Who was involved & where it happened
A commercial master based at Lakes Entrance (Vic) pleaded guilty in the Bairnsdale Magistrates’ Court (15 January 2025) to four offences: two counts of mistreating shark bycatch, landing an illegal catch of Australian salmon from a no-take zone/licence, and failing to keep an accurate logbook. AFMA built the brief with electronic monitoring (EM) footage from the vessel. AFMA
What happened (facts & timeline)
- 15 May 2023: EM captured the master stabbing an angel shark repeatedly before discarding it—forming one mistreatment count. AFMA
- 19 May 2023: The e-log omitted five discarded sharks—forming the inaccurate reporting charge. AFMA
- 20 May 2023: The vessel unloaded Australian salmon taken from waters adjacent to Victoria/Tasmania where the species was no-take under the relevant licence—forming the illegal catch count. AFMA
- 8 June 2023: EM recorded the master forcing open the mouth of a Port Jackson shark with a device before returning it—forming the second mistreatment count. AFMA
- 22 Jan 2025 (media release): The court convicted the master and imposed $4,000 in fines plus costs. AFMA
The legal issues
- Bycatch welfare obligations: Commonwealth fisheries rules govern how bycatch must be treated and recorded—mistreatment is chargeable in its own right. EM provides objective evidence. AFMA
- No-take species/licence conditions: Australian salmon was no-take for this operation in the relevant waters; licence conditions are binding and can vary across borders and seasons. AFMA
- Record-keeping accuracy: E-log entries must faithfully record catch and discards; omissions are an offence and often uncovered by cross-checking EM. AFMA
Outcome & remedies
- Convictions + $4,000 in fines and costs. AFMA emphasised that mistreatment and reporting failures will be pursued, and that penalties can be significant. AFMA
How this could have been avoided
- Crew training on bycatch handling: Make species ID & handling part of every pre-season induction. Reinforce humane, quick-release methods (e.g., de-hooking tools, careful support, minimal air exposure). AFMA
- EM-aligned logging practice: After each haul, reconcile e-log entries with the EM timeline; institute a “discard double-check” step before transmission. AFMA
- Licence map cards: Produce waterproof licence-condition cue cards at the helm—especially for bordering waters (Vic/Tas)—flagging no-take species per method/licence. AFMA
Lessons for wild-catch operators
- Your cameras will testify. EM footage now routinely underpins prosecutions; assume every interaction with bycatch may be reviewed. AFMA
- Welfare is compliance. Humane treatment isn’t just ethics—it’s law. Improper handling of angel and Port Jackson sharks turned into separate charges. AFMA
- Discard data matters. Missing five sharks from an e-log was enough to support a reporting offence. Accuracy beats speed. AFMA
- Know your “no-take” in shared waters. Australian salmon status changed with licence/water adjacency; misreads become “illegal catch” counts. AFMA
A simple on-board compliance routine
- Before lines/pots in: Skipper reads out today’s constraints (no-take species, trip limits, park edges) and assigns a “logbook buddy.”
- During haul: Logbook buddy calls discards while deck leads best-practice handling.
- After haul: 90-second EM-to-log cross-check: tally discards; confirm no-take species handling; sign off before next set/shot.
- End of day: Export EM timestamps and e-log receipt to a cloud folder for quick retrieval if AFMA queries.
Social media posts
- LinkedIn: EM footage doesn’t blink. A Lakes Entrance master copped convictions for shark mistreatment, illegal salmon, and missing e-log entries. Train for humane handling + log what you discard. #AFMA #Bycatch #eLogs #WildCatch #Compliance AFMA
- X: Cameras roll, courts read. Treat bycatch right and log every discard. #FisheriesLaw #Bycatch #Sharks #AustralianSalmon AFMA
- Facebook: From “no-take” to “illegal catch” is a short step if you don’t check licence conditions across borders. #KnowYourLicence #AFMA #CommercialFishing AFMA
Bonus context (for your newsletter intros or sidebars)
- AFMA’s 2024–25 enforcement picture: 273 Indonesian nationals prosecuted for illegal foreign fishing in that financial year—>3× the year prior—with fines totalling $359k plus imprisonment in some cases. It’s a clear signal on cross-border deterrence and cooperation with ABF/MBC and Indonesian authorities. AFMA



