Pilgrim's Pride, owned mainly by Brazil's JBS SA, will pay $75
million to settle claims by purchasers that bought chickens
directly from the company. The size of Tyson's settlement with
the same purchasers was not disclosed.
Neither company admitted liability, and both said settling was
in their best interests.
Both settlements require approval by a federal judge in Chicago.
Neither affects claims by "indirect" purchasers, which include
restaurant and supermarket operators such as Chick-fil-A, Kroger
Co and Target Inc as well as ordinary consumers.
They also do not affect claims against other defendants, such as
Sanderson Farms Inc and Perdue Farms Inc.
Pilgrim's settlement is the largest in more than four years of
litigation by restaurants, supermarkets and food distributors
over alleged price-fixing in the $65 billion chicken industry
https://www.nationalchickencouncil.org/
about-the-industry/statistics/broiler-chicken-industry-key-facts.
A few smaller chicken producers previously reached similar
settlements totaling $13 million.
Similar litigation has been pending in Minneapolis federal court
accusing Tyson, another JBS unit and other pork producers of
conspiring to inflate pork prices by limiting supply.
The Pilgrim's settlement follows that company's agreement in
October to pay a $110.5 million fine to resolve a U.S.
Department of Justice criminal price-fixing probe.
Last year, the Justice Department also filed criminal
price-fixing and bid-rigging charges https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/six-additional-individuals-indicted-antitrust-charges-ongoing-broiler-chicken-investigation
in Denver against 10 poultry industry executives. All have
pleaded not guilty.
The case is In re Broiler Chicken Antitrust Litigation, U.S.
District Court, Northern District of Illinois, No. 16-08637.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Richard
Pullin)
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