Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 10— - NORTHERN PACIFIC HALIBUT FISHING › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - NORTHERN PACIFIC HALIBUT ACT OF 1982 › § 773f
People who commit the prohibited acts must pay civil fines to the United States. Each violation can bring up to $200,000 in penalties, and each day the violation continues counts as a separate offense. The Secretary will put the penalty in writing after a hearing. When setting the amount, the Secretary will consider how bad the act was, the circumstances, how responsible the person was, prior offenses, and other fair factors. The Secretary can also look at the person’s ability to pay if that information is given at least 30 days before an administrative hearing. A person can appeal the penalty in a U.S. court by filing a notice within 30 days and mailing a certified copy to the Secretary and the Attorney General. If a final penalty is unpaid, the Secretary will ask the Attorney General to collect it in federal court. The Secretary may reduce, change, or cancel a penalty. If a vessel was used in a violation, a permit holder or applicant broke the rules, or fines or settlements are overdue, the Secretary may suspend, revoke, deny, or add conditions to permits (including foreign vessel approvals). The Secretary will consider the same factors when deciding these sanctions. Transfer of a vessel or permit does not remove a pending sanction, and the seller must tell the buyer in writing about any sanction. A suspended permit for nonpayment will be restored when the amount plus interest is paid. No sanction may be imposed without a prior chance for a hearing. Permit = any license, registration, approval, quota, or similar permission from the Commission or the Secretary.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 773f
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73