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Members Of Well-Known Seafood Company Arraigned On Conspiracy, Fraud, Obstruction Charges

Two members of a prominent Long Island seafood company have pleaded not guilty to conspiracy and obstruction charges in federal court for allegedly conspiring to illegally harvest and sell fish caught above legal limits.

Fisherman Christopher Winkler, 61, Bryan Gosman, 48, Asa Gosman, 45, all of Montauk, and Bob Gosman Co. Inc. were charged for allegedly illegally harvesting and selling fish.

Fisherman Christopher Winkler, 61, Bryan Gosman, 48, Asa Gosman, 45, all of Montauk, and Bob Gosman Co. Inc. were charged for allegedly illegally harvesting and selling fish.

Photo Credit: Facebook/@GosmansDock

Bryan Gosman, age 48, Asa Gosman, age 45, of Montauk, members of the management team of Bob Gosman Co. Inc., pleaded not guilty this week after being charged by a federal grand jury for conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud and obstruction in connection with a scheme to illegally over-harvest fluke and black sea bass.

Both men were released on $100,000 signature bonds and had their travel restricted to the continental United States.

Both Gosman's and Bob Gosman Co. Inc., “acting through its agents and employees, were also charged with obstructing the investigation into these crimes by corruptly withholding certain documents and records sought by a federal grand jury.”

According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, between May 2014 and July 2016, Winkler, as captain of the New Age, went on approximately 70 fishing trips where he caught fluke or black sea bass in excess of applicable quotas.

It is alleged those fish were then sold to a now-defunct company in the New Fulton Fish Market in the Bronx, where both Asa Gosman and Bryan Gosman had an ownership interest.

After the Bronx company went under, fisherman Christopher Winkler sold a smaller quantity of his illegal catch directly to Bob Gosman Co. Inc., a Montauk fish dealer in which the Gosman's had a management role.

Prosecutors said that the overages of fish included at least 74,000 pounds of fluke, and the overall over-quota fish (of all species) were valued at least $250,000 wholesale.

The indictment also alleges that the three also falsified documents that were sent to NOAA in an attempt to cover up the fact that the fish sold and purchased were taken in excess of mandated quotas.

Check back to Daily Voice for updates on the case. 

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