The Highliner

Commercial fishing is a bedrock industry in Alaska, and has been for more than a century. Every year scores of fishermen net millions of migrating salmon, challenge the icy Bering Sea to trap king crabs, lay miles and miles of baited hooks for halibut, and scoop up enough pollock for a zillion fish sticks. And when fishermen aren't out fishing, they're usually talking about fishing. That's what this blog by Wesley Loy has been all about for the two years he has written it.

Last set - 4/10/2009 7:36 pm

Seeking a PFD fishermen will actually wear - 4/10/2009 7:28 pm

Advice for mariculture: Grow West - 4/10/2009 7:26 pm

Anti-Pebble pitch to Anglo American - 4/10/2009 7:19 pm

Safety issues send two boats back to Hoonah - 4/9/2009 5:35 pm

Palin’s board pick draws fire - 4/2/2009 10:46 am

Cook Inlet fisherman named to board - 4/1/2009 4:51 pm

Wrangell deal back on? - 3/31/2009 9:56 am

Charter operator pleads guilty in halibut sting

Here’s an interesting something we got late Tuesday from state prosecutors:


State of Alaska
Department of Law

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Sept. 30, 2008

Southeast Sport Fishing Guide Fined $8,000 for Allowing Clients to Fish for an Over Limit of Halibut

(Anchorage, AK) – Johnathan Rodriguez, age 35 of Ketchikan, Alaska, entered a guilty plea on September 24, 2008 in Craig District Court to two counts of allowing sport fishing charter clients to keep an over limit of halibut. Superior Court Judge David George sentenced Rodriguez to pay a fine of $20,000 with $12,000 suspended, revoked his guide's license and fishing license for a period of 13 months with 12 months suspended (Rodriguez is prohibited from guiding from May 1, 2009 – June 1, 2009), and placed Rodriguez on probation for a period of three years.

Rodriguez was charged for aiding in the commission of sport fishing violations committed by charter clients on August 22, 2007. Rodriguez expressly told two clients, who unbeknown to him were undercover Alaska Wildlife Troopers, to continue catching and keep halibut after they had already retained two halibut each. The limit for halibut in Alaska at this time was two fish per person per day. Rodriguez placed the halibut in what he called a "live well" and then released extra halibut at the end of the day, including two halibut that had been gaffed and were dead upon release. This allowed Rodriguez to ensure that all of his clients took home two fish each and allowed him to select from the largest halibut while killing and wasting the smaller halibut.

Rodriguez was also cited for cutting the dorsal spike from a shark and then throwing the shark overboard. This action by Rodriguez resulted in the shark dying and being wasted. The undercover Troopers also observed Rodriguez use a paintball gun to shoot at waterfowl.

The terms of the plea agreement were negotiated by Assistant Attorney General Andrew Peterson of the Office of Special Prosecutions. Mr. Peterson indicated that the goal of this sentence was to ensure that Rodriguez complies with sport fishing guiding laws in the future. "This sentence was also designed to encourage other sport fishing guides to consider the risks and costs of violating the law."

The conditions of probation provide that Mr. Rodriguez commit no new fish and game violations, pay all fines on time and surrender his fishing and guide's licenses to the Ketchikan troopers on May 1, 2009. Any violations of these conditions could result in Mr. Rodriguez loosing his guide's license for a longer period of time.

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