Any person who sells or offers for sale fish or shellfish not recorded on his or her fish ticket is guilty of a class A offense. The time limit to record sale on a fish ticket shall be set by regulation.
(Res. 94 A 109, 7/12/1994; amended to reference the regulations for manner of reporting catch by Res. 06 A 067, 9/19/2006; Res. 20 A 071, 7/28/2020, amended this section to clarify the difference between failing to report on a fish ticket and failure to report to the monitor.)
[1]
Cross Reference: Section 17.07.01 (h) “Beach Sales”.
Any person who:
(1) 
Fails to fill out his or her fish ticket completely and accurately and sign his or her fish ticket; or
(2) 
Allows another to fill out his or her fish ticket with incomplete or inaccurate information,
is guilty of a class C offense. The fisherman’s signature on a fish ticket constitutes an affirmation that the information on the fish ticket is correct.
(Res. 94 A 109, 7/12/1994)
Any person who:
(1) 
Fails to present to the buyer at the time of sale of fish or shellfish his or her embossed Tribal Fishing Identification Card or other embossed card required by this Code or regulations; or
(2) 
Allows his or her fish ticket to be filled out without the imprint from the buyer’s valid, embossed Washington State fish buyer’s card or fish buyer’s card required by the Tribe,
is guilty of a class C offense.
(Res. 94 A 109, 7/12/1994)
Any person who engages in non-commercial fishing or shellfishing activity and fails to fill out and return a Subsistence/Catch Reporting Card or harvest log before leaving the beach or immediately upon returning to shore, or who fails to return the Card to the Tribal Fisheries Department by December 31, or earlier if required by emergency regulation, is guilty of a class D offense.
(Res. 94 A 109, 7/12/1994; Res. 18 A 148, 12/17/2018, added language into this section that cards must be filled out before leaving the beach or immediately upon returning to shore.)
Any person who fails to report his or her catch to a monitor when there is a monitor present and the regulations require reporting is guilty of a class C offense.
(Res. 20 A 071, 7/28/2020, created this section to clarify the difference between failing to report on a fish ticket and failure to report to the monitor.)