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Topic: Tomales Report - sort of...here's a restaurant to boycott.  (Read 5366 times)

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Malibu_Two

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  • Date Registered: Jul 2005
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Today's Tom Stienstra column:

Fishing charges against restaurateur
Tom Stienstra

Sunday, October 25, 2009


-------------------------------------------------------------

What could be one of the more outrageous fish crimes in Bay Area history - the alleged gillnetting of white sea bass for sale in a restaurant - is going to trial in Marin County after game wardens reportedly caught a man with fish slime on his hands and three 25-pounders at his feet.



An anonymous tipster to the Department of Fish and Game reported that John Konatich, owner of Tony's Seafood restaurant on the shore of Tomales Bay in Marshall, was gillnetting sport fish at night for his restaurant, game warden Rich Mead said.

Tony's was contacted by phone for this column, but an employee said Konatich was not available.

"He sets up lights on the dock behind his restaurant to attract baitfish," the caller said, according to Mead. "Then when white sea bass and striped bass come in to feed, he'd set a gill net."

Mead said, "Every day I go out on patrol and I run across things that never cease to amaze me. When we got this call, I wondered, 'How long has that guy been doing that?' "

Mead, working undercover with another officer, Joseph Laugesen, also in plain clothes, visited Tony's Seafood on a weekday afternoon in August when the restaurant was closed. They quietly searched the property, and at the end of the dock, said they found a large commercial fish barrel - and inside was a gill net.

They returned to Tony's Seafood after working a spotlighting deer poaching case late on a Saturday night and arrived at 1 a.m.

"We saw an individual at the end of the dock," Mead said. "He was standing next to a roll cart, and on the cart he had three large white sea bass." When the game wardens approached, they also said they spotted wet waders and gloves covered with fresh fish scales on the dock.

"Where did you get the fish?" Mead said he asked the man.

"I caught them with my fishing rod," was the answer, said Mead, who identified the man as Konatich.

"Look, it's 1 o'clock Sunday morning," Mead said he told Konatich. "We didn't just show up here by chance."

Mead said Konatich then admitted using the gill net and showed him the three sea bass. Wardens said they found three more large sea bass in the restaurant's cold storage unit that had been caught that night and more filleted sea bass in a nearby walk-in freezer, along with a juvenile halibut and a 4 1/2-foot leopard shark. Konatich said he had caught the shark in April in the gill net, according to Mead.

Fish and Game seized the illegal catch and a wet gill net that was 400 feet long and 16 feet deep with 5-inch mesh, lead weights on the bottom and floats on top. Mead said the floats allowed the suspect to vacuum 16 feet of water, from surface to bottom, leaving no way for the fish to escape.

The sea bass was turned into filets the morning after it was confiscated, and Fish and Game donated it to charity.

Kathryn Mitchell off the Marin County district attorney's office said that Konatich was charged last week with eight counts of violations of the Fish and Game Code, all misdemeanors. The counts include the unlawful use of a gill net; unlawful taking of a bird, mammal, fish or reptile; possession of a creature unlawfully taken and failing to keep accounting records.

In Superior Court, Konatich pleaded not guilty at his arraignment. He is scheduled to appear again Nov. 10.

"Tomales Bay is famous for salmon, halibut, and people spend their hard-earned money for a chance to catch a fish," Mead said. "Yet here's a guy setting a 400-foot gill net, catching everything. It's disturbing."

Illegal fish and wildlife activity can be reported to Fish and Game's poacher hot line at (888) 334-2258 or its Bay Area office at (707) 944-5500.




May the fish be mighty and the seas be meek...


BigJim

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Glad they caught him!!!!

Thanks for sharing...

Sincerely,

Jim

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Sailfish

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Hope the judge throws the book at them...
"Life is not about waiting for the storms to pass...it's about learning how to dance in the rain."


guitarzan

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Use him for crab bait. :smt013
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Slammer

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Thanks for the report.

I just hate them A-hole poachers.

S.


futhel

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man i hate hearing about things like this :smt013

its so frustrating,

thanks for the report

Mike
Everybody should have the opportunity to fish


InSeine

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So there are big white seabass and striped bass in Tomales?
OG


bmb

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i was confused by this too.  i understand WSB in tomales as people have caught them before, but have not heard much of stripers in there?


Rock Hopper

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i was confused by this too.  i understand WSB in tomales as people have caught them before, but have not heard much of stripers in there?

WSB, thresher sharks, stripers, sturgeon.........

In Loving Memory of Mooch, Eelmaster, Shicken, and Cabeza De Martillo

I started kayak fishing to get away from most of you...


ravensblack

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There are some big stripers in Tomales. I have never caught one but back in the day an old friend caught a 48 pound one at the mouth. and recently another friendcaught one that was around 20 pounds on ghost down by Inverness. We used to fish at poison oak point from shore and get schoolie bass all the time. In the 70's and 8o's. they are still there I am sure
"I always entertain great hope" Robert Frost


Rock Hopper

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I've caught quite a few smaller sized stripers down by Millerton Point. On squid, of all things, while fishing for leopards from shore.

In Loving Memory of Mooch, Eelmaster, Shicken, and Cabeza De Martillo

I started kayak fishing to get away from most of you...


bmb

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while I don't doubt that you guys have caught them there, is there a sufficient enough population to target?  would the stripers in tomales be resident fish or the same migratory ones that move up and down our coast into the delta?

this blog post says they are virtually gone from tomales and I was wondering how accurate it would be
http://www.riversofalostcoast.com/index.php/roalc_blog/blog_entry/searching_for_a_silver_lining

an excerpt relating to paper mill creek and a dam that was built there:
"“The dam also caused a substantial drop in the flow of water entering Tomales Bay. With less freshwater flush on the ebb tie, the bay silted in, spoiling the flats. It now seems probable that few, if any, striped bass or silver salmon will ever again be caught in Tomales Bay or Paper Mill Creek. Although stripers ran up Paper Mill and spawned in its estuary, this was not significant to the run. These bass migrated north from San Francisco Bay. The run, never big to begin with, suffered in proportion to the whole fishery. A remnant population still exists, but they are considered threatened.” "


ravensblack

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Its a good question. I am sure when there are bait fish in the bay as this year showed us all kinds of different speices come into the bay to feed. There used to also be a salmon hatchery right at the base of the Dam at Nicasio Lake. I have caught coho back in the day in Paremill and the state record choh came from that stream. Humans had a huge role in the demise of those fish although some still return to spawn and sometimes you can see them in the outflow at the base of Kent lake spillway. I dont think that there are a resident bunch of bass or that they come back to spawn. Just opportunistic feeding patterns that caused some of us to catch some very large and interesting specie all over this year. What a year it has been.
"I always entertain great hope" Robert Frost


bigbluefish

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I've caught stripers in the estero americano. In the months of april through october.


CGN-38

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So there are big white seabass and striped bass in Tomales?
  Looks like there might be now that this asshole is not depleting the stocks any longer.


Member/survivor STORM TROOPER Brigade