Pāua Poachers Slammed By Industry
PIC chief executive officer,
Jeremy Cooper, said poachers put the whole resource at
serious risk. Hawke’s Bay Seafoods and director
Giancarlo (Joe) D’Esposito have today been sentenced after
pleading guilty to buying pāua in contravention of the
Fisheries Act. The MPI operation saw 1140 kilograms of black
market pāua bought by Hawke’s Bay Seafoods. Cooper
praised MPI and the undercover fisheries officer who posed
as an illegal seller of pāua to
D’Esposito. “These guys did a brilliant job.
It’s not easy to get a bust of this size and they deserve
all the credit.” Cooper said the industry would not
tolerate thieves threatening the pāua
resource. “This is greed, pure and simple. Pāua is
a highly prized recreational catch and particularly
important to Maori. By buying illegal fish, they are
undercutting the commercial price and depleting the resource
at the same time. “We manage the pāua stocks
carefully and mongrels who don’t give a damn about
sustainability make my blood boil.” D’Esposito was
sentenced to 10 months home detention and 200 hours
community service. Hawke's Bay Seafoods Limited received a
$27,600 fine. “Let’s hope this sends a very strong
message to anyone poaching or buying the illegally caught
fish, although I believe an order on the prohibition of
fishing activity would have been appropriate here,” said
Cooper.The Pāua
Industry Council (PIC) has praised the Ministry for Primary
Industries (MPI) for a sting operation that uncovered an
illegal pāua operation.