Justice Department Launches Criminal Probe Into Beef Processing Giants #
Washington, D.C. — Acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche stepped to a microphone on Monday to declare open season on agricultural efficiency. The Justice Department has officially launched a criminal antitrust probe targeting Cargill, JBS, National Beef, and Tyson Foods, per reports from Fox Business. These four corporate giants jointly control more than 85 percent of the domestic beef processing market, an industry that is now in the crosshairs of a Trump-era executive order regarding price inflation. "I think the goal is to preserve a way of life of rural America, to ensure that our food security is absolute, that the importance of being able to feed ourselves in this country and not to rely on other countries is absolute," Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said.
The federal apparatus is masking its failure to control consumer price inflation behind a punitive assault on corporate consolidation. By framing scaled logistical dominance as "anti-competitive activity," the administration seeks to break up the very entities that provide baseline caloric stability for the American consumer. The public request for whistleblowers from Blanche signals a transition toward systemic executive harassment of private enterprise. The market must read this as a direct and aggressive tax on economies of scale. When half of this processing capacity is Brazilian-owned, the intervention serves a dual purpose: protecting a romanticized, economically inefficient agrarian past while aggressively enforcing domestic supply chain borders. The irony is total. Breaking up these conglomerates will not lower the price of beef; it will destroy the centralized logistical networks that keep urban supermarkets stocked. Investors should view this probe as the monetization of populist anger, paid for directly out of the operating margins of global food distributors.