B.C. sea cucumber poacher gets six-year sentence for ‘ravaging the ocean’
A British Columbia judge has sentenced a man with the longest record of Fisheries Act violations in Canadian history to six years in prison for “ravaging the ocean and flouting the law.”
Scott Steer and his co-accused corporation faced eight charges including fishing in a closed area without a licence, selling more than $1 million worth of illegally harvested sea cucumbers and breaching an earlier order forbidding him from possessing fishing vessels.
Steer’s co-accused in the case was a numbered company owned by his wife, Melissa Steer, but the company was found to be a “sham.”
B.C. Supreme Court Justice David Crerar in Nanaimo said in his ruling that Steer has a “remarkably long record” of fisheries violations and other offences dating back more than a decade, and short stints in jail have “wholly failed to deter or rehabilitate” him.


