A man in Florida was sentenced to dolphins to the fishing lines that were filmed from the boats he was running with 30 days in prison and one year of the supervision release.
Zakri Brandon Parfield, 31, not only fired on the beggar dolphins, but also used the poisoned taste after they felt frustrated to eat from rented fish fishing agents, according to public prosecutors, who said that the crimes occurred in 2022 and 2023.
Prosecutors and federal law enforcement with the National Oceanic and Air Force Administration said that Parfield shot five dolphins, killing at least one, and used the poisoned taste on dozens during the outskirts of Panama.
“He knew the regulations that protect the dolphins, however they killed them anyway – once in front of the children,” said Federal Public Prosecutor Adam Gustagonon. In a statement.
Parfield lawyer did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Saturday.
Prosecutors said that Parfield opened the fire while two children of primary school were on board, separately, while more than ten fishermen were on boats running them.
They said he used the poisoned taste wonderfully.
“Barphield is fed by 24-70 toxins full of rented trips,” Fisheries in Nawa said in a separate statement on Friday.
NOAA fisheries said it had launched an investigation into the Parfield in 2023 after one of its law enforcement agents received advice that he was killing dolphins.
In an agreement with federal lawyers who acknowledged that he was guilty on two charges of illegal navigation and one charge of prohibited use of pest pesticide, Berfield admitted that the government’s narration of his crimes is correct.
The statement said on Friday from the US Prosecutor’s Office for the Northern Region in Florida that Parfield is angry at the dolphin to eat on the red echo from the fishing lines for his customers.
NOAA fisheries quoted the defendant as telling the application of the law as “frustrating from the theft of dolphins” hunting “, as stated by the agency.
The US Public Prosecutor’s Office said: “He started putting metommel into bait fish to poison the dolphins that appeared near his boat,” the US Public Prosecutor’s Office said.
Pesticides were used in about half of pesticides, NOAA fisheries claimed.
The US Public Prosecutor’s Office said: “Parfield has realized Sumaya Metomel and its impact on the environment, but he continued to feed the poisoned taste fish for dolphins for several months.”
Prosecutors said that Parfield used the Remington Wingy Master 12 to photograph animals. Mammals outside the border under the Law on Marine Mammary Protection.
The National Office for the Service of Fisheries of Law enforcement of the Venice, which will be lost under the guilt confession agreement, according to the court documents.
Although Judge Judge Michael J. Frank, Parfield was sentenced to 30 days in prison for each of the three charges in which he acknowledged that he was guilty, has been ordered to serve time for each simultaneous, or in one extension for 30 days, according to NOAA fisheries.
He was also ordered to pay a fine of $ 51,000.