News Room
(916) 322-8911DFG News Archive
Targets 20 for Arrest in Statewide Sturgeon and Abalone Poaching Bust
Contact:
Steve Martarano, DFG Office of
Communications, (916) 804-1714
The Department of Fish and Game (DFG) today targeted 20 people for arrest in one of the most extensive sturgeon and abalone poaching busts in California history. At press time, DFG had 17 of those targeted in custody; the others were pending. Three separate investigations into illegal take and sales of sturgeon and abalone led to the arrests and service of seven search warrants. The operation was conducted by 29 teams of wardens deployed in the Sacramento, Oakland, San Francisco, Hayward, Ft. Bragg, and Mission Viejo areas.
“Today, we took a step toward knocking down the significant amount of poaching that continues to imperil sturgeon and abalone in California,” said Nancy Foley, DFG Chief of Enforcement. “While we are seeing an alarming increase in criminal activity, we will continue to send the message that DFG has zero tolerance when it comes to the illegal commercialization of fish and wildlife resources.”
Including the Incident Command Staff, a total of 85 sworn officers were involved in the operation, as well as more than a dozen support staff. DFG was assisted by several other federal, state and local law enforcement agencies. One suspect was arrested by Oregon State Police.
A complete list of individuals arrested will be made available throughout the day and at the scheduled news conference today in Cordelia, detailed below.
Highlights of the three cases in today’s takedown include:
Both sturgeon and abalone continue to be impacted heavily by poaching. Earlier this year DFG recommended that the state enact emergency regulations after a survey last fall showed legal-sized sturgeon were at a 50-year low of about 10,000 in the Sacramento River and those numbers might not increase for the next 10 years. The regulations, which were approved by the Fish and Game Commission last March, retained the current one-fish daily bag and possession limit, but reduced the maximum size limit that may be taken or possessed from 72 inches total length to 56 inches. It is illegal in California to sell sturgeon or sturgeon parts. Sturgeon is often poached for the eggs, or roe, found in females and processed into caviar.
“Caviar can fetch up to $165 per pound on the black market,” Foley said. In high-end restaurants, this same sturgeon caviar can retail for over $100 an ounce, she added.
The abalone sport split-season, open only north of San Francisco Bay for abalone 7 inches in size and longer, runs from April 1 through June 30 and from Aug. 1 through Nov. 30; July is closed. The north coast has one of the last viable populations of red abalone in the world. Continued poaching of abalone has put great pressure on this resource. Last weekend, DFG operated two vehicle checkpoints on Highway 128 in Mendocino County and Highway 1 in Sonoma County, inspecting a total of 552 vehicles. Wardens issued a total of 107 citations, and confiscated 144 illegal abalone. Abalone found in the wild cannot be sold commercially in California, and can fetch between $60 and $100 per mollusk on the black market, depending on the size.
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News Media:
DFG and state Attorney General officials will be available at a news
conference scheduled today at 2 p.m. at the Cordelia Fire Station, 2155
Cordelia Rd., in Fairfield. Items confiscated from today’s operation
and video and stills shot earlier today by DFG photographers, will be
made available.
