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Witness in lobster case may be missing at sea
BY ADAM LINHARDT Citizen Staff
alinhardt@keysnews.com
Coast Guard crews are searching for an overdue Big Coppitt Key commercial fish dealer who pleaded guilty in an illegal spiny lobster harvesting case last month.
Dennis Dallmeyer, 67, was supposed to return to Stock Island by sunset Tuesday, said Coast Guard Lt. j.g. Max Franco. A Sea Tow crew first found his 25-foot Mako center console with the keys in the ignition after responding to a emergency Coast Guard broadcast late Tuesday night, adrift about eight miles south of Key West near navigational Marker 32, known colloquially as "Toppino," Franco said.
The Coast Guard began searching for cellphone pings in areas where Dallmeyer was known to fish. It then instructed Sea Tow to go a general area where it found recent cellphone activity, Franco said. He added that there was no direct distress call made by Dallmeyer from the boat.
Sea Tow found the Mako taking on water and did not see Dallmeyer, so they left the area, said company dispatcher Tanya Ross.
Dallmeyer was believed to be alone and out for a quick fishing trip, Franco said.
Despite reports of the boat taking on water, the Coast Guard was searching for both Dallmeyer and his boat as of Wednesday afternoon. Whether the boat sank or remained adrift is also under investigation.
"We're actively searching for both," Franco said.
The St. Petersburg-based 87-foot Coast Guard Cutter Alligator and two helicopters from Coast Guard Air Station Miami were taking part in the search, as well as crews from Station Key West, Franco said. A Coast Guard airplane took part early in the search.
A Navy helicopter out of Boca Chica Field was also assisting in the search, said Naval Air Station Key West spokeswoman Trice Denny. The search encompassed more than 780 nautical miles as of Wednesday afternoon.
Dallmeyer is a well-known and experienced lobster, stone crab and fin fish commercial angler who has been fishing out of Stock Island for decades, said Ted Lund, a Key West charter fisherman and member of the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary Advisory Council.
Dallmeyer is also a government witness in an illegal lobster harvesting case after taking a plea agreement with federal prosecutors last year.
He pleaded guilty to conspiracy for his role in the case that also snared three other men -- brothers Charles, Ryan and Tyson Veach. Dallmeyer faces a maximum of five years in prison when he is sentenced on Jan. 27. The Veach brothers case is pending trial.
Dallmeyer was charged with "failing to make accurate and timely reports to the State of Florida of all harvested lobster as required by law, and by fraudulently attributing lobster harvested in excess of the legal daily limit to others who were not party to the lobster harvesting and sales," according to his indictment.
The Lower Keys brothers face allegations of harvesting spiny lobsters from illegal habitat, also know as casitas, catching more than their daily commercial bag limit and falsifying commercial fishing reports to conceal their take, according to court records.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Watts-Fitzgerald, the prosecutor in the case, could not be reached for comment Wednesday.
alinhardt@keysnews.com
BY ADAM LINHARDT Citizen Staff
alinhardt@keysnews.com
Coast Guard crews are searching for an overdue Big Coppitt Key commercial fish dealer who pleaded guilty in an illegal spiny lobster harvesting case last month.
Dennis Dallmeyer, 67, was supposed to return to Stock Island by sunset Tuesday, said Coast Guard Lt. j.g. Max Franco. A Sea Tow crew first found his 25-foot Mako center console with the keys in the ignition after responding to a emergency Coast Guard broadcast late Tuesday night, adrift about eight miles south of Key West near navigational Marker 32, known colloquially as "Toppino," Franco said.
The Coast Guard began searching for cellphone pings in areas where Dallmeyer was known to fish. It then instructed Sea Tow to go a general area where it found recent cellphone activity, Franco said. He added that there was no direct distress call made by Dallmeyer from the boat.
Sea Tow found the Mako taking on water and did not see Dallmeyer, so they left the area, said company dispatcher Tanya Ross.
Dallmeyer was believed to be alone and out for a quick fishing trip, Franco said.
Despite reports of the boat taking on water, the Coast Guard was searching for both Dallmeyer and his boat as of Wednesday afternoon. Whether the boat sank or remained adrift is also under investigation.
"We're actively searching for both," Franco said.
The St. Petersburg-based 87-foot Coast Guard Cutter Alligator and two helicopters from Coast Guard Air Station Miami were taking part in the search, as well as crews from Station Key West, Franco said. A Coast Guard airplane took part early in the search.
A Navy helicopter out of Boca Chica Field was also assisting in the search, said Naval Air Station Key West spokeswoman Trice Denny. The search encompassed more than 780 nautical miles as of Wednesday afternoon.
Dallmeyer is a well-known and experienced lobster, stone crab and fin fish commercial angler who has been fishing out of Stock Island for decades, said Ted Lund, a Key West charter fisherman and member of the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary Advisory Council.
Dallmeyer is also a government witness in an illegal lobster harvesting case after taking a plea agreement with federal prosecutors last year.
He pleaded guilty to conspiracy for his role in the case that also snared three other men -- brothers Charles, Ryan and Tyson Veach. Dallmeyer faces a maximum of five years in prison when he is sentenced on Jan. 27. The Veach brothers case is pending trial.
Dallmeyer was charged with "failing to make accurate and timely reports to the State of Florida of all harvested lobster as required by law, and by fraudulently attributing lobster harvested in excess of the legal daily limit to others who were not party to the lobster harvesting and sales," according to his indictment.
The Lower Keys brothers face allegations of harvesting spiny lobsters from illegal habitat, also know as casitas, catching more than their daily commercial bag limit and falsifying commercial fishing reports to conceal their take, according to court records.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Watts-Fitzgerald, the prosecutor in the case, could not be reached for comment Wednesday.
alinhardt@keysnews.com