On Friday, February 21, the United States reopened its border to fresh beef from Brazil after a more than two-year ban, according to a letter sent by the Food Safety and Inspection Service to the Brazilian agriculture minister, as reported by Bloomberg News. Negotiations between President Trump and President Bolsonaro began one year ago, and the two plan to meet next month in Brazil. The move, which the Organization for Competitive Markets (OCM) warned against in April 2019, threatens Read More …
Category: JBS Monopoly Abuse Tracker
From a small butcher shop in Brazil, JBS has become the world’s largest meat company and a dominant force in America’s food industry. Its growth is the result of illegal activity.
JBS bribed 1,800 Brazilian officials in exchange for taxpayer-subsidized loans and other favors so it could take over the global meat market. Since then, the company was involved in bribing Brazilian meat inspectors allowing them to sell and export rotten and tainted meat around the world. In 2018, JBS admitted to cheating America’s farmers and ranchers by paying them less than the real value for their cattle at three separate beef processing plants, amounting to hundreds of thousands of dollars in losses per farmer. JBS has racked up nearly 200 violations for workplace safety, employment discrimination, unfair wages, and environmental abuses since it began its takeover of the U.S. meat industry.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of Agriculture has purchased over 100 million dollars in meat products from JBS using taxpayer money meant to help American farmers weather the U.S.-China trade war, even though the trade war is directly fueling JBS’ growth. While China had suspended the purchase of U.S. agricultural products, it turned to JBS’ Brazilian operations to supply its demand. In August, JBS announced it is at its best moment in history to capture market opportunities as a result of increased demand from China.
OCM has called for JBS’s U.S. assets to be stripped from the company and split up, allowing for a more fair and just market.
U.S. Senators Rubio, Menedez and Stabenow, and Congresswoman DeLauro have called for the Trump Administration to launch an investigation into JBS. The Justice Department and the Securities Exchange Commission are investigating the parent company, J&F Investimentos, for potential violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. The U.S. Government Accountability Office is now opening a review of the $28 billion bailout for farmers harmed by the trade war amid allegations that the money was mismanaged and allocated unfairly.
Brian Ross Investigates | $100 Million Outrage; Corrupt Brothers Collect US Taxpayer Money
This episode of Brian Ross Investigates looks at the case of two brothers linked to a huge corruption scandal in Brazil who have been buying up American meatpacking companies, which have now received more than $100 million in U.S. taxpayer money meant for American farmers and ranchers. Brian Ross joined the Law & Crime Network as chief investigative correspondent in 2018 after decades of award-winning work at ABC News and NBC News. His reports have exposed government and corporate Read More …
JBS faces heat over ‘cattle laundering’ in Amazon supply chain
JBS has frequently been accused of links to deforestation. Now the meatpacker is facing growing pressure from Brazilian politicians and environmentalists to address the information gaps and transparency failings in its supply chain. Critics say these deficiencies mean JBS is unable to ensure it does not buy cattle from farms involved in illegal deforestation over a decade after promising to do so. Read more from The Guardian.
JBS buys U.S.-Based Empire Packing for $238M
JBS USA is buying Empire Packing Co. LP, its case ready production facilities and Ledbetter branded retail products, for US$238 million. The acquisition includes operations of five production facilities located in Cincinnati, Denver, Mason, Ohio, Memphis, Tenn. and Olympia, Wash. Empire Packing provides its grocery clients with case ready meat solutions and custom food processing and packaging services, and Ledbetter Foods branded products sold at retail nationwide. JBS said the transaction is subject to regulatory review and government approvals. Read More …
JBS’ Pilgrim’s Pride poultry plants in Chattanooga hit with civil penalities for odor
The Pilgrim’s Pride poultry plants in downtown Chattanooga last month were fined nearly $7,000 in penalties and fees for three violations over the past 18 months involving odor problems, documents show. The Chattanooga-Hamilton County Air Pollution Control Bureau, responding to a complaint related to the 1591 Broad St. “kill plant” last Aug. 5, said that bay doors had been left open and a fan that disperses liquid for odor control wasn’t operating. Also, an odor control mister outside Read More …
The Criminals Win Again: JBS Signs Deal to Increase Sales to China
JBS has done it again. Today, Meatingplace reports the Brazilian meatpacking giant’s South American arm has secured a deal to sell over $700 million dollars worth of beef, pork, and poultry to China per year under its Friboi and Seara brands out of Brazil. “This agreement reflects the maturity and evolution of our trade relations with China,” said Renato Costa, president of Friboi. “It will be an opportunity for us to evolve in our supply chain in an Read More …
New Brazilian Class Action Targets Corrupt JBS in the Name of Democracy
Brazilian class action lawsuit against corrupt meatpacking behemoth JBS lays out the undisputed evidence that through bribing over 1,800 Brazilian politicians, JBS was able to take over U.S. Swift Food, U.S. Smithfield beef group, and Pilgrim’s Pride, launching their takeover of the U.S. meat processing industry and becoming the world’s leading meat processor. The lawsuit demands JBS restore to the Brazilian public nearly a billion U.S. dollars of its ill-gotten gain. Meanwhile, U.S. officials have forked over yet Read More …
Brazilian Prosecutors Take Aim at JBS. When Will U.S. Do the Same?
Brazilian prosecutors agree with OCM’s position that meatpacking giant JBS is guilty of fraud that led to illegal loans from Brazilian state development bank BNDES. Through bribery, JBS secured the necessary funds to go on a spending spree buying up 40 rivals on four continents, including the U.S. JBS has admitted that but for these fraudulent loans, it wouldn’t have been able to take over the U.S. beef market. Now Brazilian officials are demanding $5 billion in damage Read More …