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NewsNovember 3, 2017

GLOUCESTER, Mass. — Spotting a 400-pound tuna in the Massachusetts seaport of Gloucester, known as America’s oldest seaport, is not unusual. But finding a headless tuna in the woods is a bit odd. State Environmental Police and federal fisheries regulators are trying to figure out who dumped the headless fish, which had to be hauled out of the trees by a tow truck. ...

Associated Press

GLOUCESTER, Mass. — Spotting a 400-pound tuna in the Massachusetts seaport of Gloucester, known as America’s oldest seaport, is not unusual. But finding a headless tuna in the woods is a bit odd.

State Environmental Police and federal fisheries regulators are trying to figure out who dumped the headless fish, which had to be hauled out of the trees by a tow truck.

Authorities won’t say exactly when the tuna was found or who tipped them off.

But Ally Rogers, a spokeswoman for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries Office for Law Enforcement, told the Gloucester Daily Times the fish was harvested illegally.

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The tuna season runs from early June to November.

Maj. Patrick Moran of the Environmental Police said he’s never before had to investigate a tuna in the woods.

Information from: Gloucester (Mass.) Daily Times, http://www.gloucestertimes.com

Pertinent address:

Gloucester, Mass.

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