On
June
14,
2004
at
3:30
p.m.,
the
District
Fish
and
Wildlife
officer
in
Fox
Creek
conducted
a
fisheries
patrol
on
Iosegun
Lake.
Iosegun
Lake
is
located
north
of
Fox
Creek
and
has
a
valuable
and
popular
walleye
sport
fishery.
Anglers
are
allowed
to
catch
and
retain
three
walleye
over
43
centimetres
per
day
from
that
lake.
On
this
day
the
weather
was
marginal
and
unsettled
by
winds
and
a
thunderstorm.
The
water
was
rough
with
whitecaps
and
the
officer
noted
only
two
boats
on
the
lake,
which
was
not
surprising
considering
the
weather,
but
well
below
the
normal
activity
for
that
time
of
the
year.
The
officer
checked
a
relatively
seldom
used
access
point
to
the
lake
and
made
note
of
a
white
Chevrolet
pickup
truck
at
that
remote
location.
He
then
returned
to
the
main
parking
area
to
conduct
surveillance
and
inspect
the
other
boat
and
fishermen
as
they
returned
to
shore.
With
the
aid
of
binoculars
he
noted
a
small
boat
traveling
toward
the
remote
site
where
the
white
pickup
was
parked.
He
then
patrolled
back
to
that
same
location.
Upon
the
officer’s
arrival
he
noted
two
males
loading
a
small
aluminium
boat
upside
down
into
the
bed
of
the
white
Chevrolet.
During
a
brief
interview,
the
two
men
admitted
to
fishing,
stating
that
“...they’d
caught
a
bunch
of
small
ones,
but
hadn’t
kept
any.”
After
inspecting
the
bed
of
the
truck
the
officer
noted
a
pair
of
blue,
oil
patch-style
coveralls
that
appeared
to
be
stuffed
full
of
something.
Each
leg
end
of
the
coveralls
had
been
knotted
and
the
main
zipper
had
been
zipped
to
the
collar.
Upon
inspection
of
the
coveralls,
the
officer
discovered
a
large
quantity
of
walleye.
The
officer
seized
the
coveralls
and
40
walleye,
35
of
which
were
under
the
43
cm
minimum
size
limit.
Both
suspects
were
released
on
an
Appearance
Notice
and
charged
for
exceeding
the
possession
limit
for
fish
and
catching
and
retaining
fish
of
a
prohibited
length,
under
sections
17
and
23
of
the
Alberta
Fishery
Regulations
1998.
The
preceding
is
a
summary
of
the
facts.
Let’s
contemplate
the
details
of
this
file.
The
two
suspects
verbally
denied
retaining
any
fish
to
the
officer.
Forty
walleye
were
carefully
placed
into
a
set
of
coveralls
to
avoid
detection.
The
coveralls
were
fully
zipped
and
the
legs
were
knotted
to
prevent
the
fish
from
slipping
out.
Is
this
a
normal
way
to
transport
fish?
I
think
not.
The
verbal
statement
to
the
officer
and
the
condition
of
the
fish
speaks
to
a
guilty
mind.
Did
the
two
suspects
know
of
the
possession
and
size
limits?
The
facts
would
indicate
that
they
did.
Now
let’s
examine
the
resource
impact.
Walleye
in
Iosegun
Lake
take
approximately
seven
years
to
mature
to
spawning
age.
Thirty
five
of
the
walleye
did
not
reach
that
point
in
their
lifecycle.
Fisheries
biologists
examine
and
calculate
a
sustainable
harvest
rate
on
sustainable
walleye
lakes.
It
was
estimated
by
a
fisheries
biologist
that
the
two
suspects
removed
four
per
cent
of
the
annual
sustainable
walleye
harvest
for
Iosegun
Lake
that
day.
Between
20
and
25
of
these
trips
by
such
individuals
would
effectively
collapse
this
walleye
fishery.
Iosegun
Lake
normally
sees
an
angler
effort
of
12
hours/Ha/year
and
can
sustain
that
type
of
pressure
if
the
anglers
abide
by
the
regulations.
The
two
suspects
could
have
retained
their
five
legal-sized
walleye
and
released
the
small
ones.
I
suspect
that
the
motive
for
this
gross
over
limit
was
a
total
disregard
for
fisheries
management
and
pure
greed.
On
July
26,
2004
Adam
Andurski
and
Neil
Chaychuk
appeared
before
Judge
Mitchell
in
Fox
Creek
provincial
court.
Both
entered
guilty
pleas
to
each
charge
and
the
court
heard
the
circumstances
and
the
resource
impact
submission.
The
court
assessed
the
following
penalties:
Andurski:
$2,500
per
count,
in
default
of
payment,
60
days
in
jail
for
a
total
of
$5,000
plus
a
two-year
sportfishing
licence
suspension.
Chaychuk:
$2,500
per
count,
in
default
of
payment,
60
days
in
jail
for
a
total
of
$5,000
plus
a
one-year
sportfishing
licence
suspension.
After
assessing
the
penalties,
Judge
Mitchell
added,
“I
think
it
is
a
very
expensive
lesson
you
have
learned
and
perhaps
you
might
give
up
fishing
for
a
different
career.”
Does
a
collective
$10,000
fine
and
a
threeyear
licence
suspension
fit
the
crime?
You
be
the
judge.
Miles
Grove
is
a
member
of
the
Alberta
Game
Warden
Association
in
Edmonton.
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