He'd still be driving the Bronco if it were Carp.
Man fined $2,400 for selling illegal salmon out of back of truck
By Neal Hall, Vancouver SunApril 6, 2011
Vancouver -- A man caught selling First Nations sockeye salmon out of the back of a truck in East Vancouver has been handed a $2,400 fine and won't get his Ford Bronco back until the fine is paid in full.
Larry Steven Totolewski, 61, was caught by a fisheries officer selling the sockeye salmon out of the back of a truck at Kitchener and Victoria Drive on Aug. 26, 2009.
He said he had been given 60 fish by a First Nations "friend" living on the Musqueam reserve in Vancouver, but was unable to use all the fish, so he decided to sell about 40.
Salmon caught during a native fishery opening on the Fraser are only supposed to be used for food, social or ceremonial purposes, not commercial sales.
Because of the poor return of sockeye that year, there were no commercial or recreational openings for sockeye salmon on the Fraser.
Totolewski was found to have 53 fish in a tub containing ice and a sign on his truck that said:'Fresh Sockeye.'
He was charging $20 a fish. He said his friend gave him the fish in trade for an expensive leather jacket that no longer fit him because he had lost weight because of illness.
The friend was supposed to do a bear carving for the jacket but one of the legs of the bear broke, so it was never finished, he said.
Instead, the friend paid in fish, said Totolewski, who pleaded guilty to unlawfully selling sockeye salmon from the Fraser River, an offence under the Fisheries Act.
The Crown asked the judge to impose a $2,500 fine and forfeiture of the 1989 Ford Bronco, worth an estimated $2,500.
The defence suggested a $500 fine and no forfeiture of the truck, which was seized earlier.
Vancouver Provincial Court Judge Frances Howard imposed a $2,400 fine, to be paid at $200 month.
Once the fine is paid, Totolewski can get his truck back, the judge decided.
nhall@vancouversun.com© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun