HONOLULU (AP) — A fishing boat captain told a federal judge Friday he tried to sell shark fins to a Honolulu hotel restaurant so he could earn some extra money for his crew. ADVERTISING HONOLULU (AP) — A fishing boat
HONOLULU (AP) — A fishing boat captain told a federal judge Friday he tried to sell shark fins to a Honolulu hotel restaurant so he could earn some extra money for his crew.
Matthew Brian Case, 47, said he finned dead sharks while at sea off Hawaii and planned to sell them “for a few hundred dollars.”
Case concealed about 100 shark fins in a hidden compartment of the Hawaii-based long-line fishing vessel, prosecutors said.
Hawaii was the first state to make it illegal to possess, sell or distribute shark fins — a pricey Chinese delicacy. Shark finning at sea, dropping the carcasses in the water, is a violation of federal law.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Kevin Chang ordered Case to pay a $100 fine after he pleaded guilty to attempting to sell shark fins he knew were removed from the animals at sea. Assistant U.S. Attorney Tom Brady said the government agreed to the sentencing deal because Case fully cooperated and acknowledged right away what he did was wrong.
Case, a U.S. citizen living in Mexico, ordered his crew to fin sharks that were accidentally caught toward the end of a monthlong voyage, when it became clear they didn’t catch enough fish to earn much of an income, Case’s public defender, Alexander Silvert, said.
On March 8, Case took fins from 25 sharks to the restaurant, but the manager refused to buy them, Silvert said. A cab driver wouldn’t let Case bring the bag of fins in the vehicle, so Case dumped them in the trash in the hotel lobby. Guests complained about the stench to security officials, who reviewed surveillance footage and contacted authorities.