Pro fishing team caught cheating

Did they say why the fish was cut open in the first place? Like what tipped them initially?

the director said the fish looked like a 4 lb fish, but it weighed over 7 lbs. He squeezed the fish and felt the weights inside. Did these guys think they wouldn't suspect this? Even hobby fishermen can tell the difference between a 7 and 4 lb fish.
 
Clearly the fishing community is waaayyyyy more passionate about their sport than the racing community...

Time in/on the water is something I really can't see myself not doing but I typically don't enjoy talking to other fishers especially if they go all 'me vs. the fish' about it.
 
Fraud. I read somewhere this was a tourney called the Fall Brawl. These are the prizes after 5 weeks of this tourney. Plus an extra 5k per week for the weekly winners. This isnt small time ****.

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I understand that. We have races that pay $100,000, $50,000 and even one this year paid $1 million to win. If someone is found cheating they are disqualified, no checks are sent until all tech inspections are completed.

I just find it weird to get the judicial system involved.
 
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Relative to walleye tournaments for example, why cheat with the electronics on board anymore. You actually track a larger fish around the lake and after numerous casts. Patience pays off - big time. 100,000 boat with 35,000 cash to help with taxes.
BS for daily sportsperson.
 
I understand that. We have races that pay $100,000, $50,000 and even one this year paid $1 million to win. If someone is found cheating they are disqualified, no checks are sent until all tech inspections are completed.

I just find it weird to get the judicial system involved.
Fraud to make money is fraud, sport or not, imo.
 
but how is it theft if he was caught before the prize money was given out?
Like robbing a bank but you get busted before you actually get any money.

The article mentioned that there were issues and suspicion in the past and that is why the guy was checking the fish over so much.
 
Iowa has a theft by deception statute that would probably apply on something like this:

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Here they had likely not received the money so I suppose you could take the position the theft doesn't occur until they've received the money. And I'd imagine it becomes impossible to prove they cheated in past tournaments.

I would be interested to know if other fisherman who had lost prior tournaments could sue civilly for lost income and earning potential with sponsorships and such.
 

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