two Oceanpro employees, Timothy Lydon (officer and fish buyer) and Benjamin Clough, III (fish buyer), were convicted for purchasing untagged and oversized striped bass, in violation of the Lacey Act, 16 U.S.C. § 3372(a)(2)(A) (prohibiting the purchase in interstate commerce of fish or wild-life sold in violation of state law).

Oceanpro and Clough were also convicted for giving a false statement to federal law enforcement officers during the course of the investigation of the crimes, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001. In addition to imposing fines and prison sentences, the district court ordered the three defendants, jointly and severally, to pay Maryland and Virginia $300,000 in restitution, to be divided equally between the States.

On appeal, Oceanpro and Clough challenge the District of Maryland's venue for the false statement offense because the false statement was made at the offices of Oceanpro in the District of Columbia, not in Maryland. In addition, all of the defendants contend that the order of restitution to the States was improper because the States did not have a sufficient interest in the illegally caught fish so as to make them "victims," as is required for receiving the benefit of a restitution order.

We reject both arguments, concluding that venue for the false statement charge was proper in the District of Maryland and that Maryland and Virginia's interest in striped bass was sufficient to make the States "victims" and therefore to justify an award to them of restitution. Accordingly, we affirm.

hookedonbass
03-29-2012, 03:52 PM
Glad to hear that justice prevailed.

surferman
03-12-2013, 08:21 PM
1300 poaching violations, scumbags!

http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/02/18/3240731/two-face-1300-fishing-violations.html



Tuesday, 03.12.13


Two face 1,300 fishing violations
BY KEVIN WADLOW

Boat owner Evelio Lazar Egusquiza Fornes (above) of Miami and mate Jorge Nesto Gellart face more than 1,000 counts of violating fishery law. KeysNet.com
Photo BY KEVIN WADLOW
KeysNet.com
Two commercial fishermen have been charged with a total of more than 1,300 conservation violations after being found inside a no-take zone in the Dry Tortugas, marine law-enforcement officers report.
Both men were cited last week for harvesting 664 yellowtail snapper — one misdemeanor count for each fish — seized from the commercial boat Candelaria, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.
Boat owner Evelio Lazar Egusquiza Fornes, 49, of Miami and mate Jorge Nesto Gellart, 49, also were charged with fishing inside the Tortugas Ecological Reserve, a no-fishing zone enacted under the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, and other violations.
"The two occupants were actively harvesting yellowtail snapper by hook and line, and were very surprised to see us," FWC Lt. Josh Peters wrote in a report.
Signals from the boat's vessel monitoring system, a radio beacon required aboard commercial boats in some federal waters, showed the boat was stopped inside the no-take area, Peters reported. Officers patrolling the Dry Tortugas responded and located the Candelaria in the northern reserve.
"A chum bag, lines and baited hooks were in the water," Peters said. "An inspection of the vessel's catch revealed some of the yellowtail were still alive and fighting for life."
The Tortugas reserves were established to protect the area's marine ecosystem from effects of harvesting marine life, including fish. Commercial boats can navigate through the zones but cannot stop if they have fish aboard.
The 781 pounds of confiscated yellowtail was sold for $2,558, which will be held in escrow until the case is decided.
"We see occasional cases from the Tortugas but this is one of the bigger ones," said FWC Officer Bobby Dube, an agency spokesman
Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/02/18/3240731/two-face-1300-fishing-violations.html#storylink=cpy

seamonkey
03-16-2013, 07:17 AM
They just nabbed these 3 a-holes from Maine in Absecon. I hope they throw the book at them!


Three men from Maine have been arrested and charged with poaching more than 24,000 baby eels out of Absecon Creek, the Department of Environmental Protection said in a statement.
Conservation officers from the state Division of Fish and Wildlife saw two of the men at about 2:45 a.m. Friday, tending to an illegally set net that was set to catch juvenile glass eels, also known locally as elvers. The glass eels are the juvenile form of the American Eel, which live up to 20 years in freshwater lakes and streams before migrating to the Sargasso Sea to spawn.

Robert Royce, 65, of Hope, Maine, and Neal V. Kenney, III, 53, of Thomaston, Maine, were arrested while possessing more than three pounds of the juvenile eels, which translates to about 8,000 individual eels, the DEP said. Officers then found a truck with a tank holding another six pounds, or 16,000 eels. Conservation officers then arrested the driver, Dale Witham, 54, of Medomak, Maine.

All three were charged with criminal trespass while conducting illegal activity on property owned by the Atlantic City Municipal Utilities Authority, use of a fyke net without a license, use of an illegal fyke net, possession of about 24,250 eels measuring less than 6 inches in length, and possession of eels exceeding a daily possession limit.

All three were arrested and processed with the help of the Absecon Police Department and lodged in the Atlantic County Justice Facility on $2,500 bail. Royce has since posted bail and been released. Arraignment is scheduled for Monday. Officers seized all equipment and vehicles associated with the incident.
Juvenile American Eels are raised for food popular in Asian cuisine. One pound can fetch up to $2,500 on the open market, the DEP said. The men were using a fyke net, which is a cone-shaped net mounted on rings and fixed to the bottom by stakes.
The average length of the juvenile eels in New Jersey this time of year is less than 3 inches. State law sets a minimum catch length of 6 inches and a catch limit of 50 eels per day.
American eels, which are found in freshwater, bay and ocean habitats from Greenland to South America, have been eliminated from much of the species’ historical freshwater habitat in the past 100 years, mostly because of dams that block the animal from migrating up rivers. Power plant turbines, degrading habitat and overfishing also are causes for why the species’ number has declined. Only Maine and South Carolina have glass eel seasons, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Anyone who sees what they think is illegal fishing should call 877-WARN-DEP.
Contact Sarah Watson:
609-272-7216

Monty
03-16-2013, 11:25 AM
They just nabbed these 3 a-holes from Maine in Absecon. I hope they throw the book at them!

I agree.

bababooey
03-16-2013, 06:30 PM
Robert Royce, 65, of Hope, Maine, and Neal V. Kenney, III, 53, of Thomaston, Maine, were arrested while possessing more than three pounds of the juvenile eels, which translates to about 8,000 individual eels, the DEP said. Officers then found a truck with a tank holding another six pounds, or 16,000 eels. Conservation officers then arrested the driver, Dale Witham, 54, of Medomak, Maine.

. One pound can fetch up to $2,500 on the open market, the DEP said.

9 lbs of eels @ $2500/lb = $22,500 when they brought them back to Maine. Not bad, splitting 3 ways brings them almost 8 grand apiece. Is it any wonder these characters do this? There has to be a way to stem the demand at the source. Anyone have any ideas?

captnemo
03-18-2013, 04:41 PM
I read where they can make 10 to 20k a day in Maine. The problem is limited permits which makes it so lucrative. imo they should shut it down everywhere

storminsteve
03-18-2013, 07:40 PM
Holy shamoleons no wonder people poach them! captnemo I agree they should shut it down otherwise this will continue. The lure of the almighty dollar is too great.

bababooey
03-18-2013, 07:58 PM
I read where they can make 10 to 20k a day in Maine. The problem is limited permits which makes it so lucrative. imo they should shut it down everywhere

What the Capt said. There is no reason to have a market for those elvers. Let the asians get them from asia. Oops, I forgot there are no real quantities of eels in asia because they ate them all. :rolleyes:

finchaser
03-19-2013, 10:52 AM
Conservation officers with the NJDEP Division of Fish and Wildlife have arrested and charged three men from Maine with illegally harvesting more than 24,000 juvenile eels from an Atlantic County creek. Two of the men were observed by conservation officers around 2:45 a.m. on March 13 tending an illegally set net in the Absecon Creek in Absecon and the three were arrested in the early morning hours.Anyone observing what they suspect is illegal fishing activities should contact the DEP hotline at 877-WARNDEP (877-927-6337).For more information on the apprehension of the violators, as well as on the life cycle and importance of eels to the ecosystem, see the DEP news release at http://www.nj.gov/dep/newsrel/2013/13_0023.htm . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -This message has been sent to you as a subscriber to the njmarinefishingautomated mailing list by the NJ DEP Division of Fish and Wildlife.To unsubscribe from this list, please go to:http://www.njfishandwildlife.com/lstunsub.htmIf you need assistance please email njfishandwildlife@dep.state.nj.us.

nitestrikes
07-21-2013, 11:50 PM
Thought this was a good read. Enforcement in Jamaica bay seems pretty lax.


http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/04/nyregion/poachers-are-elusive-catch-in-city-waters.html?pagewanted=all
Poachers Are Elusive Catch in City Waters

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2013/07/04/nyregion/poach1/poach1-articleLarge.jpg Brian Harkin for The New York Times
Male horseshoe crabs gather around an egg-laying female off Rulers Bar Hassock, a section of Broad Channel in Jamaica Bay. They are considered an easy and lucrative catch in May and June.

By J. DAVID GOODMAN (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/g/j_david_goodman/index.html) and SARAH MASLIN NIR (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/n/sarah_maslin_nir/index.html)

Published: July 3, 2013



It sounds like something out of a James Bond movie: Lookouts. Scuba gear. Secret caches, hidden under floating docks. Horseshoe crabs.




Enlarge This Image (http://javascript<strong></strong>:pop_me_up2('http://www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2013/07/04/nyregion/poach-2.html','poach_2_html','width=720,height=563,scrol lbars=yes,toolbars=no,resizable=yes'))
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Bryan Thomas for The New York Times

Officers Gregg Hein, left, and Gregory Neary of the United States Park Police prepared for an early morning patrol of Jamaica Bay, Queens, where they will search for potential poachers and other violators.


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Bryan Thomas for The New York Times

‘These guys always run. Because they know they’re faster than the cops, ’ said Lt. David Buckley, United States Park Police.

Enlarge This Image (http://javascript<strong></strong>:pop_me_up2('http://www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2013/07/04/nyregion/poach-4.html','poach_4_html','width=720,height=563,scrol lbars=yes,toolbars=no,resizable=yes'))
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Brian Harkin for The New York Times

Don Riepe of the American Littoral Society, a conservation group, holds a horseshoe crab off the shore of Little Egg Marsh.


Horseshoe crabs?
The crabs are among the incredible riches of Jamaica Bay, New York City’s wildest expanse of water, where a running battle between conservation authorities and those who would flout their rules has been going on for years. Despite the bay’s distant fringe of skyline, it is teeming with schools of striped bass, blackfish and fluke. Crabs and clams are numerous in its reedy shallows.
For these species, and others, state and federal authorities set strict limits on how many of each an individual may catch per day — it is sometimes as little as two or three — and of what size.
And there are plenty of fishermen who try to get around those regulations and profit from an illicit catch.

“It’s a whole underground world,” said a fisherman standing outside Stella Maris Bait and Tackle in Sheepshead Bay one day recently. He declined to give his name for fear of retribution from his peers. “You go to any market, and there’s people selling fish, anytime, that’s illegal.”
“Ever see those mob movies?” he added, as whelk, also called scungilli, were unloaded nearby. “People come out of the woodwork that you’ve never seen, envelopes full of stuff, this, that, money.”

And on a recent night, a full-fledged police helicopter chase over the waters of the bay, using night-vision goggles. A New York Police Department helicopter patrol, out on a routine run from its base at Floyd Bennett Field on Memorial Day (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/m/memorial_day/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier) discovered four men near the shore, tossing live creatures into two flat-bottom skiffs. One boat escaped. The other, which was pursued by the helicopter, did not. Two men now have a date in federal court on charges of poaching horseshoe crabs.

“This is a game that these guys pick up over the years,” said Capt. Francisco Lopez, who heads enforcement in Jamaica Bay for the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (http://www.dec.ny.gov/). “Cat and mouse stuff.”
But so far this year in Jamaica Bay, the mice have been many while the cats have been fewer and further between.
Sharp cuts from the federal sequestration meant furloughs this spring for the United States Park Police officers who patrol the bay, part of the Gateway National Recreation Area. Those officers are routinely called away to guard the Statue of Liberty (http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/subjects/s/statue_of_liberty/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier).
State authorities have faced their own problems; Hurricane Sandy (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/h/hurricanes_and_tropical_storms/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier) destroyed a dock used by the officers from the Department of Environmental Conservation, forcing them to keep boats many miles outside the bay.


“We’re not catching 50 percent of the people,” Captain Lopez estimated. “We just don’t have the manpower.”
Those who fish do so for different reasons: There are the owners of sport fishing boats, many with middle-class backgrounds, who offer chartered fishing. They are largely catch-and-release fishermen, and support fishing limits, which places them in the cross hairs of their more commercial counterparts.
Those are the men who catch fish to earn a living, by selling them door-to-door to restaurants, or through brokers, who meet them at the marinas with wads of cash, and pile coolers full of fish into the backs of their cars. Many are descendants of generations of Jamaica Baymen, but there are newer arrivals as well: Chinese fishermen from Sunset Park, Brooklyn, and from Flushing, Queens.

Quotas can vary, depending on whether a fisherman holds a recreational or commercial license, and on the time of year. The bay is governed by overlapping federal and state regulations that fishermen, as well as some law enforcement officials, say create confusion on the waters — so much so that accused poachers have successfully used competing regulations to get a case dismissed.
A particularly easy and lucrative catch in May and early June are the horseshoe crabs. Some Asian chefs use the arthropod’s eggs, in a scramble. The pharmaceutical industry bleeds and releases them, harvesting a component in their blood. And commercial fishermen say there is no better bait for catching eels and whelk.

Moratoriums on horseshoe crab fishing in New Jersey have driven up their price, from about one dollar per crab five years ago to about five today. The very rules meant to protect the crabs, some fishermen say, have made them a more desirable catch.
The dearth of policing on the water means poaching is a regular practice, both day and night, said Frank Crescitelli, who runs a charter sport fishing boat and says he often floats past noncommercial boats where the captain is “knee deep in fish.”
To avoid being caught when pulled over by police or Department of Environmental Conservation boats, poachers commonly put their catch in a weighted burlap bag draped over the ship’s gunwale, or side, Mr. Crescitelli and others said. When apprehended, they release the bag, which sinks along with any evidence.

“You look behind them,” Mr. Crescitelli said, “and you see the dead fish floating in their wake as they are speeding away from the D.E.C. police.”
On the docks, the tensions among the competing groups of fishermen can take a dark turn.
After he reported a man he suspected of poaching to state enforcement officers, John McMurray said that his charter boat, One More Cast, was vandalized and untied from its moorings in Somerville Basin on the Rockaway Peninsula; it ended up on the rocks.
Shortly after, Mr. McMurray, a conservationist who sits on the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (http://www.asmfc.org/)’s striped bass advisory panel, said he arrived to find One More Cast at the bottom of the marina. Though he does not have proof, Mr. McMurray suspects that what befell his boat was retribution. “It certainly made me think twice about ratting out a guy at my marina again.”

On a recent Thursday morning, Officer Gregory Neary of the United States Park Police sat behind the controls of a 34-foot, jet-powered boat, the only law enforcement vessel patrolling the flat expanse from John F. Kennedy Airport to the churning, brackish waters around the Breezy Point jetty.

Even when patrols do come across poachers, Officer Neary said, they can be difficult to catch. This is especially true of the clammers who congregate along areas like Plumb Beach, by the Belt Parkway, plucking their quarry from the shallow waters and dropping them into buckets weighted to sit out of sight just below the surface. (Clams from the bay are considered unsafe for human consumption.) “You’re not beaching a boat for a clammer,” he said. “We hope they don’t run.”

With so few officers available, spotting poachers often falls to concerned citizens.
In May of last year, a tipster recorded video of two men scooping up horseshoe crabs under the Belt Parkway, and later phoned the park police; a patrol boat raced to the area.

But as the boat approached, the men roared off, illustrating another impediment to thwarting any poaching: the poachers have swifter boats. “These guys always run. Because they know they’re faster than the cops,” said Lt. David Buckley, who commands a small unit of the park police.
When the officers finally caught up with the fleeing boat, at the Tamaqua Bar and Marina in Gerritsen Beach, they found a Carolina Skiff filled with 900 horseshoe crabs. But the poachers themselves had vanished. The police arrested the boat’s owner, William Dunphy, who was charged with unauthorized commercial fishing and illegally taking horseshoe crabs. (In season, commercial fishermen are subject to shifting quotas, which can reach as high as 200 horseshoe crabs per trip per day, or go as low as 30; out of season, the limit is 5 per trip per day.)
Rather than fight it out in federal criminal court, where these violations end up, Mr. Dunphy paid a $125 ticket and made a $3,000 donation to the National Park Service, Lieutenant Buckley said.
Not everyone has done the same.

In 2007, a commercial fisherman from Sheepshead Bay, Richard Knauer, challenged two tickets that charged him with illegally taking horseshoe crabs from federal waters. The trial included deep discussion of the overlapping state and federal regulations as well as expert testimony on the definition of a fish.
While such cases rarely go to trial, those that do are hard fought. That is because the lawyers for both sides tend to come from law school clinics, where students are eager to practice their arguments.

“These cases are given much more attention than they would ordinarily get,” said Patricia E. Notopoulos, an assistant United States attorney who oversees students from Brooklyn Law School (http://www.brooklaw.edu/) who argue for the government. Students from New York University School of Law (http://www.law.nyu.edu/index.htm) represent defendants like Mr. Knauer.
Mr. Knauer was acquitted of illegal fishing — because arthropods are not fish, the court ruled — but found guilty of harming wildlife. He appealed and, nearly three years after taking more than 70 horseshoe crabs from the bay, was able to defeat the other charge on a legal technicality.
Now Mr. Knauer’s brother has been caught up in the net of the law: Joseph Knauer, 33, was spotted by the Police Department helicopter unit on Memorial Day along with Robert Wolter, 28.

To the officers, such family ties are not surprising. “It’s the same guys every year,” said Sgt. Grant Arthur of the park police, who has worked in Jamaica Bay since 1988. “They’ve been doing it for generations.”

Rules intended to bolster fish populations, several fishermen said, have decimated their livelihoods, and threaten to end that maritime lifestyle. “It’s frustrating, that you can’t do something you love and make a living doing it,” said John Arena, who was arrested with 46 striped bass in 2009, and said he paid a fine of $1,200.

Jamaica Bay fishermen, he said, “are an endangered species.”
That argument has little weight with conservationists. “The horseshoe crab can’t do anything else, the fisherman can,” said Don Riepe, the president of the Northeast Chapter of the American Littoral Society (http://www.littoralsociety.org/), a conservation group that is active in the bay. “A fisherman can fish for something else,” he said, “or drive a cab.”

Mei-Yu Liu contributed reporting.

strikezone31
08-21-2013, 01:19 PM
Charles Wertz Commercial Scumbag!!!!!!!

Glad they put this scum out of business. What an a-hole!


LIer to pay up to $516G, close shop in plea deal over fishing scamOriginally published: August 17, 2013 4:34 PM
Updated: August 17, 2013 9:27 PM
By MARK HARRINGTON mark.harrington@newsday.com (mark.harrington@newsday.com?subject=Newsday.com Article)

http://cdn.newsday.com/polopoly_fs/1.5813935.1375395436!/httpImage/image.JPG_gen/derivatives/display_600/image.JPG

Photo credit: Patrick E. McCarthy | Federal prosecutors charged a Long Island fisherman, Charles Wertz, of East Meadow, with wire fraud and falsification of federal records in connection with a scheme they say resulted in the illegal harvesting of more than 86,000 pounds of fluke over three years. (March 10, 2010)

A commercial fisherman from East Meadow admitted to falsifying records to overfish, and agreed to pay up to $516,000 in fines, give up his fishing license and sell his boat in a plea deal reached with federal prosecutors in Central Islip on Friday.


According to court papers and prosecutors, Charles Wertz Jr., 53, operator of the Freeport-based commercial trawler the Norseman, pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud and two counts of falsification of federal records in a scheme to underreport 86,080 pounds of fluke harvested between 2009 and 2011, authorities said.

The fish were valued at just under $200,000, authorities said. Wertz had previouisly pleaded not guilty to the charges, but a plea agreement had been in the works, authorities said in court last month.
Wertz's fish-dealing company, C&C Ocean Fisheries, also pleaded guilty to wire fraud and three counts of falsification of records, and will close as part of the agreement, prosecutors said.

Ronald Russo, an attorney for Wertz, declined to comment. Wertz is scheduled to be sentenced in November.
Justice Department spokesman Wyn Hornbuckle said based on federal guidelines, the government agreed not to ask that Wertz face more than 21 months in prison, "and the defendant can argue for a term of prison that includes no time."
Wertz and another unnamed individual intentionally submitted 137 falsified dealer reports from May 2009 through December 2011, and 70 falsified fishing logs "as part of a scheme to defraud the United States of overharvested and underreported fluke," authorities said.

During that period, authorities said, Wertz participated in the federal research set-aside program, which allows fishermen to buy the right to harvest allotments of fish beyond the federal quotas. Money from a set-aside auction is used for fisheries research.
As part of the plea deal, Wertz and C&C Ocean agreed to pay between $480,000 and $516,000 in combined fines and forfeitures, relinquish federal fishing permits and divest interest in the Norseman, a longtime presence on the Nautical Mile in Freeport. Wertz also agreed to a ban from participation in the set-aside program, authorities said.

"When individuals like the defendant willfully defraud the government in order to turn a larger profit for themselves, they are also cheating their fellow fishermen who choose to play by the rules," Robert G. Dreher, an acting assistant attorney general for the Justice Department's Environment and Natural Resources Division, said in a statement. "Today's plea demonstrates that we will hold those who break the rules accountable and make sure that this valuable resource remains available to everyone."


http://www.newsday.com/long-island/nassau/lier-to-pay-up-to-516g-close-shop-in-plea-deal-over-fishing-scam-1.5910166

storminsteve
08-21-2013, 03:09 PM
:clapping: :kicknuts:About time a commercial poacher gets something more than a slap on the wrist! This guy is a turd bucket. 86,000 lbs of fluke is a lot! Thats 43 tons.

nitestrikes
08-21-2013, 03:21 PM
"When individuals like the defendant willfully defraud the government in order to turn a larger profit for themselves, they are also cheating their fellow fishermen who choose to play by the rules," Robert G. Dreher, an acting assistant attorney general for the Justice Department's Environment and Natural Resources Division, said in a statement. "Today's plea demonstrates that we will hold those who break the rules accountable and make sure that this valuable resource remains available to everyone."


http://www.newsday.com/long-island/nassau/lier-to-pay-up-to-516g-close-shop-in-plea-deal-over-fishing-scam-1.5910166

That says it all right there. When a guy like this poaches in such great numbers he is stealing from a shared resource.

voyager35
08-21-2013, 05:46 PM
^^ What gets me is how he was able to get away with it for so long. I think there are a lot of public officials that may have an incentive to look away. I am not talking bribery because if there was proof it would be in the papers. You have to wonder how such a big operation could have been unmolested for so long. People talk and some must have known. Unbelievable. Glad he got his just desserts.

hookset
08-21-2013, 05:52 PM
You have to wonder how such a big operation could have been unmolested for so long. People talk and some must have known.

Hey voyager just look at Salty Tours. That guy has been getting away with raping the ocean and poaching for years. Have you ever read about him in the papers? No. He must have a network of contacts protecting him. Can't wait for the day he gets busted. I will drink a whole bottle of Johnnie Walker to celebrate that arrest.

clamchucker
11-09-2013, 09:16 PM
This was posted on the internet earlier. They got some poachers at Island Beach. Some fishermen I know heard about it as well. Good job to the park police.

have to give the "Tip of the Cap " to the NJ parks police today, their hard work and professionalism really showed . A group of guys coming off the jetty had SHORT Striped bass in their car and in the backpacks. Hope NJ Parks keep up the good work. Great job guys .. Thank You

plugcrazy
11-11-2013, 11:36 AM
Repeat offenders nabbed in MD - God these were 18" fish and they filled the cooler with them!http://stripersandanglers.com/Forum/images/icons/icon13.png


Maryland Natural Resources Police (NRP) charged four men on Saturday with overfishing and with catching 131 undersized striped bass in Dorchester County.
An officer stopped a pick-up truck pulling a boat at about 4:15 a.m. after it crossed the center line on Route 335 on Hooper Island. During an inspection of the coolers in the boat, the officer found 138 striped bass, all but seven of them below the 18-inch minimum size.
All four men were charged with possession of more than 10 striped bass over the limit and possession of more than 10 striped bass under 18 inches: Jose Adelso Hernandez Orellana, 43, of Manassas, Va., Jose Luis Reyes, 40, of New Carrollton, Ruben Lopez Valle, 45, of Germantown, and Rene Obdulio Pacheco Rivera, 31, of Oxon Hill.
The citations require a court appearance. A trial date has been set for February 19 in Dorchester District Court.
In addition, Orellana, the truck driver, was issued a motor vehicle warning.
Rivera was found guilty last year in Dorchester District Court of possessing undersized striped bass. Orellana was found guilty in Charles County District Court of crabbing violations in 2009, court records show.
NRP urges citizens who see conservation violations, maritime emergencies and other law enforcement issues to call its communication hotline at 800-628-9944.

surfstix1963
01-09-2014, 03:18 AM
Natural Resources Police say officers caught the pair while double checking their catch. They intended to sell the stolen fish at market price.
?This is shocking because these are professionals. They know all the rules,? Offer said.
And because they didn?t play by the rules, police say the pair face fines in excess of $400,000. That?s a maximum fine of $2,500 per fish for exceeding their daily harvest by 532 pounds.
?The people that are going out there working honestly, it gives them a black eye,? said Robert Brown, president of the Watermen?s Association.
Three years ago, 13 million pounds of fish were found in poachers? nets. State officials shut down the rockfish season early to protect the species from overfishing.
?It killed us. It killed our winter?s work,? a waterman said at the time.
And the Watermen?s Association says they?re not in the clear yet.
?The following year, we were deducted 10 percent of our catch in case somebody did break the law,? Brown said. ?The next year it was down to five percent so it?s down to 2.5 percent this year.?
It?s a hefty consequence for honest workers when those who cheat don?t fish by the rules.
DNR is cracking down on poaching using sonar to detect nets underwater.

Monty
01-09-2014, 07:11 AM
I hope they shut them down early again. Talk about the honest ones. Malarkey, this has got to stop, protect the bass from them now, and then protect the bass from the recreational fishermen. People cannot be trusted.

finchaser
01-09-2014, 07:13 AM
they will still fish. bass is on every menu down there

ledhead36
01-11-2014, 09:55 AM
I hope they shut them down early again. Talk about the honest ones. Malarkey, this has got to stop, protect the bass from them now, and then protect the bass from the recreational fishermen. People cannot be trusted.


they will still fish bass is on every menu down there

This is completely unacceptable. If you get caught poaching more than once they should take your boat and gear away. End of story

storminsteve
01-11-2014, 10:24 AM
These guys don't get it. They make money today and then there is none tomorrow when the stripers are gone. Idiots.http://stripersandanglers.com/Forum/images/icons/icon13.png

Monty
01-11-2014, 03:34 PM
This is completely unacceptable. If you get caught poaching more than once they should take your boat and gear away. End of story

:thumbsup:

And a year in jail.
People need to be civilized, we are spiraling out of control....

finchaser
01-12-2014, 11:28 PM
http://www.onthewater.com/striped-bass-poachers-busted-in-maryland/

storminsteve
01-13-2014, 09:12 AM
God it never ends. They should start seizing boats. The small fines are not enough. Scumbags

bababooey
02-20-2014, 11:49 AM
Those damned russians at it again. When you look at all the international violations you tend to see the russians or chinese behind a lot of them. From bbc.com

23 January 2014 Last updated at 08:12 ET

Senegal frees Russian ship caught for 'illegal fishing'

http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/72099000/jpg/_72099832_tra.jpg Senegal says its fishing resources are being pillaged
Continue reading the main story (http://stripersandanglers.com/Forum/#story_continues_1) Related Stories

Senegal has freed a Russian ship after its owner paid a $1.2m (?720,000) fine for fishing illegally in its waters, a government minister has said.
Haidar El-Alia said Senegal had shown that it would not allow the "looting of our seas" by "pirates".
Russia had condemned the "aggressive conduct of Senegalese troops" when the ship was seized on 5 January.
West African governments are battling to curb illegal fishing, which is threatening fishing stocks.
Mr El-Alia, the Fisheries Minister, told BBC Afrique that local people were dependent on fish for food and their livelihood.
The government would not tolerate foreign-owned firms making profits by fishing illegally in Senegalese waters, he added.
They turned their catches into "fishmeal to feed animals in their countries", Mr El-Alia said.
Sixty-two Russians and 20 nationals from Guinea-Bissau were detained when the Senegalese navy raided the ship, Oleg Naydenov.
Mr El-Alia denied the arrests had led to diplomatic tensions with the Russian government.
"This is not about the Russian state. It's true it's a Russian boat but this was a private owner and we'd have done the same thing if it was a Chinese, French or Spanish ship," he said.

hookedonbass
03-25-2014, 08:55 PM
Those damned russians at it again. When you look at all the international violations you tend to see the russians or chinese behind a lot of them.

I agree and in our country it is the russians and the chinese too. Go to chinatown in philly and you will see illegal blackfish all over the place. Also the guys on the intlet jetties who say no spek inglish! when they get busted. About time some of these damn people learn to read and talk in our language.


Another bust a spanish guy with 228 of them. I am sick and tired of them violating our laws they should take his boat too. Go back to your own country and poach the fish there!:2flip:

http://www.dnr.state.md.us/fisheries/news/story.asp?story_id=389&title=Silver-Spring-Man-Found-Guilty-of-Poaching-228-Undersized-Striped-Bass
Silver Spring Man Found Guilty of Poaching 228 Undersized Striped Bass3/24/2014 | Posted by kking (kking@dnr.state.md.us)
Tags: Striped Bass, NRP
A Silver Spring man was found guilty last Friday in Annapolis District Court of possessing 228 undersized striped bass.
Hervin O. Nunez-Aleman, 34, pleaded guilty to a single violation. He was fined $2,000 and placed on unsupervised probation.
An officer with the Maryland Natural Resources Police was on patrol at Sandy Point State Park on August 31 at 1:30 a.m., when he stopped a boat returning to the marina.
After receiving permission from Nunez-Aleman, the boat owner, to check the coolers aboard the 14-foot recreational vessel, the officer found 228 striped bass under the legal minimum of 18 inches. The officer also found about 30 pounds of white perch in the coolers. None of the four people on the boat had a fishing license.
The trial of a fishing companion, Amaya Chicas, is set for April 18 in Annapolis District Court. The district courts in Anne Arundel County participate in a program that highlights natural resources cases on specific day each month. Under the program, cases including fishing, hunting, boating and tree expert violations are heard on a specific day each month in the region where they occurred.
Citizens who see conservation violations, maritime emergencies or other law enforcement issues on the Chesapeake Bay or the State's public lands are urged to call 800-628-9944.

jigfreak
03-25-2014, 09:00 PM
. I am sick and tired of them violating our laws they should take his boat too. Go back to your own country and poach the fish there!:2flip:


Most of the time they already wiped out the fish from their country. That's why they come here. Don't you know the streets of America are paved with fish? 228 is a lot. Hope they give him some stronger fines and don't let him plea out. A**wipe.

crosseyedbass
03-25-2014, 10:57 PM
Take his boat? they should sink it. End of story.

Monty
03-25-2014, 11:10 PM
Take his boat? they should sink it. End of story.
Agree, penalty needs to exceed the crime, not be weaker than it.

seamonkey
08-26-2014, 08:46 AM
http://www.onthewater.com/striped-bass-poachers-busted-in-maryland/



I think this is a follow up to that. They pleaded guilty. I wonder what their sentence will be. Hall a million dollars in stripers.
http://www.philly.com/philly/news/Fisherman_admit_poaching_500K_worth_of_bass_from_C hesapeake_Bay.html

finchaser
02-05-2015, 12:41 PM
http://www.northcarolinasportsman.com/details.php?id=4812

VSdreams
02-06-2015, 12:00 AM
Thats disgusting those guys are greedy pigs. They should take their boats away!

buckethead
02-06-2015, 08:49 AM
"The illegal poaching of striped bass by commercial fishermen can have a huge collective impact on the fish resource and has the potential to devastate the future livelihoods of law abiding commercial fishermen," said John C. Cruden, Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department's Environment and Natural Resources Division.

"The vast majority of fishermen do respect the law and carefully monitor their harvest to ensure they stay within the well-researched limits. Those who deliberately break the law will be prosecuted."

Thanks for reporting that finchaser. Hopefully the judge who does the sentencing is smart enough to send a message.

finchaser
02-24-2015, 09:07 AM
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/sun-investigates/bs-md-tilghman-island-20150221-story.html#page=1

robmedina
02-24-2015, 01:06 PM
despicable.

storminsteve
02-24-2015, 02:05 PM
OMG this turns my stomach. He's going to prison and will still be fire chief when he comes out????????? someone should sink this guys boat! What a scumbag!!!!!!!!!:mad:
Some of the most disturbing comments:

" The Tilghman Island Volunteer Fire Company recently decided that Lednum should continue as chief while he's in prison. Two marinas have offered to dock the Kristin Marie for free. A waterman friend will be mowing his lawn while he's gone.
(http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/sun-investigates/bs-md-tilghman-island-20150221-story.html#) "I don't know what the state of Maryland is trying to do," said Johnny Haddaway, 78, a third-generation waterman whose house sits in the shadow of the island's drawbridge. "They are trying to get rid of watermen is what they are trying to do."

Patricia McGlannan, co-owner of the Tilghman Island Country Store, notes that Lednum and the other men convicted in the poaching scheme "are the very same people who take care of the community and do all the volunteering. So there is your great irony. ... I'm not for illegal fishing, but you meet the guy and you say, 'Damn, it's just fish.'"

Lednum and Hayden admitted to illegally selling a total of 185,925 pounds of rockfish worth nearly $500,000, court records show.

Hayden and Lednum say 10 to 12 other boats had unattended nets in the area before the 2011 season opened. Hayden said that's why residents were not upset with them: "Everybody was doing it! Why would you argue if everybody is doing it?"



Despicable that's for sure! Eff you Fire Capt Billy Lednum you are a POS and a disgrace to firemen everywhere!!!

seamonkey
04-07-2017, 05:43 AM
These guys got caught with duffle bags filled with stripers
http://www.wmdt.com/news/maryland/natural-resources-police-recover-87-striped-bass-over-two-night-surveillance-in-dorchester-county/435103147

seamonkey
11-14-2017, 08:46 AM
Poaching bust up north. Wish they would hit the jetties in CM soon. Heard of many over limit blackfish catches already.

"Do DFW Conservation Police Officers work at night, or on the weekend, or in the city?
The answer to all of these is yes!

Last night Conservation Officers Jordan Holmes, Trevor Anderson, and Lt. Joseph Kuechler worked the Newark Bay Complex and Hudson River checking striped bass anglers for compliance. Sixteen fishermen were contacted, resulting in the issuance of four summonses for possession of undersized striped bass and one summons for possession of striped bass over the daily limit.

Did you spot the Statue of Liberty in the background?"

#Conservation (https://www.facebook.com/hashtag/conservation) #NewJersey (https://www.facebook.com/hashtag/newjersey) #DFWLawEnforcement (https://www.facebook.com/hashtag/dfwlawenforcement)#ConservationOfficers (https://www.facebook.com/hashtag/conservationofficers)

basshunter
11-14-2017, 09:32 AM
So glad they made those busts thanks for sharing. Illegals should be subject to our laws, same as we are.

VSdreams
11-14-2017, 08:43 PM
Thank you DFW!

bababooey
11-15-2017, 10:10 AM
Good news. Also sad to think with the recent election NJ will become a sanctuary state and illegals will get special privilege.

finchaser
11-15-2017, 07:44 PM
All about votes

ledhead36
04-09-2018, 11:38 AM
Poaching bust up north. Wish they would hit the jetties in CM soon. Heard of many over limit blackfish catches already.

"Do DFW Conservation Police Officers work at night, or on the weekend, or in the city?
The answer to all of these is yes!

Last night Conservation Officers Jordan Holmes, Trevor Anderson, and Lt. Joseph Kuechler worked the Newark Bay Complex and Hudson River checking striped bass anglers for compliance. Sixteen fishermen were contacted, resulting in the issuance of four summonses for possession of undersized striped bass and one summons for possession of striped bass over the daily limit.

Did you spot the Statue of Liberty in the background?"

#Conservation (https://www.facebook.com/hashtag/conservation) #NewJersey (https://www.facebook.com/hashtag/newjersey) #DFWLawEnforcement (https://www.facebook.com/hashtag/dfwlawenforcement)#ConservationOfficers (https://www.facebook.com/hashtag/conservationofficers)

This goes on every year in that area. I fish there in the fall a lot. Very little enforcement.

ledhead36
04-09-2018, 11:50 AM
Heads up for all who fish the rb. Lots of guys been taking shorts home. Not much stopping them, only periodic busts. This weekend they got serious. Enforcement showed up, wrote out some serious tickets for the no speaky da english crews.

baitstealer
04-09-2018, 12:00 PM
Love it! Thanks for posting that.

finchaser
04-09-2018, 12:58 PM
They don't pay the fines most have fake ID and addresses total bullsh-t

storminsteve
04-09-2018, 01:25 PM
Exactly! I heard if they have fake id, they don't even check to see if its real or not. I guess it must be tough, heard the number of COs are down as well.

Monty
04-09-2018, 09:11 PM
They don't pay the fines most have fake ID and addresses total bullsh-t

They should break their legs.
Make them feel it a little.
Make'm crawl!!!

williehookem
04-12-2018, 09:44 AM
Or just deport them to whatever country they came from.