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finchaser
02-20-2015, 06:49 PM
Fisherman Charged With Shooting, Killing Pilot Whale With WWI Era RifleBy Daniel Nee (http://brick.shorebeat.com/author/admin/) February 20, 2015 in Boating & Fishing (http://brick.shorebeat.com/category/boating-fishing/) 4 Comments (http://brick.shorebeat.com/2015/02/fisherman-charged-with-shooting-killing-pilot-whale-with-wwi-era-rifle/#disqus_thread)



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http://brick.shorebeat.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/pilot_whale-240x160.jpg (http://brick.shorebeat.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/pilot_whale.jpg)Pilot Whale. (Credit: Wikipedia)

A commercial fisherman has been charged with using a rare World War I era rifle to shoot and kill a pilot whale that died after beaching itself in Monmouth County.
The fisherman, Daniel Archibald, 27, of Cape May, admitted to authorities that he used a Mosin-Nagant rifle to shoot at pilot whales swimming near the Capt. Bob commercial fishing boat in 2011, a statement from U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman said.
On Sept. 24, 2011, an 11-foot, 740-pound pilot whale beached itself in Allenhurst, Monmouth County, and died shortly thereafter. A necropsy uncovered a .30 caliber bullet lodged in the whale?s jaw. The bullet wound triggered an extensive infection that caused the whale to starve to death a month later.
Archibald, who was fishing for tuna on board the Capt. Bob, which is docked in Cape May, posted a Facebook photograph of a tuna head on a hook with the caption ?thanks a lot pilot whales? about a month before the incident allegedly took place, authorities said.
Special agents from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Office of Law Enforcement, eventually searched the Capt Bob and found the Mosin-Nagant, a World War II rifle that has not been manufactured in several decades. Forensic analysis, the statement from Fishman said, revealed that the bullet found in the whale was similar in all general rifling characteristics to test bullets fired from Archibald?s rifle. When interviewed by special agents, Archibald admitted that he had ?spray[ed]? bullets at pilot whales in an effort to chase them away, according to the statement.
Special agents confirmed the Capt. Bob was fishing in New Jersey around the time the whale was shot by reviewing records from the boat?s vessel monitoring system, a GPS-based tracking system which commercial fishing boats must use under federal law.
Archibald faces a maximum penalty of one year in prison and a statutory maximum fine of $100,000 or twice the gross gain or loss resulting from the offense. He is currently free on $10,000 unsecured bond, with travel restricted to the United States, except for fishing in international waters. He is required to surrender all firearms and firearms purchaser identification cards and is prohibited from using or possessing a firearm on land or sea, Fishman?s statement said.

buckethead
02-21-2015, 08:35 AM
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Archibald, who was fishing for tuna on board the Capt. Bob, which is docked in Cape May, posted a Facebook photograph of a tuna head on a hook with the caption ?thanks a lot pilot whales? about a month before the incident allegedly took place, authorities said.

Special agents from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Office of Law Enforcement, eventually searched the Capt Bob and found the Mosin-Nagant, a World War II rifle that has not been manufactured in several decades. Forensic analysis, the statement from Fishman said, revealed that the bullet found in the whale was similar in all general rifling characteristics to test bullets fired from Archibald?s rifle. When interviewed by special agents, Archibald admitted that he had ?spray[ed]? bullets at pilot whales in an effort to chase them away, according to the statement.
Special agents confirmed the Capt. Bob was fishing in New Jersey around the time the whale was shot by reviewing records from the boat?s vessel monitoring system, a GPS-based tracking system which commercial fishing boats must use under federal law.
Archibald faces a maximum penalty of one year in prison and a statutory maximum fine of $100,000 or twice the gross gain or loss resulting from the offense.

The amount of personal information posted on facebook today is ridiculous. I have cautioned my children to be careful what they put out there but I don't think most of the younger generation is aware that what they post is there forever. In this case it's a good thing as this idiot got himself caught. Thanks for sharing that finchaser.

seamonkey
02-21-2015, 08:45 AM
The amount of personal information posted on facebook today is ridiculous.

Thats for sure! Hey it took them 3 years but at least they got the guy. Shooting whales what a toolbag.

basshunter
02-21-2015, 08:55 AM
Yep we should kill all the whales because they eat bunker too. Sheer stupidity glad he was nabbed. Hope the judge gives him more than a slap on the wrist.

wish4fish
02-21-2015, 09:08 AM
not a big deal i bet the belford pirates have dun it too

plugcrazy
02-23-2015, 08:57 AM
You can't fix stupid!

fishinmission78
02-23-2015, 05:09 PM
It was def a doosh move to talk about it on fb.