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Department of Commerce NOAA Fisheries
- Office for Law Enforcement
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 29, 2004
| CONTACT: |
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Sheela McLean - AKRO
(907) 586-7032 |
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Brian Gorman - NWRO
(206) 526-6613 |
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Mark Oswell – OLE HQ
(301) 427-2300 |
NOAA ISSUES $3.44 MILLION PENALTY FOR VIOLATIONS OF THE AMERICAN FISHERIES ACT
Icicle Seafoods, Inc. and two associated seafood-processing companies
in Adak, Alaska have been assessed a $3.44-million penalty for
violating the American Fisheries Act for exceeding the company’s
crab-processing cap. The Notice of Violation and Assessment (NOVA)
was issued today by NOAA, the Commerce Department’s National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Icicle Seafoods and Adak Fisheries, LLC and Adak Fisheries Development,
LLC have been issued this penalty as the culmination of a year-long
investigation by NOAA’s National Marine Fisheries Service
Office for Law Enforcement - Alaska Division.
NOAA is charging that for over two years, from Jan. 2002 until
Feb. 2004, Icicle Seafoods controlled Adak Fisheries Development,
through the actions of Icicle’s officers and through Icicle’s
subsidiary fish-processing operation.
Under the AFA, if one company controls more than 10 percent of
another company, they are considered the same company for applying
crab cap limits. Because of the direct and indirect control Icicle
Seafood exercised over both companies, the companies are considered
one.
As an "AFA entity" Icicle Seafoods is authorized
to participate in the lucrative Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
(BSAI) limited entry pollock fishery. Because of the economic benefits
which accrue from participation in the BSAI pollock fishery, AFA
entities are statutorily capped as to the amount of harvesting
and processing they may do in specified non-pollock fisheries.
The American Fisheries Act, passed in 1998, is meant to encourage
diversity and competition among fish harvesters and processors,
and conservation of the resource. Certain processors, Icicle Seafoods
among them, are authorized to participate in the lucrative pollock
fishery in the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands, but are strictly
limited in how much non-pollock fishing and processing they are
authorized. Adak is a remote island located near the end of the
Aleutian chain, which stretches over 1,300 miles southwest of Anchorage
towards the coast of Siberia.
Seattle-based Icicle Seafoods, one of the largest seafood processing
operations in Alaska, was a co-partner in Adak Fisheries, the sole
fish processor on Adak. Adak Fisheries leased space in its plant
to Adak Development, the sole crab processor which is owned by
Icicle Seafoods co-partner in Adak Fisheries. According to the
notice of violation, although Adak Fisheries and Adak Fisheries
Development were separately incorporated, they both used the same
facility, the same employees, the same management team and were
both supplied with virtually all administrative support from Icicle
Seafoods.
During the time period charged, Adak Fisheries purchased and
marketed approximately 90 percent of all crab that Adak Fisheries
Development processed. As a result of the control exercised by
Icicle Seafoods, all crab processed by Adak Fisheries Development
should be allocated against Icicle Seafoods crab cap limit. When
this is done, Adak Fisheries Development processed over 3.8 million
pounds of brown king crab in excess of Icicle Seafoods’ AFA
crab cap for western Aleutian brown king crab during the same time
period.
As a result of Icicle Seafoods' actions, non-AFA crab processors
lost the market opportunity to conduct the processing of over 3.8
million pounds of brown king crab. The purchase price of the crab
paid to the vessel for this crab was over $13 million. NOAA investigators
said that the value of the processed crab would be greater than
purchase price.
The three companies are all being charged together and are jointly
responsible for paying the fine. Any or all of them can request
a hearing before a Federal Administrative Law Judge to the review
the charges and their case.
NOAA Fisheries is dedicated to protecting and preserving our
nation’s living marine resources through scientific research,
management, law enforcement, and the conservation of marine mammals
and other protected marine species and their habitat.
NOAA is dedicated to enhancing economic security and national
safety through the predication and research of weather and climate-related
events and providing environmental stewardship of our nation’s
coastal and marine resources.
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