The Day

Crustacean defamation? Maine lobstermen sue

- By TIMOTHY BELLA

A group of lobstermen is heading to court in the hope of resolving an issue that they claim has endangered their American market: lobster defamation.

Months after a California aquarium and conservati­on group recommende­d that seafood consumers avoid buying and eating American lobster, Maine industry groups are arguing that lobster, which is mostly harvested in that state, should not have been boycotted.

A coalition of organizati­ons, including the Maine Lobstermen’s Associatio­n and the Maine Coast Fishermen’s Associatio­n, filed the defamation suit Monday against the Monterey Bay Aquarium Foundation after it placed the American lobster, a species found on the Atlantic coast that makes up most of the U.S. market, on its “red list” of seafood for consumers to avoid in September.

Seafood Watch, the conservati­on group operated by the aquarium, made the move because of the threat posed to right whales by fishing gear entangleme­nt used to harvest lobster. Only an estimated 340 right whales are left in the North Atlantic.

In the lawsuit, the groups allege that portraying the Maine lobster industry as a threat to whales is false and defamatory. The “red list” distinctio­n caused stores like Whole Foods and restaurant­s like the Cheesecake Factory to no longer sell lobster caught in Maine, the lawsuit says. In addition to the aquarium’s “red list” title, the Marine Stewardshi­p Council, a major seafood guide, also suspended the Maine lobster industry’s sustainabi­lity certificat­ion due to concerns for the whales.

The 37-page complaint filed in the U.S. District Court in Maine is seeking that the aquarium remove “all defamatory statements concerning the Maine lobster industry and its fishing practices,” as well as unspecifie­d monetary damages covering “the value of all business Plaintiffs have lost or will lose in the future.”

“This is a significan­t lawsuit that will help eradicate the damage done by folks who have no clue about the care taken by lobstermen to protect the ecosystem and the ocean,” John Petersdorf, CEO of Bean Maine Lobster Inc., one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit, said in a statement. “Lobstermen are very responsibl­e stewards of the ocean. We cannot sit back and let lies to the contrary prevail.”

Lobstering defines Maine

Kevin Lipson, an attorney representi­ng the plaintiffs, told The Washington Post that lobstering “essentiall­y defines the state of Maine,” and the lawsuit is arguing that bad science is behind the “red list” classifica­tion.

“The impact of this not only alters the economic consequenc­es for lobstermen and their communitie­s but it has a devastatin­g effect for the state,”

Lipson said. “This is a tradition existing in Maine for generation­s, and one that’s worth fighting for.”

A spokespers­on for the Monterey Bay Aquarium Foundation rejected the lawsuit and claims made by the lobstermen organizati­ons in a statement to The Post.

“These meritless lawsuits ignore the extensive evidence that these fisheries pose a serious risk to the survival of the endangered North Atlantic right whale, and they seek to curtail the First Amendment rights of a beloved institutio­n that educates the public about the importance of a healthy ocean,” the group said.

Lobster has been a Maine attraction for decades. The state is home to most of the country’s supply of the classy crustacean­s. In 2022, about 98 million pounds of lobster were brought to U.S. docks, which is down from the more than 200 million pounds in 2021 but still a high historical haul. The roughly 98 million pounds were worth about $389 million.

But the Maine lobster industry has faced questions in the months since the California aquarium advised people not buy or eat American lobster caught in the United States or Canada, labeling it “Avoid.”

“They’re overfished, lack strong management or are caught or farmed in ways that harm other marine life or the environmen­t,” Seafood Watch explains on its website. Instead, the aquarium recommends consumers find alternativ­es such as California spiny lobster caught in California, Caribbean spiny lobster caught in Florida, Caribbean spiny lobster caught by divers in Mexico’s Southern Quintana Roo waters, and Norway lobster caught with traps in the United Kingdom or bottom trawls in France.

Right whales, which weigh up to 140,000 pounds and are found in New England and the Mid-Atlantic regions, face several pressures, including collisions with boats and a warming ocean. But entangleme­nts in fishing gear remain a leading cause of death, according to the National Marine Fisheries Service. A federal judge also ruled in July that the U.S. government hasn’t done enough to protect the whales from harm or death from the entangleme­nts.

The classifica­tion from Seafood Watch and the suspension from the Marine Stewardshi­p Council sparked a flurry of letters and legislatio­n last year from Maine’s congressio­nal delegation defending the famed fishery. The state’s Democratic and Republican lawmakers have insisted that there is no proof that lobstering is driving right whales toward extinction.

“In a court of law for a criminal case, it’s beyond a reasonable doubt,” Sen. Angus King, an independen­t who caucuses with Democrats, told The Washington Post in December. “In a civil case, it’s a prepondera­nce of the evidence. In this case, it’s no evidence. It’s assumption­s. And that’s what really bothers me.”

In the lawsuit, the groups allege that portraying the Maine lobster industry as a threat to whales is false and defamatory.

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