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Piranhas! Bad!

Department of Justice
Office of Public Affairs
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEWednesday, January 29, 2014
Tropical Fish Importer Pleads Guilty in New York Federal Court to Piranha Import Violations

Joel Rakower, along with his solely-owned corporation, Transship Discounts Ltd., pleaded guilty today in federal court in Brooklyn, N.Y., to violating the Lacey Act by mislabeling imported piranhas, announced Acting Assistant Attorney General Robert G. Dreher for the Environment and Natural Resources Division of the Department of Justice and Queens County District Attorney Richard A. Brown.

In the plea agreement, Rakower admitted that his company purchased piranhas from a Hong Kong tropical fish supplier and imported them to Queens, N.Y. Each such import must be accompanied by a packing list describing what wildlife is contained in the package being imported, and the importer must provide this packing list to the United States Fish and Wildlife Service upon import for inspection. In March of 2011, shortly after New York City prohibited possession of piranhas, Rakower instructed the foreign supplier to falsely label the piranhas on packing lists as silver tetras, a common and unaggressive aquarium fish. Over the course of 2011 and 2012, Transship submitted packing lists to the Fish and Wildlife Service containing false identifications of 39,548 piranhas, worth approximately $37,376, which Transship then sold to fish retailers in several states.

“Rakower flouted federal laws meant to protect people and the environment from the illegal trade in wildlife species,†said Acting Assistant Attorney General Dreher. “Mislabeling imported wildlife presents dangers to the public and the environment and we will continue to prosecute these cases.â€

Under the plea agreements, Rakower agreed to pay a $3,000 fine. Transship agreed to serve a two-year period of probation, pay a $35,000 fine and pay $35,000 in restitution to the State of New York’s Department of Environmental Conservation Division of Law Enforcement. Both parties will be sentenced on April 24, 2014.

Piranhas are freshwater fish originating from South American rivers such as the Amazon, Orinoco, Guyana and the Sao Francisco river systems. Piranhas are extremely aggressive and territorial, feeding on insects, fish, and larger prey such as amphibians, reptiles and mammals. As a result of piranhas’ aggressiveness, 25 states have either banned or regulated piranhas, making them illegal to own or sell. Piranhas, an injurious species, could pose a serious risk if they escaped into native water systems, potentially damaging ecosystems through aggressive predation or injuring people or pets. Tropical fish enthusiasts can contribute to this possibility by releasing piranhas into the wild when they grow too large for a tank. Although piranhas originate from tropical waters, they are able to withstand much cooler water temperatures, creating fear that they may even become established in more northern US waters. Effective regulation of piranha possession and sales within the United States depends on accurate reporting of piranha imports; concealing the fish upon import facilitates their entry into the black market in states that have banned or strictly regulated piranhas to protect state waters and ecosystems.

“Driven by greed and without regard for the health and safety of people or the environment, the defendant and his company illegally trafficked in piranha by falsely labeling the imported predatory freshwater fish as being silver tetras, a far more benign fish often kept in home aquariums and having a far less street value than piranha,†said District Attorney Brown. “I thank the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and our federal colleagues – the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the United States Department of Justice’s Environment and Natural Resources Division – for providing a reasonable and appropriate resolution of the case.â€

This case was investigated by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service in conjunction with the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Division of Law Enforcement, and is being prosecuted by Cassandra Barnum, a trial attorney in the Environmental Crimes Section of the U.S. Department of Justice’s Environment and Natural Resources Division.



http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/2014/January/14-enrd-093.html
 

dogofwar

CCA Members
I just got off of the phone with FWS in Miami (in preparation for my Uruguay trip).

These guys broke the law on purpose...and are paying the price. I surprised they're not behind bars.

Matt
 
Crazy to think this guy got 40,000 fish in to the country. Imagine a twisted individual releasing only a fraction of them into native waters in the southern states. Easily enough numbers for them to get a foot hold and run a muck. Or a twisted new type of enviornmental terror, attacks against our natural ecosystems. Just think of the results this could have on our country............

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He was not punished enough. This is why we have snakeheads in the Potomoc and pythons in the glades. Let him plead to a 5 year prison sentence and forfeiture of his company and assets, otherwise just sentence on 39,000 counts of trafficking. If nothing else it will send a message to the rest of industry.
 
He was not punished enough. This is why we have snakeheads in the Potomoc and pythons in the glades. Let him plead to a 5 year prison sentence and forfeiture of his company and assets, otherwise just sentence on 39,000 counts of trafficking. If nothing else it will send a message to the rest of industry.

+1
 

Andrewtfw

Global Moderators
He was not punished enough. This is why we have snakeheads in the Potomoc and pythons in the glades. Let him plead to a 5 year prison sentence and forfeiture of his company and assets, otherwise just sentence on 39,000 counts of trafficking. If nothing else it will send a message to the rest of industry.

Not to start anything, but the majority of the burmese, rock pythons and boas in the glades have had their dna tested and linked to snakes that escaped when the reptile breeding facility they were housed in was destroyed due to a hurricane.
With regards to this piranha case, I agree that greed was the motive. His business should be shut down and he should be forced to spend his life working to remove invasive fish from waterways.
 
ugh, had to re-write this 5 times...

To keep it brief and on point, whoever did the due diligence and approved that facility should fully fund the cleanup. Period. If they can not afford it, that will become their new full time minimum wage job.
 
Unfortunately to the vast majority of people in this country this is just another one of those things thats out of sight out of mind. Never saw this story on any news shows or in any papers. The next guy who's going to fill this guys shoes probably never heard about it either. And so it goes!

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World needs more people cleaning up environmental disasters on the cheap. At some point I can see our hobby (exotics) shutdown.
 

Rasta Fish

Members
He deliberately broke the law i am sure he will think twice again about that
Most everything that comes through the pet trade legally at some point gets into the environment, it will never end
The FL waterways if filled with exotic creatures
 

toddnbecka

Members
Ya, he broke some laws and should pay the price, but they were commercially bred for the trade, not actual "wildlife" collected from their native habitat. I don't see the big deal about importing commercially bred fish then selling them to distributors in other states. NY is worried that they could live in the sewers? Can anyone actually believe their sewer water is clean enough for any fish to live there? Has anyone ever actually documented any fish surviving being flushed, much less then living/growing in the sewer system?
As for snakeheads (and other non-native species) why doesn't anyone ever mention the largemough bass, several species of trout, and another non-native species or two I can't remember off the top of my head that were introduced into MD as game fish. There's also a little-known (not publicized) North American fish called a bowfin that's essentially the same fish, but doesn't grow quite as large as red-line snakeheads.
 
Ok if it wasn't shady buisness why did he lie and decieve the federal government. I agree they couldn't live in ny but its documented they can survive waters temps that are commom in most southern states. The only reason ny was involved was because a huge percentage of all imported goods arrive in ny. I highly doubt they were concerned about them taking over the sewer system or the state for that matter. The fishes point of origin and whether it was bred for the trade is entirely irrelevant the point is that these fish have the potential to destroy a food chain in turn eliminating countless other native animals, not just fish. Any animal introduced as a game fish is scrutinized to ensure such destruction is avoided. After all several species of fish (pike, muskie.....) and mammals would be much better game for hunters and fishermen but we aren't releasing them.

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