[Yet another reason to never financially support fisherman! Rick.]
   
   
  Sea Shepherd News
News Releases

12/19/2006

    Boys Will be Boys, Even When They Are Eco-Terrorists
   
  The double standards in the enforcement of the laws concerning wildlife are 
amazing.
   
  When we approach a seal killer on the ice with a camera in Eastern Canada we 
are arrested, roughed up, jailed, fined, and called criminals.
  You see, a person doing something like that is viewed as an eco-terrorist by 
the courts.
   
  This week, the courts in Australia slapped a fisherman on the wrist for 
shooting up to 100 endangered seals in a wildlife preserve, destroying 
property, discharging weapons in a national park, endangering human life, and 
discharging a weapon while under the influence of alcohol.
  This cold-blooded killer and his accomplice were observed by frightened 
University students laughing, drinking, and jeering as the heads of fleeing 
seals exploded and the bay filled with the blood of the fourth most rare 
species of seal in the world. 
   
   
  You see this person was just having fun. The courts are more tolerant of 
violence for fun than documentation of violence for a cause.

  Paul Goodwin, 30, was the captain of a shark fishing boat in August 2006 when 
he mass slaughtered up to 100 rare fur seals on Kanowna Island within Wilson 
Promontory in southeast Victoria, Australia. 
  At the time he was arrested he claimed he shot the seals to protect his 
catch. He and his accomplice fired over 100 shots over a period of an hour. 
Forty seal bodies were recovered. All of the shooting took place in a national 
park where fishing was not allowed. Hs accomplice was his deckhand Damien 
Hislop, 19, of Newhaven.
   
   
  Goodwin pleaded guilty in Korumburra Magistrates Court to nine charges 
including reckless conduct endangering human life, hunting notable wildlife, 
destroying notable wildlife, and hunting protected wildlife.
   
   
  University students on the island, conducting a study, testified that they 
saw Goodwin and a co-accused person drinking beer, laughing, and cheering as 
they shot at the seals coming out of the water.
  The students said they heard 100 shots fired at seals over an hour and they 
feared for their lives.
   
   
  Goodwin's lawyer Chris Carr attempted to impress the court by presenting him 
as a model fisherman, explaining that he was the poster boy for the commercial 
fishing community of Australia.
  Mr. Carr reported that Goodwin was extremely remorseful for his actions and 
horrified to discover there were people on the island and that he had impacted 
on their research project.
   
   
  Of course, he was horrified that there were people on the island. That was 
because he was caught. He did not think anyone would be there to witness his 
crime. He did not express any remorse for the lives of the endangered seals he 
so ruthlessly snuffed out.
   
  Magistrate Steven Raleigh described his behaviour as abhorrent and said any 
right-minded person would feel the same yet he sentenced him to a mere 
six-month intensive correction order meaning he does not go to jail, fined him 
$5,000, and ordered him to do community service. The maximum sentence was five 
years for the offences.
   
   
  Prosecutor Marie Fidone said that following the incident, the seal colony on 
the island was so badly disturbed the majority of the animals did not return to 
the island, $50,000 worth of tagging equipment used on the seals was lost, and 
the University  research project was severely compromised.
   
  Mr. Raleigh said he recognized Goodwin had no prior convictions, was 
remorseful, and had been punished in other ways for his behaviour. According to 
the lawyer for Goodwin his client’s life has been destroyed, his fishing career 
ended, and he has received death threats and hate mail.
   
  His accomplice Damien Hislop will appear in March next year to answer 
charges.Outside the court, Detective Senior Constable Mick Harvey said, “As far 
as I'm concerned, it was a cowardly act and it was irresponsible."
  This light sentence illustrates yet again that those who make a living 
destroying life are given special dispensation by the court while those who 
struggle to protect life are vilified and punished severely by the courts.
   
   
  “It’s a double standard,” said Captain Paul Watson. “For more than thirty 
years I have seen this pattern over and over again. Save a life and go to jail, 
take a life and pay a small fine or do community service. No wonder so many 
people disrespect the courts.”
   
   
  Source >  http://www.seashepherd.org/news/media_061219_1.html
    

Note from WAR:  Sea Shepherd Conservation Society has valiantly fought to 
protect and defend the wildlife that live in the seas. They work hard to 
investigate violations and enforce international maritime laws.  Recently SSCS 
launched Operation Leviathan tasked with defending the whales of Antarctica 
from Japanese whalers.  Please take a moment to visit the Operation Leviathan 
webpage and while you are there look for the "donate now" button at the bottom 
of the page.

http://www.seashepherd.org/leviathan/ 
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