Seven men charged in 57-count indictment in seafood investigation
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Posted: 3:21 PM Jul 24, 2008
Seven men charged in 57-count indictment in seafood investigation
A two-year investigation by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s fisheries service, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and the United States Attorney’s Office involving marine species illegally caught in Florida and shipped out of state has resulted in a 57-count federal indictment against seven individuals.
Reporter: Toni Brannon, F-W-C
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A two-year investigation by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s fisheries service, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and the United States Attorney’s Office involving marine species illegally caught in Florida and shipped out of state has resulted in a 57-count federal indictment against seven individuals.

The indictment, returned in U.S. District Court in Albany, Ga., details how five Panhandle fishermen and seafood dealers and two Georgia brothers, allegedly conspired to transport a variety of marine fish illegally across state lines from Florida to Georgia, mislabeled fish and falsified documents.

Those charged in the indictment are James Stovall, 41, Colquitt, Ga.; Guy Stovall, DOB 35, Colquitt, Ga.; Eric Donald Woods, 28, Keaton Beach, Fla.; Jeffery Cannon, 50, Panacea, Fla.; James N. Nations, Jr., 40, Apalachicola, Fla.; Gary D. Brown, 65, Medart, Fla.; Floyd Robbie Jenkins, 54, Perry, Fla.

U.S. District Attorney Maxwell Wood said the indictments are only accusations, and the accused are presumed innocent until proven guilty at trial.

The multi-count indictment alleges Guy and James Stovall, owners of Road Runner Seafood Incorporated in Colquitt, Ga., worked with fishermen and two seafood dealers in Florida to purchase fish illegally taken or fish that can not be sold in Florida. They also are charged with mislabeling the fish that must be reported to the FWC and NOAA.

Most of the violations involve the federal Lacey Act, which prohibits interstate shipment of fish or wildlife taken in violation of state law. Each Lacey Act violation carries a possible five-year prison term and a $250,000 fine.

“This is one of the most far-reaching undercover operations on the northern Gulf Coast during the past 20 years,” said Capt. Leroy Alderson, FWC regional investigations supervisor. “Laws exist to protect marine resources, but the investigation showed pretty-blatant efforts to bypass those laws for profit.”

Investigators obtained search warrants and seized computers, business records and other documents from Road Runner Seafood in Colquitt, Ga., Brown’s Seafood in Medart, Fla. and Robbie’s Seafood in Perry, Fla.

The indictment spells out numerous violations including: fish sold illegally from Florida’s waters, including red drum (redfish) and spotted seatrout; red snapper, red grouper and gag grouper caught and sold during closed seasons; fishing in state waters without proper commercial fishing permits and licenses; selling fish without proper permits and licenses; falsely identifying regulated fish species on state and federal documents; and selling Vietnamese catfish as grouper.

NOAA and FWC investigators say the total commercial value of the fish involved exceeded $200,000.

The seven defendants have been arrested or issued summons requiring them to appear in the United States District Court in Albany, Ga., on Aug. 13.


Latest Comments

Posted by: Ben Location: Perry, Fl. on Jul 24, 2008 at 07:50 PM

To anyone who knows any of the accused they know that the FWC in Taylor County especially is a biased and prejudiced lot, and should themselves be federally investigated. This is of a case when personal disputes get blown out of proportion and powers are abused. I personally know many FWC officers in Taylor County, and none know of any "undercover investigation". I stand by the claim that the FWC should be investigated before this case is over.
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