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Default Chefs plead guilty to serving whale meat at Santa Monica restaurant



latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-chefs-whale-meat-santa-monica-20140210,0,3674555.story

latimes.com
Chefs plead guilty to serving whale meat at Santa Monica restaurant

By Victoria Kim

1:42 PM PST, February 10, 2014

Two sushi chefs who served whale meat at a now-shuttered Santa Monica
restaurant pleaded guilty Monday to misdemeanor charges for their part
in a scheme to import and sell cuts of whale including tail meat and
“whale bacon.”

Chefs Susumu Ueda and Kiyoshiro Yamamoto were indicted in early 2013
along with Typhoon Restaurant Inc., the parent company of the restaurant
the Hump. The restaurant closed in 2010 after a sting operation
involving an associate producer of the Oscar-winning documentary “The
Cove” revealed that whale was being served off-menu to customers.

Whales are protected under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, which
prohibits the importing or sale of whale meat.

Ueda, the head sushi chef, and Yamamoto each face a maximum of three
years in prison for the charges. Prosecutors said they would also
recommend a $5,000 fine and 200 hours of community service.

They are cooperating with the government and could be called to testify
in the trial against the restaurant, set to begin in April. The supplier
of the whale meat, Ginichi Ohira, pleaded guilty in 2011 and has yet to
be sentenced.

In their plea agreements, the two chefs named the restaurant’s owner
Brian Vidor and manager Chris Schaefer, neither of whom has been
charged, as being part of the conspiracy to sell whale meat.

Ueda admitted to ordering several pounds of whale meat from Ohira in
2007 with approval from Vidor and Schaefer. Ohira in turn contacted his
supplier in Japan, and delivered about three kilograms of whale akami
(red meat), about two kilograms of whale bacon, and about two kilograms
of whale onomi (tail), according to the plea.

The restaurant paid $15,367.75 for the order totaling about 11 pounds,
according to the plea.

Yamamoto admitted to serving pieces of whale meat on two occasions to
“confidential informants posing as customers” in February and March 010.


Twitter: @vicjkim