Originally published October 5, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified October 5, 2007 at 2:03 AM
Five Makah whalers charged
A federal grand jury returned misdemeanor indictments Thursday against all five men arrested in the killing of a gray whale in early September...
Seattle Times staff reporter
A federal grand jury returned misdemeanor indictments Thursday against all five men arrested in the killing of a gray whale in early September.
According to the indictment, the whalers sought weapons and ammunition from the Makah Tribe the day before the hunt, claiming they wanted them for practice. The whalers also got permission to get a 12-foot boat from the tribe and obtained a large buoy from a Makah tribal employee.
The next morning the five men set out in two boats, encountered a gray whale and struck it with at least four harpoons, the indictment said. They then attached four buoys to the whale and shot it at least 16 times with high-powered weapons obtained from the Makah Whaling Commission.
According to the indictment, the fatally injured whale swam nine miles. About 12 hours after it was struck, it died and sank in about 700 feet of water.
The five men have been summoned to appear in federal court in Tacoma Oct. 12.
The men charged are: Frankie Gonzales, Wayne Johnson, Andrew Noel, Theron Parker and William Secor. All are charged with conspiracy, unlawful taking of a marine mammal and unauthorized whaling.
"The charges brought today are the most serious available to the government in this case," U.S. Attorney Jeffrey Sullivan said in a prepared statement.
Said Naomi Rose, marine-mammal scientist for the Humane Society of the United States: "We welcome these charges; we think they are what should have happened. These are strong charges, with the maximum penalty the law allows. What we need to do now is wait and see what happens."
The federal prosecution does not take the place of tribal action against the whalers, said John Arum, an attorney for the tribe. "The tribe has promised prosecution to the fullest extent of the law, and it intends to do that," Arum said.
If convicted under federal law, the whalers could face up to a year in jail and a fine of up to $100,000. Under tribal law, the whalers could serve up to a year in jail, pay up to a $5,000 fine and face suspension of their treaty right to fish for up to three years.
Makah Tribal Council member Micah McCarty said tribal authorities are eager to get on with trying the case, but they have been held up, waiting for federal officials to finish their work. Federal authorities have all the most pertinent evidence in the case and won't turn it over to the tribe until the federal case is concluded.
"Any jury of their peers would say, 'OK, where is the evidence?' " McCarty said. "We are patiently waiting. Our timelines are connected at the hip with the federal timelines. Initially, we thought we would be in lock-step cooperation and it became a one-way street pretty quickly. The tribal prosecution doesn't have the strongest case without the evidence they are holding.
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"We are kind of in a Catch-22 situation."
Jim Oesterle, assistant U.S. attorney for environmental crimes, said the investigation is continuing, and he was not sure when it would conclude.
Tribal leaders have been impatient to get on with the case, McCarty said, because of pressure in Washington, D.C., from anti-whaling interests arguing the tribe isn't really going to prosecute its own.
The tribe needs political support in Washington, where it is seeking a federal waiver from the Marine Mammal Protection Act to allow legal hunts in the future. The illegal hunt has set that effort back, Arum said. Vicki Nomura, special agent in charge of the National Marine Fisheries Service, confirmed the rogue hunt could delay the tribe's press for a waiver, in the works for years.
"This just puts further pressure for holding a treaty right hostage until these five Makah men see their day in court," McCarty said. "It reflects on the integrity of the U.S. trust responsibility. This just wraps a whole people in a situation that shouldn't have had to come to this."
The tribe has a right to whale, guaranteed in its treaty of 1855 with the U.S. government. Whaler Wayne Johnson has said he was tired of waiting for the waiver, and decided to go out and hunt a whale, as his ancestors always had, and as the treaty allows.
Johnson has said repeatedly since the hunt that he didn't regret his actions. But he was more circumspect Thursday.
"I got three counts against me," Johnson said. "I'm a little worried, of course."
Lynda V. Mapes: 206-464-2736 or lmapes@seattletimes.com
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company
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