|
Department of Justice
United States Attorney's Office
- South District of Florida
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 13, 2006
| CONTACT: |
|
| |
Yovanny Lopez
(305) 961-9316
|
URUGUAYAN COMPANY AND CORPORATE EXECUTIVE
PLEAD GUILTY AND ARE SENTENCED FOR ILLEGAL DEALINGS IN CHILEAN
SEABASS
R. Alexander Acosta, United States Attorney for the Southern District
of Florida, Sue Ellen Wooldridge, Assistant Attorney General of
the Justice Department's Environment & Natural Resources Division,
Dale Jones, Director, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA), Office of Fisheries Law Enforcement, and Jesus Torres,
Special Agent in Charge, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement,
announced today that Antonio Vidal Pego , 33, of Rebeira, Spain,
and Fadilur, S.A . , a Uruguayan corporation, pled guilty and were
sentenced in connection with charges related to an attempt to import
and sell illegally possessed toothfish, commonly known as Chilean
seabass. Fadilur was convicted on its plea to false labeling, importation
of illegally possessed fish, and attempted sale of that fish. Additionally,
both Fadilur and defendant Vidal were convicted of obstructing
justice.
According to the Indictment and statements at the plea hearing
before United States District Court Judge Ursula Ungaro-Benages,
in May 2004, Antonio Vidal Pego and Fadilur, S.A. knowingly attempted
to import approximately 53,000 pounds of toothfish from Singapore
into Miami, for sale in the United States, knowing that the fish
were taken and transported in violation of the Antarctic Marine
Living Resources Convention and provisions of U.S. law enacted
to implement the conservation measures adopted by the Treaty parties.
The Indictment further charged that the defendants made and submitted
a false record and account for fish intended to be imported into
the United States from Singapore . Finally, the Indictment charged
that in July 2004, the defendants knowingly altered and made a
false entry in a Survey Report purporting to reflect a toothfish
cargo off-loaded at Singapore from the F/V CARRAN with the intent
to obstruct and influence the investigation and proper administration
of a matter within the jurisdiction of the NOAA.
According to records in the case, the government seized more than
53,000 pounds of toothfish, valued at wholesale prices of $314,397.30,
which arrived in Miami aboard a cargo vessel from the CARRAN catch.
This is the first successful federal felony prosecution in the
United States for activities involving illegal importation and
sale of toothfish. A total of 11 cargo containers of toothfish,
with an approximate wholesale value of $3.5 million, from the F/V
CARRAN catch was shipped on three separate vessels as part of the
effort to import the illegal fish into the United States . NOAA
and ICE agents in Miami , Los Angeles , and New York seized all
the containers. The plea agreements in this case include provisions
requiring the forfeiture of all the fish, or the proceeds of the
government's sale of the fish, to the United States .
Judge Ungaro-Benages accepted the guilty pleas of the defendants
and proceeded to immediate sentencing. Antonio Vidal Pego, as a
result of cooperation provided to the United States government
in the investigation or prosecution of others, was placed on probation
for a period of four years, and is required as a condition of that
probation to cease all involvement in the toothfish industry, direct
or indirect. The Court's Probation Office and the U.S. government
are empowered to enforce this provision by examining the books
and records of any business activities of Vidal and to require
his appearance in the United States as necessary. Further, Vidal
has been required to provide a waiver of extradition for use in
the event a violation of the terms of the sentence arises. A criminal
fine of $400,000 was also imposed against Vidal by the Court, which
will be paid into the Magnuson-Stevens Fisheries Conservation and
Management Act Fund.
Fadilur, S..A. was also placed on probation for a period of four
years. Additionally, the company was fined $100,000, payable to
the Magnuson-Stevens Fisheries Conservation and Management Act
Fund, and is required by the terms of its plea and the sentence,
to cease all corporate activities and dissolve as a business entity
within 45 days.
Patagonian toothfish (Dissostichus eleginoides) and Antarctic
toothfish (Dissostichus mawsonii), a.k.a. Chilean seabass, are
slow-growing, deep sea species of fish found throughout large areas
of the sub-Antarctic oceans. They can live approximately 40 years
and breed relatively late in life. The Antarctic toothfish is found
only in very southern latitudes and alongside the Antarctic icepack
and reaches a smaller maximum length than the Patagonian toothfish.
Chilean seabass has been the subject of international conservation
efforts in the face of increased fishing pressure from both legal
and “pirate” fishing.
The harvest and trade of Chilean seabass is regulated under the
international Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine
Living Resources, implemented in the United States through the
Antarctic Marine Living Resources Act. The treaty and implementing
laws, set forth in detail in the Indictment, require specific documentation
to follow legally harvested toothfish from the point of harvest
to the point of final import for consumption.
Mr. Acosta commended the investigative efforts of the Special Agents
of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries,
Office of Law Enforcement, with assistance from the Department of
Homeland Security, Customs and Border Protection Service, who cooperated
in this investigation, known as Operation Coldfish. The case is being
prosecuted for the U.S. Attorney's Office, Southern District of Florida
by Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Watts-FitzGerald and the Environmental
Crimes Section of the U.S. Department of Justice by Senior Counsel
James Morgulec.
|