
Captain nets 4th fishing charge
Date: Saturday, July 29 @ 22:43:49 EDT Topic: Guppies fishing report
The
story below is cut and pasted from the Baltimore Sun:
Captain
nets 4th fishing charge
Illegal
bass found at Harrison's plant
By
Candus Thomson and Chris Guy
Sun
Reporters
Originally
published July 28, 2006
TILGHMAN
ISLAND // A
flamboyant Chesapeake
Bay
charter captain and Eastern Shore entrepreneur who already has three fishing-law
violations on his record has been charged with another offense against
Maryland's state fish.
Maryland
Natural Resources Police said yesterday that an officer caught Levin
"Buddy" Harrison III, 72, of Tilghman Island with undersize striped
bass at his seafood processing plant last Friday afternoon.
The
officer, acting on an anonymous tip, went to the plant, which is typically
where the catch is taken for cleaning after a charter fishing trip. The
officer measured the fish and found 31 to be below the state minimum, said
Capt. Adrian Baker.
Maryland recreational fishing regulations set a daily allowance of two striped
bass between 18 inches and 28 inches, or one at that length and another larger
than 28 inches. Baker said he did not know the length of the fish in
Harrison's possession.
Reached at his restaurant yesterday, Harrison declined to comment. If found
guilty of the misdemeanor charge, he could be fined $280.
According to police and court records, Harrison, who at one time served on a
state advisory board on striped bass fishing, has been fined for violating
state fishing regulations three times in the last 13 years. Yet each page of
his Web site prominently displays Maryland's striped bass size regulations.
Harrison has been a charter captain for 50 years, with an empire that includes
the processing plant, a 90-room inn, a 300-seat restaurant and a fleet of more
than a dozen fishing boats. His family is the largest private land owner on
the 3-mile long island.
His son, Levin Harrison IV, was a Talbot County commissioner from 1998 to 2002
and is running for his old seat this year.
Nicknamed "Boss Hogg," Harrison is a larger-than-life figure, who
wears huge gold chains and rings, a jewel-encrusted Rolex and snakeskin shoes.
A few years ago, he swapped his gold Cadillac for a camouflaged Hummer and
traded in his 50-foot charter boat, Buddy Plan, for a 62-foot vessel, Capt.
Buddy.
In the late 1980s, he and several partners built the $20 million Harrison's
Pier V at the Inner
Harbor.
The city took over the waterfront property in 1994 after the partnership
defaulted on $11.45 million in unpaid loans and taxes.
The family's roots are deep in Tilghman Island's soil. They came from England
in the 1700s and settled on the shore of Dogwood Harbor to fish and harvest
oysters. Harrison's Chesapeake House opened in 1934 on the site of the family
homestead. Over the years, it has attracted presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt,
Harry S. Truman and Bill Clinton as well as Sen. Barry Goldwater.
The walls of his restaurant are covered with autographed photographs and
letters of thanks from politicians and sports figures, including Sen. Barbara
A. Mikulski, Orioles Hall of Fame third baseman Brooks
Robinson
and Comptroller William Donald Schaefer.
Harrison led a flotilla of boats filled with reporters and photographers to
the mouth of the Choptank River in June so that Boog Powell, the former Oriole
star, could release a tagged striped bass for the start of the state's annual
fishing tournament.
In 1993, Harrison was found guilty of possession of striped bass out of season
and fined $3,500, with $1,500 suspended. Schaefer, then governor, wrote a
letter to the judge praising Harrison's character, and then-Natural Resources
Secretary Dr. Torrey C. Brown was a witness for the defense, court records
show.
Harrison also was fined for illegal possession of striped bass in 1999 and
2000.
candy.thomson@baltsun.com chris.guy@baltsun.com
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