Smithfield Foods Settles Pork Price-Fixing Lawsuit for $42 Million

Smithfield Foods Settles Pork Price-Fixing Lawsuit for $42 Million
Employees of two departments report to work at the Smithfield pork processing plant in Sioux Falls, S.D., on May 4, 2020. Stephen Groves/AP Photo
The Associated Press
Updated:
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OMAHA, Neb.—Smithfield Foods will pay restaurants and caterers $42 million to settle a lawsuit that accused the giant meat producer of conspiring to inflate pork prices, which will likely only add to concerns about how the lack of competition in the industry affects meat prices.

Lawyers began notifying companies affected by this latest settlement Tuesday. Previously, Smithfield settled with a different group of pork buyers for $83 million, and JBS agreed to pay the restaurants and caterers $12.75 million in the pork lawsuit. Earlier this year, JBS also said it would pay $52.5 million to settle a similar beef price-fixing lawsuit. Neither Smithfield nor JBS admitted any wrongdoing as part of those settlements, and officials at Smithfield’s headquarters in Virginia declined to comment on the details of the deal.