Monkey Meat, Fake Booze, and Tainted Olives Seized in International Food Fraud Bustby Dana Hatic
Authorities have confiscated more than 10,000 tons of illicit foods in recent months
What do sugar spiked with fertilizer, olives painted with copper, and fake alcoholic beverages
have in common? All are among the more than 10,000 tons of counterfeit
and illicit foods that have been seized over the last several months in a
massive initiative by Interpol and Europol, reports the Associated Press.
The seizures even had a special name: Operation Opson V,
which spanned November 2015 to February 2016 and resulted in a number
of arrests around the world as police and other regulatory bodies
carried out investigations.
"Among the aims of the operation is to identify and
disrupt the organized crime networks behind the trafficking in fake
goods," a release from Interpol said.
The investigations were carried out in 57 countries, including the UK, Greece, Thailand, and Indonesia.
The investigations were carried out in 57 countries, including the UK, Greece, Thailand, and Indonesia.
Aside from the aforementioned fake liquor, tainted
sugar, and painted olives, some of the stranger confiscated items
included monkey meat, illegal buffalo meat, 11 kilos of locusts and 20
kilos of caterpillars, peanuts that were repackaged and relabeled as
pricier pine nuts — obviously a major concern for those with dangerous
food allergies — and chicken intestines preserved in formalin.
Concerns over fake or tainted products are ongoing as investigations into fake labels, tainted goods, and organized crime rings continue to make headlines. A recent episode of 60 Minutes exposed the Italian epidemic that is olive oil fraud, and scientists are working on ways to detect counterfeit coffee beans. Meanwhile, many restaurants in the U.S. have been busted subbing cheap fish for lobster.