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Many foreign fishermen who man Hawaii’s fishing fleet are underpaid and virtual captives on their boats

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

A U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer checked the documents of a Filipino fisherman aboard an American fishing vessel docked in Honolulu in March. About 700 undocumented foreign workers, mostly from impoverished Southeast Asian and Pacific island nations, work on Hawaii’s commercial fishing fleet, the country’s fifth top grossing fishery. They do not have visas and cannot enter the country, staying confined to their boats for sometimes years at a time.

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

In May, Dr. Craig Nakatsuka, left, distributed medication and fruit to undocumented foreign fishermen who work aboard American fishing boats in Honolulu. The doctor comes to Pier 38 with a church outreach project that holds services for the men twice a week. He said he sees problems ranging from high blood pressure to skin infections due to a lack of gloves or improper gear.

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U.S. Customs and Border Protection Officer Ericson Padilla, right, checked the documents of an Indonesian fisherman from an American fishing vessel docked in Honolulu in March. Hundreds of undocumented men labor in a unique U.S. fishing fleet in Hawaii, due to a federal loophole that allows them jobs but exempts them from most basic workplace protections.

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U.S. fishing boats that are crewed by undocumented foreign fishermen were docked at Pier 38 in Honolulu in May.

Pier 17 doesn’t even show up on most Honolulu maps. Cars whiz past it on their way to Waikiki. Passing tourists, let alone locals, are unaware that just behind a guarded gate, another world exists: foreign fishermen confined to American boats for years at a time.

Hundreds of undocumented men are employed in this unique U.S. fishing fleet, due to a federal loophole that allows them to work but exempts them from most basic labor protections. Many come from impoverished Southeast Asian and Pacific nations to take the dangerous jobs, which can pay as little as 70 cents an hour.

With no legal standing on U.S. soil, the men are at the mercy of ship captains on American-flagged, American-owned vessels, catching prized swordfish and tuna. Because they don’t have visas, they are not allowed to set foot on shore. The entire system, which contradicts other state and federal laws, operates with the knowledge of high-ranking U.S. lawmakers and officials, an Associated Press investigation found.

The fleet of about 140 boats docks about once every three weeks, occasionally at ports along the West Coast, including Fisherman’s Wharf in San Francisco, but mainly at piers 17 and 38 in Honolulu. Their catch ends up at restaurants and premium seafood counters across the country, from Whole Foods Market to Costco, and is touted by celebrity chefs such as Roy Yamaguchi and Masaharu Morimoto.

Americans buying Hawaii seafood are almost certainly eating fish caught by one of these workers, who account for nearly all the fleet’s crew.

A single yellowfin tuna can fetch more than $1,000, and vendors market the catch as “sustainable seafood produced by Hawaii’s hardworking fishermen.”

But workers such as Indonesian Syamsul Maarif aren’t protected or compensated like locals. He was sent home to Indonesia after nearly dying when his boat sank 160 miles off Hawaii. He lost everything, and said it took four months to get his pay.

“We want the same standards as the other workers in America, but we are just small people working there based on the contract that we signed,” he said. “We don’t have any visa. We are illegal, so we cannot demand more.”

Over six months, the AP obtained confidential contracts, reviewed dozens of business records and interviewed boat owners, brokers and more than 50 fishermen in Hawaii, Indonesia and San Francisco. The investigation found men living in squalor on some boats, forced to use buckets instead of toilets, suffering running sores from bed bugs and sometimes lacking sufficient food. It also revealed instances of human trafficking.

This report is part of the AP’s ongoing global look at labor abuses in the fishing industry.

In Hawaii, federal contractors paid to monitor catches said they are troubled by what they’ve seen while living weeks at a time at sea with the men.

“You get that sort of feeling that it’s like gaming the system,” said Forest O’Neill, who coordinates the boat observers in Honolulu. “It’s a shock. It becomes normal, but it’s like, ‘How is this even legal? How is this possible?’ … They are like floating prisons.”

Technically not here

Under the law, U.S. citizens must make up 75 percent of the crew on most commercial fishing vessels in America. But influential lawmakers, including the late Sen. Daniel Inouye, pushed for a loophole to support one of the state’s biggest industries. It exempted commercial fishing boat owners from federal rules enforced almost everywhere else.

“It has the fig leaf of legality,” said Cornell University law professor Stephen Yale-Loehr, who, like other leading immigration experts contacted by AP, was unfamiliar with Hawaii’s arrangement. “This is inconsistent with the general notion in American values, if not law, that workers should be paid a fair wage and not be mistreated.”

Thus about 700 foreign workers in Hawaii lack rights most Americans take for granted. They have little legal recourse, and are detained on boats where U.S. Customs and Border Protection require captains to hold the men’s passports. That potentially goes against federal human trafficking laws saying bosses who possess workers’ identification documents can face up to five years in prison.

U.S. Attorney Florence Nakakuni, the chief federal law enforcement official in Hawaii, said it’s all above board.

“People say … they’re like captives,” she said. “But they don’t have visas, so they can’t leave their boat, really.”

Hawaii’s fishing industry is otherwise one of the most tightly regulated for catch limits and sustainability, attracting companies that pride themselves on being ocean-friendly. Supermarkets, restaurants and chefs selling the seafood condemned labor abuse.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the Coast Guard routinely inspect the Hawaii boats. At times, fishermen complain they’re not getting paid and officers say they tell owners to honor the contracts. But neither agency has any authority over actual wages.

“This is a unique situation,” said Coast Guard vessel examiner Charles Medlicott. “But it is legal.”

Here’s how it works: When boat owners need crew, they pay brokers abroad or in Honolulu to bring the men from overseas — mostly from Indonesia, the Philippines, Vietnam and the tiny Pacific island nation of Kiribati.

Workers typically sign two- or three-year renewable contracts, and some extend repeatedly.

“For one crew, one person, it’s about $10,000,” said Honolulu-­based agent Hernan Santiago, who works on commission. He also wires money home to the fishermen’s families, gets them phone cards and assists in times of crisis. “I’m playing the middle man.”

Regional customs director Brian Humphrey said his agency could issue the workers temporary permits allowing them to enter the U.S., similar to those sometimes used by cruise ships employees. But he added that option would be “administratively cumbersome.” And so these crew members aren’t even allowed to land at the airport in Honolulu.

“There really is no purpose for them to come to the U.S. or for them to have a visa because they really don’t have any intention of setting foot on shore,” he said.

As a result, the men are first put on planes at home, and then hopscotched from country to country across thousands of miles and picked up by American captains for the 10- to 20-day sail to Honolulu.

Some fishermen have even been made to leap into the sea. In one video shown to AP, men swam from one boat to another through tossing waves, clutching their belongings in plastic bags.

It used to be easier. Before Sept. 11, the men came on planes. But the terror attacks spurred a national crackdown on foreigners entering the country. As an unintended consequence, the workers now reach U.S. docks with minimal government vetting, creating greater security risks.

“We’ve been stuck in this hellhole,” said Jim Cook, a longtime leader in the commercial fishery who co-owns several vessels, a supply store and a seafood restaurant at Pier 38. “It’s a very complicated system that doesn’t work well for anybody, not the boat owner, not Customs and Border Protection. And the potential for mischief is far greater.”

The fishermen are paid as little as $350 a month, far below U.S. minimum wage, but still more than they can make back home in countries where people live on less than a dollar a day. Many workers also get small bonuses, lifting their monthly pay to $500 or $600.

For many boat owners, the fishermen are a bargain: Bait and ice can cost more than crew salaries. Some of the men in Hawaii earn less than $5,000 for a full year.

Sen. Mazie Hirono acknowledges the fishermen’s liberties are limited and has unsuccessfully proposed an amendment that would allow them to fly into the country. It’s a move that would fix a widely accepted paradox. Currently, even though the men never legally enter the United States, the government provides a transit visa that lets them exit through Honolulu’s airport.

AP reporters watched as two fishermen from Kiribati prepared to fly out. Bill Paupe said he’s alerted at the Kiribati Consulate in Honolulu every time a worker leaves, but he’s otherwise not involved: “They’re technically not here.”

Trapped by debt

If the men are unhappy, some are allowed to skip out on their contracts, but the ticket home can cost up to two months’ salary. They also may have to pay back recruiters’ fees, ending up trapped by debt.

In one particularly bad situation, a Kiribati fisherman’s ledger obtained by AP shows deductions from his pay including $1,300 for airfare, $1,800 to pay for his replacement and $2,100 for breaking a captain’s computer. After more than three years of work, at $350 a month, he should have accumulated close to $13,000, but he ended up with about half of that.

The U.S. government defines forced labor and debt bondage, often involving migrant workers, as modern-day slavery. Every year, the U.S. blacklists countries that have the worst human trafficking records.

“Most of the fish caught and sold in Hawaii is done by the use of exploiting migrant workers in what looks to be a human trafficking scheme legitimized by our own laws,” said Kathryn Xian, who runs the nonprofit Pacific Alliance to Stop Slavery.

Authorities are aware Hawaii’s fishermen are vulnerable to exploitation. Signs posted at Pier 17 in six languages offer a hotline to help those who have been trafficked.

That’s what happened to Abdul Fatah and Sorihin, who arrived from Indonesia seven years ago and were put on the Sea Queen II.

First, a fishing line nearly ripped Sorihin’s finger off, and his captain set it straight with a chopstick. Then a winch cable snapped, badly bruising the fisherman’s shoulder. That time, he said, he was allowed a two-hour rest.

“I knew if I stayed on that boat I was going to die,” said Sorihin, who uses one name.

His friend, Fatah, who was kicked awake before dawn for work, was just as scared. He was thrown against a rail and nearly tossed overboard by a wave.

So early one morning when their captain was gone, the two men broke into the skipper’s quarters, grabbed their passports and made a run for it while docked in San Francisco.

Eventually, federal officials issued each of them a special visa designated for victims of human trafficking. They remain too terrified to go near the dock at Fisherman’s Wharf, where the Sea Queen II still unloads. The captain did not respond to messages left by the AP.

Sorihin has advice for American seafood lovers: “Ask, where did this fish come from? Is it the kind of fish that you got from someone in slavery?”

Not all fishing boats have harsh conditions, and some crew members said they enjoy the camaraderie. All said the experience ultimately comes down to each captain.

However, on some vessels, cultural and language barriers, coupled with exhaustion, can exacerbate tensions. Entire crews, at times, have quit. And the days can be grueling. One boat’s schedule looked like this: Work from 8 a.m. until 3 p.m., break two hours for lunch and rest. Work from 5 p.m. until 6 a.m., eat and sleep again. Start a new shift at 8 a.m.

“It’s very hard work,” said a Filipino fisherman who’s supporting a teenage daughter and a son studying engineering in college. “When the children finish school, I’m done with this.”

Crews typically spend three weeks at sea before coming into the harbor for a few days to sell their catch, restock food, repair damaged gear and fuel up. In port they are dependent on their captain to bring them everything from socks and underwear to rice and meat.

“Mistreatment of workers and failure to provide for basic safety and hygiene is unacceptable. And, regardless of workplace exemptions, is illegal,” said Gavin Gibbons, spokesman for the National Fisheries Institute, which represents about 75 percent of the U.S. seafood industry.

In rare cases, boat owners can request passes from federal authorities to take the fishermen ashore for things such as medical care. Though the men are not technically allowed to leave their vessels, security guards turn a blind eye when they go onto the docks, but no farther, to see friends. One afternoon at Pier 17 in Hawaii, the foreign crews visited from boat to boat — Vietnamese cooked a shared meal, Filipinos passed around a phone, Indonesians smoked cigarettes.

At the piers, some vessels are tidy, neatly packed with coiled ropes, scrubbed rails and clean decks. Others have piles of garbage, rusting tanks and rotting carpets.

“It’s unhealthy, quite frankly, for people to have to be kept on the boat,” said Kitty Simonds, executive director of the Honolulu-based Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management Council. “Maybe there needs to be legislation. I mean, who’s going to take that on?”

Some fishermen spoke to the AP of injuries or bore scars.

After one worker began coughing up blood at sea, the Hawaii Department of Health said it was contacted by his captain, who brought him in. Doctors diagnosed the man with a rare case of active tuberculosis, isolating him for months and calling everyone on the boat in for chest X-rays and testing.

It is up to boat owners to provide care to their crews. Some fishermen said their bosses were responsive, quickly arranging medical treatment. Others complained they received inadequate care or none at all.

Dr. Craig Nakatsuka visits Pier 38 with a church outreach project that holds services twice a week, a rare opportunity for fellowship. He spoke at dusk on the dock, wearing a white coat and stethoscope.

He said he sees problems in the men ranging from high blood pressure to skin infections caused by the lack of gloves or improper gear. He’s concerned about the possibility of scurvy from a shortage of fruits and vegetables.

It’s like a “Third World overseas medical mission support in your backyard,” he said.

Not so local

At Honolulu’s Pier 38, the tired fishermen dock at the end of another trip. Some venture as far as 50 feet to a nearby public restroom, but they are careful not to stray much farther. They know they can be sent home if caught off their ships.

Just steps away at Uncle’s Fish Market & Grill, crowds dine on $20-plus plates of sashimi and ahi poke bowls, a Hawaiian staple.

The fish is unloaded early every morning at the pier and sold at the only public auction of its kind in the U.S. The sought-after seafood, famous for its taste and quality, commands prices that make the fishery the country’s fifth largest.

About 80 percent of the fish stays in Hawaii, ending up at hotels, restaurants and supermarkets, said John Kaneko, program manager for the Hawaii Seafood Council. The rest is exported, often flown fresh in airtight cool boxes to the country’s finest eateries, from Los Angeles and San Francisco to New York.

For instance, some of Roy’s 25 restaurants in eight states source seafood here. Delivery drivers in Honolulu were headed for a local Sam’s Club, military bases and hotels, including the Hyatt, along with supermarkets.

When asked about the workers in Honolulu, Costco said it was investigating. Walmart, which owns Sam’s Club, declined to comment.

Whole Foods spokeswoman McKinzey Crossland said only 1 percent of their seafood comes from Hawaii, and they had been assured boat crews are well paid with bonuses and health insurance. She added that the company is also looking into the issue.

During the auction at 5 a.m., John Hernandez of John’s Fresh Fish picked over rows of seafood. The industry veteran said he knows exactly who’s working on the boats.

“The owners are a bunch of leeches making money off these crews,” he said.

Across the island in an upscale neighborhood where Obama regularly vacations, an array of fish is displayed in a refrigerated case at Whole Foods, with yellowfin tuna selling for $23.99 a pound. Labels in front of each cut say: “Local matters. Fresh. Product of USA (Hawaii)/Processed in USA.”

A store worker, eager to answer questions, smiles and says it’s all caught in Hawaiian waters by local fishermen and brought to the store every morning from the auction at Pier 38.

He proudly adds: It’s the best you can buy.

38 responses to “Many foreign fishermen who man Hawaii’s fishing fleet are underpaid and virtual captives on their boats”

  1. manakuke says:

    In this day and age; servitude still occurs on the ‘high seas’.

    • bobbob says:

      Signs posted at Pier 17 in six languages offer a hotline to help those who have been trafficked. — – How does this help someone who can’t even get off the boat?

    • allie says:

      Such a shame! So outrageous! And here we have thousands who refuse to work holding out their oversized palms for more free money.

    • DannoBoy says:

      Part of Inouye’s legacy, along with the rail project and militarization of the islands.

    • DannoBoy says:

      “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness….”

      Well, maybe not ALL men… people from other countries just aren’t as exceptional as Americans, right? Uncle Dan knew that.

      Enjoy your poke.

  2. kiragirl says:

    Shameless boat owners and also those who purchase their fish. Names should be published.

    • Allaha says:

      Throw all the foreigners out and man the boats with our own riffraff, homeless and welfare parasites. Pay high enough wages and you will have enough applicants.

      • pohaku96744 says:

        Actually if I were a terrorist, this is what I would do, jump off one of these fishing boats, swim up Nuuanu river and join the A’ala Park gang. CBP don’t go up there…. not their responsibility or their jurisdiction. Get one machete then go shopping, right on King and Bishop .

    • littleyoboboy says:

      These are the very one’s who try to fight sustainable fishing restrictions because of how it would affect the “local” fishing industry. Ain’t no local jobs at stake here. Just a bunch of rich owners and puppet politicians making a mint, thanks to their illegal alien slaves. The true local fisherman have to struggle to make their living because they’re just little fish in a huge pond. Shut it down until they can hire legal workers and abide to labor laws like everyone else. Quit mqking excuses and swimming through loopholes. As anyone can see by the fish prices in the stores, this cheap labor isn’t benefitting anyone except the owners and their puppets.

  3. pohaku96744 says:

    Lots of disgruntled central asians too with Fijian passports moving about the Pacific Ocean following the fish. Another way a terrorist slips in because no real tracking if terrorist gets a third party passport from another third world country where there is no U.S. presence.

    • juscasting says:

      And we keep blaming the raw scallops served at Genki as the cause of the HEP A outbreak! Look who’s handling your fresh fish!

    • advertiser1 says:

      So, any thoughts on how many terrorists have actually done this?

      • pohaku96744 says:

        None yet, that’s because CBP keeps them confined there and they are subject to random inspections by CBP. Lots of Pakistanees hold Fijian passports. Before TSA took over screening, captains or fishing company manangers line them up march them to JAL, put them on flight to Japan then home. Lots of these people aren’t vetted if there is no U.S presence in their country where they got their current passport. No U.S. visa, no entry bit we want your fish.

  4. Sandybeach says:

    Corruption at it highest level. Government officials, law enforcement, industry profiteers. Filth, shame and human labor trafficking. Remember expansion of the Papahanaumokuakea. You say Jim Cook, Shawn Martin and kitty Simonds, Ariyoshi, Cayetano, Peter Apo, prominent people against it. Greed is what motivated them. They got money or favor from the Long Line Fishing industry. But you did not see a single fisherman. They are locked up in boats that’s why they are not there. Boycott, Nico’s, Uncles, Roys, Costco until fish are caught legally. Shame on Flo Nakakuni, United States Attorney. She along with every law enforcement authority in this State knows exactly what is going on. Corruption, money and greed. They are stealing fish from the mouths of Hawaiian citizens. Help these slaves, please.

    • pohaku96744 says:

      Yeah, us Hawaiians need to take back what was taken from us, lets start with the haoles and work our way forward….. Lol

    • Manawai says:

      If they were slaves they’d be shackled to the boat when it’s in port. So calling them that is excessive. All they need to do is jump ship (swim to shore at night) get picked up and claim to be victims illegal abuse and trafficking so they can them apply for a “U Visa” and more and more foreigners are doing now. This gets them long term legal U.S. residency and quite possibly citizenship. The victims claims don’t have to be true. Look up “abuses of U Visa”. It’s a legal loophole originally designed to allow crime witnesses/victims to stay in the U.S. while the offenses are investigated. Besides, these fiscally poor workers willingly signed up for this to make way more money than they could in their home countries. They’re financing their families and their children’s college educations.
      So don’t use the “slavery” claim as it doesn’t hold water.

  5. Sandybeach says:

    This is not above board. Flo Nakakuni is lying. She is the problem. The customs people cannot get her to prosecute the simplest case of labor trafficking. Yet she prosecutes the theft of a mailbox from the chief or police’s home. The conduct described in this article is what the United Nations call crimes against humanity…. a form of genocide. We are allowing slavery 3 blocks away from the United States District Court. Embarrassed for this State and our Country.

  6. earlson says:

    Sad. But if they are paid and have benefits that US citizens receive, they probably won’t have a job.

  7. cojef says:

    Simply boycott their products so they will seek other foreign markets. Our government aiding and abetting slave labor conditions? What about international labor unions fighting for the rights of all workers?

  8. popolo says:

    These guys are the ones who NEED a union

  9. wave1 says:

    Thought Obama was going to take care of all this…

  10. Bdpapa says:

    No documentations, passports etc. Not many options and we don’t need them here.

  11. wrightj says:

    When’s the last time they had a bath?

  12. littleyoboboy says:

    Jim Cook owns a couple of longline boats, owns Pacific Ocean Producers, and owns Nico’s. Need anything more be said about him? Anything he says is just blah blah blah,, all the way to the bank! $$$$$ Who’s side do u think he’s on?

  13. JustMyTwoPennies says:

    … “are detained on boats where U.S. Customs and Border Protection require captains to hold the men’s passports. That potentially goes against federal human trafficking laws saying bosses who possess workers’ identification documents can face up to five years in prison.”

    I know this is different from the Aloun Farms situation a few years ago but didn’t they get in trouble fir that reason?

    • pohaku96744 says:

      well have you ever seen these people…. I have as a policeman working out there. Always trying to stab one another, fighting, stealing, it’s a zoo. Keep the these guys confined and under Federal jurisdiction. We’ve had a few cases where they killed their captains or first officers but end up here because coast got the SOS and brought them in.

  14. kennie1933 says:

    Is Kathryn Xian on this case? Or does she just do massage parlors and prostitutes? Or….maybe just lying low after her recent run in with the law.

  15. wlsc says:

    need to stop inhuman treatment!!!!!!

  16. oxtail01 says:

    Ohh..such indignation shown by so many of you “righteous” individuals. Yeah, blow off some steam here and then go about your merry ways with the knowledge that you’re not part of the problem. Hey, go to Genki Sushi (oops, not right now) and have a plate of that wonderful cheap fish these slaves brought to you. So worldly you are, having seen the abuses in the world from the comfort of your chair, never having actually travelled and seen the conditions in the third world countries. Ohh, you didn’t know that in most of these countries, you’re considered doing well if you make $500 a YEAR? Ohh, you didn’t know that one of the highest source of revenue for the Philippines is the money brought back in by all the cheap labor exported to outside countries? Just go back to drinking your $5 coffee from Starbucks and spending mindless minutes on your unlimited data plan that you pay more for in one month than most of these people earn in half a year. Keep your “righteousness” to yourselves.

    • Allaha says:

      Your comment is off. These people like Philippines have ruined and impoverished their own countries by multiplying like there is no limit, and soon they will exterminate all the fishes. The high price of fish is already proof that it is getting scarce.

      • oxtail01 says:

        Who’s off? US consumes, wastes, and pollutes more than any other nation and the amount of fish the Filipinos consume is nothing compared to Japanese, Chinese, and Americans.

  17. Sensible01 says:

    For those who think there is a line of people eager to work on those boats, please go over and sign up. Find out what it’s like. And then come to the realization that most people who live in the US just won’t take that kind of job, no matter what it pays.

    While there are probably boats that are abusing their crews, there are also a lot more boats where they’re treated well. AP hasn’t stated the relative scale of the problem. It hasn’t reported how many boats in the fleet have problems. Instead, readers are presented with a generalized view of the situation. The reader then makes the assumption that all the boats are like that.

    Are all the boats involved? Are a few? Who knows? AP isn’t saying.

    Meanwhile note this: Some crewmembers keep signing up and work these boats for years. What kind of masochistic person does that to themselves if they’re living in squalor and being kept as slaves?

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