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National
Marine Fisheries Service
Southeast Region
NEWS RELEASE
9721 Executive
Center Drive, North, St. Petersburg, FL 33702
CONTACT: Chris Smith,
Public Affairs Officer FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(727) 570-5301, Pager
888-955-4854 September 20, 1999
Cynthia Fenyk, NOAA General Counsel SERO
99-053
(727) 570-5433
Two Pensacola, Fla. corporations collectively charged with over one
hundred counts of federal fisheries violations have agreed to
pay
$800,000 in penalties, the Commerce Department's National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), announced today.
"The serious
violations committed by these two corporations, particularly the falsified
records, undermine the very integrity of
NOAA's management regime and will
not be tolerated," said Bill Hogarth, southeast regional administrator of NOAA's
National Marine Fisheries Service, the agency that manages marine resources in
federal waters.
"Falsifying records of red snapper landings hurts honest
fishermen and subverts our efforts to rebuild this prized species," said NOAA
Enforcement Attorney Cynthia S. Fenyk, who prosecuted the case. "The $800,000 in
fines demonstrate our commitment to protecting these
resources from those who
would abuse them."
A. C. Williams, Jr., A. C. Williams Seafood Company,
Inc., and A. C. Williams Corporation, Inc., admitted to multiple violations of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the Lacey Act, and the Atlantic Tunas Convention Act
and agreed to the $800,000 settlement. A. C. Williams, Jr. and A. C. Williams
Seafood Company, Inc., the seafood dealer, admitted to:
• purchasing
approximately 35,000 pounds of red snapper during the commercial closure;
•
falsifying records to conceal the identity of the fish;
• shipping the
falsely labeled fish in interstate commerce to Blue Ribbon Seafood at New York
City's Fulton Fish Market;
•purchasing red snapper in excess of a vessel's
trip limit during the open commercial season;
• and engaging in activities
requiring federal reef fish and tunas permits without such permits.
A. C.
Williams, Jr. and A. C. Williams Seafood Company, Inc. engaged in 576 closed
season purchases from twenty-five boats after 375 vessel trips in 1996 and
1997.
A. C. Williams Corporation, Inc., owner of five of the supplying
vessels, admitted to:
• selling approximately 9,000 pounds of red snapper
during the commercial closure;
• falsifying logbooks to conceal the identity
of the fish and/or failing to submit logbooks when reef fish were landed;
•
and selling approximately 475 pounds of red snapper in excess of vessel trip
limits during the open commercial season.
Vessels owned by A. C. Williams
Corporation, Inc. engaged in 155 commercial closure sales of red snapper after
102 vessel trips in 1996
and 1997.
"I'm particularly pleased with the
work of NOAA Special Agent Allan Coker, who followed informant leads and
obtained the administrative
search warrant that yielded the evidence
supporting the charges, " said Special Agent-in-Charge of NOAA's Southeast
Enforcement Division Eugene F. Proulx. "In addition, Officers of the Pensacola
office of the newly formed Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission's
Marine Enforcement Bureau, formerly the Florida Marine Patrol,
provided invaluable assistance in this inter-agency effort to protect
our
severely overfished red snapper fishery."
A. C. Williams, Jr., A. C.
Williams Seafood Company, Inc., and A. C. Williams Corporation, Inc. agreed to
collectively pay the penalty by December 31, 1999, and A. C. Williams, Jr.
agreed to refrain from dealing in federally regulated species of fish in any
capacity and at any location for a period of three months. A. C. Williams
Seafood Company, Inc. also forfeited $3,694.75 from the seizure of assorted reef
fish purchased without a federal dealer's permit.