This was in the Bellingham Herald today. What a shame! The Game Department is pushing to close the Nooksack down for fishing at the end of February instead of March 15th, this just helps their case. Why doesn't the Game Department fine these guys thousands of dollars instead of the hundred or so dollars they do?
Lawman lands steelhead poacher
Mark Porter, The Bellingham Herald
A Custer man was cited for illegal possession of a native steelhead during closed season Saturday after a state wildlife agent caught him landing a 22-pounder on a gravel bar along the Nooksack River near Lynden.
The man, in his 40s, had the fish confiscated, his fishing gear seized for forfeiture while his buddy - who allegedly was his lookout - was cited for complicity for the misdemeanor crime, said state Department of Fish and Wildlife enforcement agent Russ Mullins.
Each man faces fines in the "hundreds of dollars," Mullins said. The wild steelhead population is in decline, he added.
"People lose sight of the fact that by killing such a fish .... is basically a theft to everyone," Mullins said. "This is the kind of fish you want to help replenish the native stock."
Mullins was patrolling the area of the Nooksack near Lynden on Saturday after receiving several complaints by law-abiding fishers who were watching poachers take illegal fish.
Here's what happened, according to Mullins:
He had just arrived to the area at about 1 p.m. and was watching five fishers in brush upstream when he watched the man run toward his fishing gear and start fighting a steelhead. The man landed the fish in 15 minutes, and when he pulled it out, Mullins said the size of the fish tipped him off that it was a native and therefore illegal.
Hatchery steelhead aren't that big, he said, and hatchery fish also have had one fin on their backs clipped off by hatchery workers before being released.
The man had a picture taken with the fish, and then his friend went up the river's embankment to be sure there weren't any wildlife officials waiting around. Meanwhile, the poacher put the fish in a black plastic bag and was starting up the embankment after his friend gave him the "thumbs up" sign that everything was OK, Mullins said.
"Once it was clear it was going into a bag, that's when I decided to step in," Mullin said.
Mullins called and stopped the man, who "knew the gig was up," Mullins said.
Wildlife officials aren't going to catch every person who catches an illegal fish, including native steelhead, but this is a lesson for people who would poach, he said.
"I'm sure the word is already out," he said. "We're out there."
Reach Mark Porter at mporter@bellingh.gannett.com or call 715-2263.