The Bob Barker first intercepted the Thunder on December 17, 2014 on the Banzare Bank in Antarctica. Captain Hammarstedt conducted a citizen's arrest of the vessel for its illegal fishing activity, and ordered it to return to port in Fremantle, Australia.

The Thunder immediately fled from the Bob Barker. Over the next 60 days, the poaching vessel attempted to lose the Bob Barker by deliberately sailing into bad weather and heavy ice, and by attempting to intimate the Sea Shepherd ship with aggressive, close-quarter manoeuvring. Despite this, the Bob Barker has been able to maintain continuous pursuit of the poaching vessel, effectively shutting down its poaching operations and costing the illegal fishing operation millions of dollars in lost profits.

On January 16, the Sam Simon completed three week-long operations to remove the illegal gillnets that were abandoned by the Thunder when it first fled from the Bob Barker, from the waters of Antarctica. More than 72 kilometres of illegal gillnet was recovered over a three week period and over 1,400 fish, weighing a total of 50,000 kilograms, were returned to the ocean.

Following the successful retrieval operations, the Sam Simon intercepted another two Interpol-wanted poaching vessels, the Kunlun and the Yongding, in Australian waters in the Southern Ocean. Both vessels had illegal fishing gear on their decks at the time they were intercepted.

Records from the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) indicate that both the Kunlun and the Yongding have a long history of illegal fishing activity, including links to known Spanish crime syndicate, Vidal Armadores.

Following aggressive manoeuvring and evasive actions aimed to deter the Sam Simon, both the Kunlun and the Yongding fled. The Sam Simon subsequently engaged in a high seas pursuit of the Kunlun. On February 8, Captain Chakravarty reported that he and the crew of the Sam Simon had successfully chased the poaching vessel out of its hunting grounds in the Southern Ocean.

The poaching vessels, which target vulnerable Patagonian and Antarctic toothfish, are the focus of Sea Shepherd's 11th Southern Ocean Defence Campaign, Operation Icefish.

Commencing in December last year, Operation Icefish is Sea Shepherd’s first Southern Ocean Defence Campaign to target illegal, unregulated and unreported (IUU) fishing operators in the waters of Antarctica.

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