15 Jul 2025

Queenstown hotel fined $22,000 for breaches under Fisheries Act

4:47 pm on 15 July 2025
crayfish

The hotel had been offering 'The Rees Ultimate Heli Crayfish dining experience' to guests which included the illegal sale of recreationally caught crayfish. File picture. Photo: Malcolm Francis

A Queenstown hotel has been fined $22,000 for illegally selling recreationally caught crayfish and failing to keep records.

The Rees Management Limited, which trades as The Rees Hotel, was sentenced in the Queenstown District Court on Monday for charges under the Fisheries Act and Fisheries (Record keeping) Regulations.

The hotel had been offering 'The Rees Ultimate Heli Crayfish dining experience' to guests which included the illegal sale of recreationally caught crayfish.

Guests were invoiced between $4650 and $7750 for the total day's experience.

Fisheries New Zealand regional manager south Garreth Jay said under the Fisheries Act, a commercial fishing permit is required to take any fish for sale. 

Any use of seafood as part of a business' commercial activities is considered sale under the Act.

"The rules are there for a reason - to safeguard the resource for current and future generations, protect the integrity of the fisheries management system, and ensure a level playing field for businesses' using seafood as part of their commercial activities," Jay said.

"In this case it is our view the offending persisted despite clear advice being given to the operators involved that the helicopter experience package did not comply with the Fisheries Act."

The hotel also did not keep required records of the crayfish making it difficult to quantify the scale of the offending, Jay said.

"We all have a role to play in ensuring the ongoing sustainability of our fisheries. We encourage people to report suspected illegal activity through our free-calling 0800 4 POACHER number (0800 47 62 24)," he said.

Fisheries New Zealand is also prosecuting another business in relation to the offending, with the matter still before the courts.

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