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Department of Justice
Assistant U.S. Attorney’s Office
- Northern District of California
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 2, 2005
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Luke Macaulay
415-436-6757 |
NORTH COAST FISHERIES AND ITS PRESIDENT PLEAD GUILTY
TO MAKING FALSE FISH LANDING RECORD
The United States Attorney's Office for the Northern District
of California announced that North Coast Fisheries Inc. (North
Coast), along with its President, Michael Lucas, 40, of Santa Rosa,
California, pleaded guilty yesterday to one count of making false
statements regarding the amount of groundfish they were purchasing
from fishermen. North Coast is a commercial fish dealer in Santa
Rosa that purchased federally-regulated groundfish from fishermen.
North Coast pled guilty to making a false statement and Michael
Lucas, its President, entered a plea for aiding and abetting in
the offense. The term groundfish
includes several different species of rockfish, sablefish, petrale
sole, and lingcod.
The Pacific Fishery Management Council (PFMC), which includes
federal, state and local government officials, manages groundfish
along the West Coast. The PFMC sets quotas or "trip limits," which
are the amounts that a fishing vessel may catch of a certain species.
The trip limits ensure that fisheries along the West Coast are
not over-fished to exhaustion. The trip limits set by the PFMC
vary depending on the species of fish.
State and federal law requires that fish dealerships, such as
North Coast, fill out and submit fish landing receipts in order
to report all landings of groundfish received and ultimately purchased
from fishermen. Federal agents of the National Marine Fisheries
Service rely on accurate landing receipts to enforce trip limits
on the amounts of fish that can be lawfully caught under federal
regulations. The PFMC also relies upon accurate landing receipts
in setting trip limits. Federal law prohibits filing false landing
receipts.
"Our environmental agencies depend on accurate records to
estimate future catch limits and maintain healthy fisheries. If
fishing industry companies and chief executives make false statements,
it harms our fisheries and puts honest fishermen at a disadvantage.
The U.S. Attorney's Office will continue to criminally prosecute
those who make false statements to any agency of the United States
Government," said Kevin V. Ryan, U.S. Attorney for the Northern
District of California.
North Coast, Michael Lucas, and Peter Pomilia (a former North
Coast manager) were initially indicted on November 2, 2004. Mr.
Pomilia previously pled guilty to submitting false information
to a Marine Fisheries Council in violation of 16 U.S.C. § 1857.
Michael Lucas faces a maximum statutory penalty of five years
imprisonment and a $250,000 fine for making a false statement to
the government in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001. North Coast
faces a maximum fine of $500,000 for making a false statement in
violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001. Peter Pomilia faces a maximum
statutory penalty of one year imprisonment and a $100,000 fine
for submitting a false statement to a Marine Fisheries Council,
in violation of 16 U.S.C. § 1857.
North Coast and Michael Lucas are scheduled to be sentenced on
May 25,
2005, at 2:15 p.m. before United States District Judge Charles
R. Breyer in San Francisco. The sentencing of Peter Pomilia will
be on May 11, 2005, at 2:15 p.m. before Judge Breyer in San Francisco.
The prosecution is the result of a 3-year investigation by agents
of the National Marine Fisheries Service, which is part of the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, and the United States Attorney's Office
for the Northern District of California. Lawrence J. Leigh and
Stacey Geis are the Assistant U.S. Attorneys who are prosecuting
the case.
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