This undated photo provided by the STEP hatchery shows dead pre-smolt Chinook salmon at the hatchery near Reedsport, Ore. An Oregon man was convicted of killing 18,000 of the juvenile fish with bleach in April.

This undated photo provided by the STEP hatchery shows dead pre-smolt Chinook salmon at the hatchery near Reedsport, Ore. An Oregon man was convicted of killing 18,000 of the juvenile fish with bleach in April.

Courtesy of Gardiner Reedsport Winchester Bay Salmon Trout Enhancement Program

An Oregon man convicted of killing 18,000 pre-smolt salmon with bleach is now out of jail.

On April 21, the Gardiner Reedsport Winchester Bay Salmon Trout Enhancement Program (STEP) hatchery was broken into. The next morning, a hatchery worker found thousands of dead fish settled on the bottom of a holding tank.

The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office said a deputy found 20-year-old Joshua A. Heckathorn of Gardiner wandering along Highway 101, and then again later inside a gate at the hatchery site. Police said Heckathorn admitted to trespassing on the property, entering a storage location, and handling a bottle that contained bleach.

After Heckathorn was arrested, he missed his initial court appearance and then a second one, prompting the judge to issue a bench warrant.

Heckathorn was brought in a few days later and eventually convicted on multiple charges, including burglary and criminal mischief.

On June 7, he was ordered to pay $15,000 in restitution and to avoid contact with the STEP hatchery, and all hatcheries within Oregon, unless with written permission by the Douglas County Court or his probation officer.

Heckathorn was to serve 30 days in Douglas County Jail, but records show he was booked on May 23 then released on June 14. His fishing license has been suspended for three years, the same period he’ll remain under supervised probation. He’s also been ordered to stay off alcohol and illegal substances.

In a Facebook post shortly after Heckathorn’s arrest, STEP said the maximum civil penalty in Oregon for illegal take of a single Chinook salmon is $750, and the courts had the authority to multiply that amount by the number of fish taken. That meant the potential fine against Heckathorn could have exceeded $13 million, though STEP also admitted such an amount was unlikely.

Deborah Yates, president of STEP, told KLCC that she’s disappointed with the outcome and Heckathorn’s sentencing.

“It really was just a slap on the hand, kinda like, ‘Oh don’t do that again.’ At least they could have given him 100 hours of community service,” she said. “Something to let him know he did something wrong.”

Yates added that Heckathorn’s actions not only destroyed 18,000 young fish just before their release, but also hurt the livelihoods of fishing communities across Oregon, Washington, Alaska and British Columbia.

“It’s just a loss, a sad loss,” said Yates. “You don’t rebound from that.”

The STEP hatchery is proceeding with operations, which included the recent release of 60,000 pre-smolt salmon into waterways that lead to the Pacific Ocean.

After the incident was reported, Yates said, several generous people helped fund security upgrades to the hatchery to prevent additional break-ins.

Copyright 2024, KLCC.