Yuma Sun

StarKist admits fixing tuna prices, faces $100 million fine

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SAN FRANCISCO — StarKist Co. agreed to plead guilty to a felony price fixing charge as part of a broad collusion investigat­ion of the canned tuna industry, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Thursday.

The DOJ said StarKist faces up to a $100 million fine when it is sentenced. Prosecutor­s allege that the industry’s top three companies conspired between 2010 and 2013 to keep prices artificial­ly high.

“We have cooperated with the DOJ during the course of its investigat­ion and accept responsibi­lity,” said StarKist chief executive Andrew Choe. “We will continue to conduct our business with the utmost transparen­cy and integrity.”

The scheme came to light when Thai Union Group’s Chicken of the Sea attempt to buy San Diego-based Bumble Bee failed in 2015, according to court records. Chicken of the Sea executives then alerted federal investigat­ors, who agreed to shield the company from criminal prosecutio­n in exchange for cooperatio­n.

Bumble Bee Foods last year pleaded guilty to the same charge and paid a $25 million fine, $111 million lower than prosecutor­s said it should have been. Prosecutor­s said they feared putting the financiall­y struggling Bumble Bee out of business with a high fine and agreed to let the company make interest-free payments for five years.

Two former executives of Bumble Bee and one from StarKist have also each pleaded guilty to price-fixing charges. None of them have been sentenced.

Former Bumble Bee chief executive Christophe­r Lischewski has pleaded not guilty to a price fixing charge.

“The conspiracy to fix prices on these household staples had direct effects on the pocketbook­s of American consumers,” said Assistant Attorney General Makan Delrahim.

In addition, the three companies face myriad lawsuits from wholesaler­s, food service companies and retailers such as Walmart, Target and Kroger.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS JUNE 30, 2008, FILE PHOTO, a StarKist brand product is seen on a grocery store shelf in Boston. Authoritie­s say StarKist has agreed to plead guilty to price fixing as part of a broad collusion investigat­ion of the industry. Federal prosecutor­s announced the plea agreement Thursday and said the company faces a maximum fine of $100 million. Bumble Bee Foods last year pleaded guilty to the same charge and paid a $25 million fine.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS JUNE 30, 2008, FILE PHOTO, a StarKist brand product is seen on a grocery store shelf in Boston. Authoritie­s say StarKist has agreed to plead guilty to price fixing as part of a broad collusion investigat­ion of the industry. Federal prosecutor­s announced the plea agreement Thursday and said the company faces a maximum fine of $100 million. Bumble Bee Foods last year pleaded guilty to the same charge and paid a $25 million fine.

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