On Tuesday, January 20, the Kentucky Department of Fish & Wildlife (KDFW) announced more than 700 criminal charges for 25 individuals in one of the most eye-catching poaching cases in recent memory. The sprawling investigation, dubbed “Operation River Raid,” involved catfish. A lot of catfish.
Operation River Raid was a 10-month multi-agency effort that relied on surveillance, intelligence sharing, and field inspections across six counties in Kentucky. During the course of the investigation, wardens uncovered significant amounts of illegal activity that “involved harvesting catfish from public waterways and transporting them for sale to unregulated or illegally operated pay lakes.”
In fact, KDFW officials say that the defendants of the recent charges failed to report the harvest of more than 300,000 pounds of catfish. Yes, 300,000 pounds. The impact of such an astoundingly large illegal harvest is significant.
“A critical piece of information to properly manage any fishery is accurate harvest rates,” explained Dave Dreves, director of the KDFW Fisheries Division. “That is why commercial fishers are required to report their harvest each month. This egregious underreporting undermines our ability to properly monitor catfish populations, especially trophy catfish.”
Catfish pay lakes are particularly popular in parts of the Midwest, where, according to local angler Chris Lanham, some lakes provide fishing for farm-raised catfish, some for wild-caught trophy catfish, and some both. The practice of planting wild-caught trophy fish in pay lakes has long stirred debate in the catfishing world. Many claim that it threatens natural fisheries through overfishing and limits opportunities for recreational anglers on public waterways. Wild-caught catfish in pay lakes are typically legally harvested by commercial fishermen. The recent bust, however, shows that’s not always the case, and the recent wildlife violations announced include “the unlawful operation of pay lakes across Kentucky.”
“This case reflects our commitment to safeguarding Kentucky’s natural resources,” said Col. Jeremy McQueary, director of the Kentucky Fish and Wildlife Law Enforcement Division. “Illegal commercialization of wildlife — especially through the exploitation of native fish populations — undermines conservation efforts and lawful recreation. We will not tolerate it.”
Of the 700-plus pending charges, KDFW wardens plan to present more than 100 felony counts to local grand juries. KDFW will not release the names or further details in the case while active court proceedings are underway.
Feature image via Adobe Stock.
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