nwsportsmanmag.com | AUGUST 2019 Northwest Sportsman 35
By Andy Walgamott
MIXED BAG
Egregious Sekiu
Salmon Poacher Fined
J
OTM stays in
Colorado this
issue with news
that a man who
has had his license
privileges suspended
twice before has now
had them revoked for
life throughout nearly
the entire United States.
Jeff Bodnar, 46, was stripped of his
fishing, hunting and trapping rights in late
JACKASS OF THE MONTH
A
n angler who egregiously violated
Washington’s salmon regulations
last summer was sentenced to
pay more than $3,200 in fines, and he also
forfeited his boat.
Mark Heinemann, 75, of Bainbridge
Island was caught fishing alone off Sekiu
with six lines out – all baited with lures
with barbed hooks – off two downriggers,
claimed he had only caught one fish but
was eventually found to be way over his
limit with 10 – half of which were also
illegal to retain wild salmon – and hadn’t
marked anything down on his punch card.
WDFW Region 6 Capt. Dan Chadwick
said Heinemann’s fishing setups looked
like what you might find on a commercial
boat, though added there wasn’t any
evidence he was selling his catch.
In February, Heineman was convicted
of 10 counts in Clallam County District
Court, including criminal charges for
possessing four wild coho and a king
during a closed season, exceeding the bag
limit on hatchery coho by three fish, and
failing to record any of his catch. Another
10 charges were dropped, Chadwick said.
Heinemann’s 23-foot Maxum Cabin
Cruiser, worth approximately $5,000, was
initially seized at the dock and he later
did not contest its forfeiture to the state,
according to WDFW.
While there are some Washington
waters that an angler can run two lines for
salmon with the second rod endorsement,
Sekiu is not one of them because it’s a
mixed-stock fishery.
Barbless hooks are also required on all
of the state’s marine waters for salmon.
Neither wild Chinook nor wild coho
were open at the time as well. Heinemann’s
fines included civil penalties of up to $500
for each unclipped salmon he kept.
HEINEMANN AND HIS boat were spotted
on Tuesday, Aug. 28, during a joint Clallam
County Sheriff ’s Office-WDFW patrol of the
western Strait of Juan de Fuca.
Officers noticed that he had two
downriggers deployed, the second without
an accompanying rod or another angler.
When they asked Heinemann to reel up
his gear for inspection, he brought in the
line of the rod attached to one downrigger,
but left the ball down.
So they asked him to bring it up, and
he began to but stopped part way, so they
had to ask again, after which he complied
“reluctantly,” according to WDFW.
As it came up, Heinemann unclipped
a leader from the cable and officers saw
it had a bungee attached to a flasher and
lure, as did a second that came up.
On the rodless downrigger were three
more bungee-flasher-lure rigs off the cable.
“I’ve been on the marine unit since
- I’ve done thousands of boardings in
that time. I’ve never seen somebody run
that kind of gear off of a recreational boat,”
Clallam County Sheriff ’s Office Sergeant
Eric Munger told the Peninsula Daily News.
Heinemann volunteered that he had
kept one hatchery coho, which he showed
to the officers, though he hadn’t put it on
his catch card.
Between the good bite in the Straits
at the time, all the gear he had down and
his claim to have only one fish, the officers
were a bit suspicious.
WDFW Officer Bryan Davidson asked
him again if he had any more salmon to
show, and after Heinemann denied it,
Davidson advised him that he thought
there were in fact more on the boat.
From the cabin Heinemann brought out
two garbage bags containing nine more
salmon, most of which had been cleaned.
Game wardens have suggested this
probably wasn’t Heinemann’s first try at
running all the lines, but what led him to
decide to break the rules so spectacularly
that day isn’t clear. He didn’t respond to
multiple efforts to contact him.
June by the state’s wildlife commission
after pleading guilty to unlawfully
possessing a pair of bears and a cougar, as
well as being a felon with a gun.
Previously they’d been suspended
for a 2008 case involving Bodnar trying
to sell poached bobcats out of state, a
Lacey Act violation for which he received
more than two years in a federal prison
(and which landed July’s JOTM in hot
water too). Even as his privileges were still
under suspension, he began hunting and
trapping again, according to state officials.
“Mr. Bodnar appears to possess a
complete disregard for Colorado’s hunting
laws and a total indifference for wildlife,”
said game warden Ian Petkash. “We take
these investigations seriously because of
the toll someone like this can take on local
wildlife populations.”
If Bodnar violates his ban – effective
in all 48 states of the Interstate Violator
Compact – he faces fines up to $10,000
and as much as three more months in jail.
Just doesn’t seem worth it, but
jackasses will be jackasses.
WDFW Officer Bryan Davidson poses with the boat,
trailer, downriggers, fishing rod and flasher-lure
combos seized following an at-sea inspection of
Mark Heinemann’s boat last August that turned up
egregious fishing rules violations. (WDFW)