Washington man arrested for stealing $8M fishing boat with crew still on board, officials say
PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) — A 42-year-old man from Aberdeen, Wash. is being held on $250,000 bail, after he allegedly stole an 80-foot, $8 million commercial fishing boat out of Westport on Feb. 8 with the crew still on board.
Suspect Joshua Stedman boarded the Jamie Marie around 9 a.m. and temporarily convinced the crew that he was the boat's new captain, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Police said.
'A subject had boarded the vessel, woke the crew and advised them they needed to get underway,' the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Police wrote on social media. 'The newer crew did not know the captain, but didn't argue, thinking he was an alternate operator, or someone sent by the real captain. He surely acted the part as he knew how to start and operate the large vessel.'
Floating shanty visible from I-205 removed from the Columbia River
After a short while, the crew grew suspicious of Stedman's behavior and called the boat's actual captain from the bridge. After speaking with the captain, they determined they were on a stolen boat.
'As the vessel transited further out and onto the Grays Harbor bar about to cross into the ocean, the crew finally figured out something was wrong,' WDFD wrote. 'The subject driving the boat was talking about meeting the 'Chinese Mothership' and was not making sense. He certainly was not describing fishing activity.'
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WDFW Police and the Westport Police Department responded to the scene and Stedman returned the boat to the harbor at about 9:30 a.m.. Upon his arrest, Stedman was found in possession of $4,000 in cash and a 'large quantity of individually weighed and packaged marijuana,' WDFD Police said.
Westport Police arrested Stedman and brought him to the Gray Harbor County Jail. Stedman was charged with theft, vehicle prowling, possession of stolen property and illegal drug possession.
'As the investigation played out, it was learned the same subject boarded another large vessel in the early morning hours and managed to start the main engines and was attempting to rally the crew for a trip to sea,' WDFW Police said. 'They ran him off the boat but did not report the activity until the current theft was playing out and the information was circling Westport.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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