BRIEFLY IN THE NEWS Fisherman acquitted of...
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BRIEFLY IN
THE NEWS
Fisherman acquitted of smuggling
The captain and chief engineer of a Taiwanese fishing trawler
accused of smuggling 10 Chinese nationals onto Crystal Cove State
Beach, were acquitted of the charge Monday.
Jin Yinn Wang, the vessel’s captain, and co-defendant Jin Lon Guo
said they were not smugglers and had not been paid $10,000 per person
to bring the 10 into the United States.
A group of partyers last May spotted the men paddling ashore naked
and then getting dressed in suits and baseball hats on the beach.
When taken into custody and questioned by authorities, the men said
they had been held on the trawler in squalid conditions during their
trip across the Pacific.
Wang and Guo said they were fishing for sharks 600 miles off
Hawaii when the 10-member crew turned on them and forced them to
bring the ship to the United States.
Federal prosecutors thought they had a strong case “demonstrating
that these two men were responsible for smuggling these individuals,”
said Thom Mrozek, spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los
Angeles.
“The jury decided there was reasonable doubt,” he said. “We accept
their verdict.”
The 10 men were held as material witnesses and nine of them
testified in the case, Mrozek said. He said all the men have been
turned over to the Immigration and Naturalization Service.
The INS cannot comment on specifics about the case, said Francisco
Arcaute, spokesman for the Bureau of Immigration and Customs
Enforcement.
“Generally, when individuals [who are not legal immigrants] are
done with their legal issues, they are referred to us,” he said. “And
very often, they are sent back to their country of origin.”
-- Deepa Bharath
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