Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: MONDAY, June 21, 1993 TAG: 9306210315 SECTION: SPORTS PAGE: B6 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: BILL COCHRAN OUTDOOR EDITOR DATELINE: LENGTH: Medium
Now officials of the Department of Game and Inland Fisheries say this wasn't a tale about a record fish that didn't get away. It was a story of a fish that probably wasn't there to begin with.
The 52-inch striper reportedly caught by Waller, who lives in Gretna, won't make the Virginia freshwater fish record book, because it has the chemical characteristics of a fish from saltwater, said M.C. Duval, a state fisheries biologist supervisor. Leesville is a freshwater lake immediately downstream from Smith Mountain Lake.
"We had to reject the fish on those grounds," Duval said.
For a time, it appeared the striper was a shoo-in for record status. It was nearly 6 pounds heavier than the current freshwater record, a 44-pound, 14-ounce Smith Mountain Lake fish landed July 7, 1992, by Gary Tomlin of Buena Vista.
A state game warden witnessed the weighing and even took pictures of Waller and his family that appeared in newspapers. "State record striper caught in Leesville," said one headline.
Then came a tip from someone who claimed Waller really had landed the striper in tidal water near Hopewell, where spawning, ocean-going stripers are protected by a closed season. Biologists began scrutinizing the fish's chemical makeup.
"We decided we'd better go ahead and make our checks in order not to compromise our state record system," said Duval.
A committee of eight biologists examined the test results and unanimously recommend that the record be denied.
If there is reasonable doubt about any aspect of a record candidate, it may be rejected, said Duval. "We are not claiming that Mr. Waller lied to the committee; what we find is that we have reasonable doubt."
State game wardens said they will decide this week whether to press charges against Waller.
"We take that [record] program seriously," said Capt. John Heslep.
All this is of little comfort to North Carolina angler David Snider, who landed a Smith Mountain striper 1 ounce heavier than the record shortly after word of Waller's fish was circulated. Snider, and his guide, Ken Dempsey, figuring their catch couldn't top Waller's, so they didn't follow record-verification procedures.
by CNB