Man charged with selling live Asian carp in Mich.

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. — An Arkansas man accused of illegally selling live Asian carp in Michigan has been charged with 12 felony counts, officials said Tuesday.

The Michigan attorney general’s office said David Shane Costner, 42, of Harrisburg, Ark., sold two grass carp last month in Midland to undercover officers from the state Department of Natural Resources. He had been driving around the state selling the carp from store parking lots, investigators said.

Grass carp are among four species of Asian carp that infested U.S. waterways after being imported decades ago to clear algae from fish ponds and sewage treatment lagoons.

Two other Asian varieties — bighead and silver carp — have migrated up the Mississippi and Illinois rivers and are poised to invade the Great Lakes, where scientists say they could out-compete native fish for food. The federal government has spent more than $100 million on an electric barrier and other steps to keep them out.

“Invasive species in general and the Asian carp in particular pose one of the most serious current threats to the economy and the ecology of the Great Lakes,” DNR Director Rodney Stokes said.

Possession and sale of live Asian carp is illegal in Michigan.

The attorney general’s office said Costner had 110 grass carp, which he kept in tanks inside a semi-truck. Officials said the words “grass carp” were imprinted on the side of the vehicle, along with the names of several legal species Costner was selling, including channel catfish, largemouth bass and fathead minnows.

Costner is charged with 10 counts of possessing an illegal species and two counts of selling an illegal species. Each carries a maximum sentence of two years in prison and a fine of $2,000 to $20,000. Costner is in Arkansas and will be arraigned in Michigan later, said Joy Yearout, spokeswoman for Attorney General Bill Schuette.

SportsPlus

News

Your Real ID questions answered

Mower County

Austin Area Arts presents pride gallery show

Mower County

First Class: After 41 years of delivering mail, Troy Nelson to retire with fond memories of the job and people

Mower County

Dance party honors tunes of the past

Mower County

In Your Community: Austin Rotary Trivia Night raises $7K for Matchbox Children’s Theatre

Mower County

In Your Community: Order of Eastern Star install officers

Crime, Courts & Emergencies

Man charged with allegedly threatening man with a gun

News

Medicaid puzzle confronts Minnesota lawmakers. Federal cuts could hit health safety net program

Education

Frustration, anger simmer during heated APS Board meeting Monday night

Crime, Courts & Emergencies

Austin woman pleads guilty in Federal court to fraud that netted her $320K

Mower County

Austin Utilities recognized as a reliable public power provider

Education

Three named to AHS Music Hall of Fame

Law Enforcement

A vital connection: Telecommunicators honored during National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week

Education

RCC Phi Theta Kappa chapter, Linaker honored at Phi Theta Kappa convention

Mower County

‘We have a home’: House on Fire church moves into new permanent location

Mower County

AHS speech team sending five to state meet later this month

Mower County

Best of Broadway closes ‘Paramount Goes Dark’ series

Mower County

In Your Community: Kiwanis support Paramount project

Mower County

In Your Community: Duplicate Bridge

Mower County

In Your Community: Mower County Senior Center

Education

Amanda Schulz Elected to Membership into The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi

Crime, Courts & Emergencies

Convictions: March 31-April 7

Mower County

Volunteer cleanup set for Austin’s public spaces

Education

Austin Community Scholarship applications now available to college juniors and seniors