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Alaska fisher could get 6 months in prison after attempting to kill sperm whale

a whale
A sperm whale is seen in an undated photo published by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. (NOAA photo)

Federal prosecutors  are recommending that an Alaska fisher serve six months in prison, pay a $25,000 fine and be banned from commercial fishing for a year after lying about fishing catches and trying to kill an endangered sperm whale.

Dugan Paul Daniels  pleaded guilty to a federal misdemeanor earlier this year, and prosecutors released their sentencing recommendation on Tuesday.

According to court documents, Daniels became infuriated in March 2020 when a whale began taking fish from his longline fishing gear and damaging equipment.

This kind of behavior  has been seen for decades across Alaska’s coast, but prosecutors say this is the first time in Alaska that a fisher has attempted to kill a whale in retaliation, and it may be the first time nationally.

“Daniels’ behavior evidences a total disrespect for whales and the laws that protect them,” prosecutors wrote.

According to messages sent on his GPS unit, Daniels directed a crew member to shoot the whale, tried to ram it with his fishing boat, then tried to kill it by reeling in his fishing gear while the whale was trapped in it.

In one message, Daniels wrote that he “wish(ed) (he) had a cannon to blow the f***** out of the water.”

After one of his message recipients warned Daniels that killing a whale was a federal offense, he replied, “the feds are shut down and I don’t care.” 

That was a reference to the COVID-19 emergency closure of offices in March 2020, at the time of the messages.

Federal officials don’t know whether Daniels successfully killed the whale. No dead sperm whales were seen in Southeast Alaska at the time of the incident. Regardless, prosecutors say, the incident qualifies as “taking” an endangered whale, in violation of the Endangered Species Act.

Prosecutors are asking that in addition to the fine and prison term, that Daniels be sentenced to community service and supervised release for three years. If he resumes commercial fishing after his one-year ban, prosecutors ask that he be subject to additional monitoring.

The sentence has been referred to magistrate Matthew McCrary Scoble for consideration.

Alaska Beacon is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Alaska Beacon maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Andrew Kitchenman for questions: info@alaskabeacon.com. Follow Alaska Beacon on Facebook and X.