April 19, 2012
Shetland Catch Limited has admitted involvements in illegal landings of fish at its processing plant in Lerwick between January 2002 and March 2005.
A confiscation hearing at the High Court in Edinburgh taking place this week is expected to go on for several days.
Judge Lord Turnbull was told that Shetland Catch was fighting an attempt by the Crown to seize GBP6 million (US9.6 million), but the company cannot be fined until the matter of compensation has been resolved, BBC reports.
Advocate depute, Barry Divers, said that was the sum the company had earned from the black fish scam and which made up more than a third of Shetland Catch's profits during the years it was engaging in illegal operations, Shetland Times reports.
While Defence QC David Burns agreed that the scheme had helped the firm make profits from illegal landings of mackerel and herring, he noted that Shetland Catch had also paid tax on those illegal earnings.
The fish processing firm also claims that once the scam was revealed, the company went into the red when quotas were cut in following years. As such, annual profits exceeding GBP 3 million (US$4.8 million) became losses of more than GBP 2 million (US$3.2 million).
"A quota claw-back had a direct and initially catastrophic effect," concluded a report by Shetland Catch's accountants.
The total allegedly amounted to close to GBP11 million (US$17.6 million).
"There was no benefit because of the effects of quota payback and other issues," said Burns.
Burns said the court should also consider the thousands lost when Shetland Catch was closed down for three days during the investigation, plus the costs of re-structuring the company due to the losses.
Last February, 17 Scottish skippers and a processing firm were fine for taking part in the UK's biggest fraud involving illegal fish landings.










