Monday, April 20, 2026

Go Ahead and Speak Your Mind

Have you ever noticed how most people really don't like being told they suck or are bad at their jobs?

I've had not a few irate people scream at me (over the years), because I wouldn't provide legal advice to people researching their legal questions.

But that's not what I'm talking about.

Nope, I'm taking about members of the city council.  I mean you'd think they way people scream at these guys (and gals) that they (the city councils of America) really don't have a clue about what they're doing!

And by their reactions, sometimes, I'm guessing they don't.

Take the case of  Noah Petersen, who was arrested for criticizing his mayor and police department.

 

Seems Mr. Petersen had written letters to the city council because he was upset about something.  After not getting a response, he decided to stand in front of his local city council and complain about how things were being done.

During the course of his monologue, Mr. Petersen stated that both the Mayor and the Chief of Police were "fascists"- which really didn't sit well with the Mayor who banged his gavel and, eventually, had Mr. Petersen arrested and removed from chambers.

The problem with all this is that the right to criticize the government is protected under our constitutional republic.  Pursuant to the 1st Amendment of the United State Constitution:

Congress shall make no law… abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

This single amendment protects the core right of citizens to criticize government, officials, laws, and policies.

The two clauses that are especially important (as they relate to criticizing government or speech, in general) are:

  1. Freedom of Speech
    Protects verbal and expressive criticism of government actors and policies.

  2. Right to Petition the Government
    Protects complaints, protests, and demands for change — historically understood as the right to criticize authority without fear of punishment.

The SCOTUS has repeatedly said that criticism of government is at the heart of the First Amendment, not at its edges and has said so in not a few cases, including:

  • New York Times Co. v. Sullivan376 U.S. 254 (1964)
    The Court held that public officials must tolerate harsh, inaccurate, and even offensive criticism, unless it is knowingly false and malicious.
    → This case exists specifically to protect criticism of government.

  • Terminiello v. Chicago337 U.S. 1 (1949)
    Speech that “stirs people to anger” or “invites dispute” is still protected.
    → Government cannot silence speech simply because it is upsetting.

  • City of Houston v. Hill482 U.S. 451 (1987)
    The Court struck down a city ordinance banning verbal criticism of police officers.
    → The Court said “the First Amendment protects a significant amount of verbal criticism and challenge directed at police officers.”

Government officials try to get around the right to criticize government constantly, and the courts have been very clear—all such speech is protected.  Following are real-world breakdown of the most common methods, what officials claim, and how courts respond.

1. “You’re being disrespectful / negative / offensive”

What officials say: “This meeting must remain respectful.”

What they really mean: Stop criticizing us.

Why it fails:  The First Amendment does not protect only polite speech. In fact, criticism is often uncomfortable by nature.

Court response:  City of Houston v. Hill, 482 U.S. 451 (1987)The First Amendment protects a significant amount of verbal criticism and challenge directed at police officers.

Bottom line: “Disrespect” is not a constitutional category.

2. “You’re off topic”

What officials say: “Please limit comments to agenda items.”

How it’s abused: Supporters are allowed to wander; critics are shut down.

Why it fails: Agenda limits must be evenly applied. Selective enforcement = viewpoint discrimination.

Court response: Courts consistently hold that unequal enforcement of meeting rules violates the First Amendment.

Bottom line: Rules aren’t illegal — biased enforcement is.

3. “You’re causing a disruption”

What officials say: "You’re disrupting the meeting."

What disruption actually means (legally):

  • Physical obstruction

  • Refusing to yield the floor

  • Shouting so proceedings can’t continue

What it does not mean:

  • Saying things officials don’t like

  • Accusing them of corruption

  • Speaking passionately

Court response: Terminiello v. Chicago, 337 U.S. 1 (1949)
Speech that provokes anger is protected.

Bottom line:  Offense does not equal disruption.

4. “This is a limited public forum — we can control speech”

What officials say:  “Public comment is a limited forum; we can restrict it.”

Why this fails:  Limited public forums still require viewpoint neutrality.

Court response:  Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia515 U.S. 819 (1995):  Viewpoint discrimination is prohibited in all forums.

Bottom line:  “Limited forum” is not a magic eraser.

5. “We’re just enforcing decorum”

What officials say:  “We’re enforcing decorum rules.”

How courts see it:  Decorum rules must be:

  • Narrow

  • Clear

  • Content-neutral

  • Applied equally

Why this fails in practice:  “Decorum” is often undefined and used selectively.

Court response:  Broadrick v. Oklahoma413 U.S. 601 (1973)Vague rules chill speech and are unconstitutional.

Bottom Line: Vague/undefined rules are unenforceable

6. “We’re protecting staff safety”

What officials say:  “This speech makes people feel unsafe.”

Why it fails:  Emotional discomfort ≠ legal threat.

Court response:  Brandenburg v. Ohio, 495 U.S. 444 (1969): Only true threats or incitement to imminent violence are unprotected.

Bottom line:  Feeling unsafe is not the same as being unsafe.

7. “You violated meeting policy”

What officials say:   “Our policy doesn’t allow that kind of speech.”

Why it fails:  City policies do not override the U.S. Constitution.

Court response:  Police Department of Chicago v. Mosley, 408 U.S. 92 (1972)Local rules conflicting with constitutional rights are void.

8. “You can criticize us — just not here”

What officials say:  “Take that outside.”

Why it fails:  If public comment is allowed, criticism must be allowed too.

Court response:  City of Madison Joint School District v. Wisconsin Employment Relations Commission429 U.S. 167 (1976): Silencing dissent at the only official forum for public input is unconstitutional.

Bottom Line:  If you can't take the heat, stay out of the kitchen. 

So, what can you do about city council's violating your 1st amendment rights (to criticize them)?

Well, following are some practical, plain-English checklists citizens can use in real time at city council or board meetings to protect their First Amendment rights.  They are written so an ordinary person can actually use them while standing at the podium or immediately afterward. 

Before You Speak

Is there a public comment period?
→ If yes, it is at least a limited public forum.

Are other people allowed to speak?
→ If yes, the government cannot silence you based on viewpoint.

Are time limits posted or announced?
→ Time limits are legal if applied equally.

While You Are Speaking

Am I speaking on a matter of public concern?
→ Criticism of officials, policies, or spending is fully protected.

Am I following the same rules as others (time, order)?
→ If yes, you are protected even if officials dislike your message.

Am I being interrupted or cut off?
→ Ask yourself why:

  • Actual disruption (shouting, refusing to yield time)?

  • Or because the content is critical or uncomfortable?

If it’s the second one, that's a constitutional red flag.

Common Illegal Justifications (Red Flags)

🚩 “You’re being disrespectful”
🚩 “We don’t allow negative comments”
🚩 “You’re criticizing council members”
🚩 “You’re making people uncomfortable”
🚩 “This isn’t the place for that” (when others are allowed to speak)

None of these are valid legal reasons to stop protected speech.

If You Are Cut Off or Removed

Did others expressing a different viewpoint speak longer or more freely?
→ This suggests viewpoint discrimination.

Was the rule applied only to you?
→ Selective enforcement = unconstitutional.

Was the reason vague or emotional?
→ “Decorum” without definition is a legal weakness.

What to Say (Calm, On-the-Record)

If interrupted, you may calmly say:

“For the record, I am speaking on a matter of public concern and complying with all posted rules.”

Or:

“Please state the specific rule I am violating.”

These statements create a record without escalating conflict.

After the Meeting (If There Was a Violation)

Note the date, time, and exact words used
Save video or request the meeting recording
Identify witnesses
Request meeting minutes and written policies

Ask:

  • Was my speech stopped due to content or viewpoint?

  • Were rules enforced equally?

If yes, this may be a First Amendment violation (that's "may" as in there are no absolutes in law)

The bottom line to all this is if praise is allowed at City Council hearings but criticism is stopped, then the First Amendment has been violated.

Make a note of it.


Monday, April 13, 2026

You're Pulling Me Over, Why?!?

In every place I've lived (four states and counting), California has, by far, the most police per mile of roadway.  That said, I am often surprised to find cops popping up in the most unlikely places here in Utah - particularly when I'm driving a few miles over the speed limit.

That's right, I'm a scofflaw of sorts and have been known to break a few traffic laws.  Thankfully, though, I have yet to be caught doing so (knock on wood).  I got to thinking about this the other day (as I was flying down the highway) specifically about the various ways people can get pulled over.  

So, how many reasons do you think there are that police can pull you over?  Well, If you count actual, codified legal reasons, most states have 200–400 distinct traffic and vehicle code sections of which roughly 150–250 are enforceable as stop-justifying violations, like:

  • Speed-related (multiple sub-rules)

  • Lane positioning

  • Signaling timing

  • Equipment specs (color, brightness, placement)

  • Registration display rules

  • Driver conduct rules

  • Pedestrian/right-of-way interactions

Soooooo ballpark guesstimate: there are maybe about 200 legitimate statutory reasons a police officer could lawfully stop a vehicle in a typical U.S. state?

Now, if you count discretion-based or “catch-all” violations, the number of possible pull-overable violations dramatically increase the number.  Nearly every state has vague statutes like:

  • “Careless driving”

  • “Unsafe operation”

  • “Failure to maintain lane”

  • “Driving at a speed not reasonable and prudent”

  • “Equipment not in safe working order”

and each of these can be triggered by dozens of observable behaviors.  Sooooo, again, ballpark guesstimate: maybe another couple hundred more practical justifications.

Given all that and because the SCOTUS went and ruled in Whren v. United States, 517 U.S. 806 (1996) that any traffic violation, no matter how minor, gives police probable cause to stop a vehicle, we are all in danger of getting pulled over and for any of the 400-ish reasons government has come up with to separate we the people with our hard-earned cash.

Notwithstanding all that, and after extensive research into all things reasons police pull people over, I've come up with the top 10 reasons police pull people over (in all states).  To wit:

1. Speeding

  • Driving above the posted speed limit is one of the most common reasons for being pulled over. Officers may also pull over drivers who are going too fast for the road conditions (e.g., in poor weather).

Speeding ends up as the #1 reason police pull people over because it sits at the intersection of law, safety, detectability, and enforcement practicality.  No other traffic offense checks all those boxes as cleanly.  Common penalties for speeding include:

  • Fines – Usually the first hit. The faster over the limit, the higher the fine.

  • Points on your license – Many places add demerit points; too many can lead to suspension.

  • Higher insurance rates – Even one ticket can bump your premiums for years.

  • Traffic school – Sometimes required, sometimes optional to reduce points.

  • License suspension or revocation – More likely for extreme speeding or repeat offenses.

  • Court appearance – Required in some cases, especially if the speed was very high.

  • Vehicle impoundment – In some jurisdictions for excessive or reckless speeding.

  • Criminal charges – If speeding is classified as reckless driving (e.g., 25–30+ mph over the limit).

As it relates to speeding, fines are typically based on how fast your are traveling and vary state by state.  To that you can usually expect to pay:

First Offense (example speed ranges):

  • 1–10 mph over limit: about $120–$130

  • 11–15 mph over: about $150–$160

  • 16–20 mph over: about $200–$210

  • 21–25 mph over: about $270–$280

  • 26–30 mph over: about $370–$380

  • 31+ mph over: base $470–$480+

2. Running a Red Light or Stop Sign

  • Ignoring traffic signals or failing to stop at stop signs is dangerous and a frequent cause for police intervention.

Turns out running a red light or stop sign really is one of the most dangerous everyday driving behaviors, and the reason has less to do with speed alone and more to do with how crashes happen at intersections.  When someone runs a red light or stop sign:

  • Vehicles are crossing at 90-degree angles

  • There’s no shared direction of travel, and

  • There’s often no time to react.

Running a red light or stop sign is dangerous because it:

  • Creates unavoidable, perpendicular collisions
  • Removes reaction time from innocent drivers
  • Targets the weakest parts of vehicles
  • Endangers pedestrians and cyclists
  • Turns small timing errors into major crashes

Bottom line, running a red light is not just illegal — it’s one of the highest-risk choices a driver can make in everyday driving.

3. Improper Lane Changes or Failure to Signal

  • Not signaling before changing lanes or making turns can create confusion on the road and is a traffic violation that often leads to a stop.

Improper lane changes combine high crash risk, constant occurrence, and are easily enforceable—even though they don’t feel as dangerous as speeding or red-light running.  Lane changes may not feel dramatic, but in real-world traffic safety and policing, they’re one of the most consequential everyday mistakes drivers make.

4. Tailgating (Following Too Closely)

  • When a driver follows another vehicle too closely, it’s considered unsafe and can lead to a ticket or a stop, especially in high-traffic areas.

Even though it often feels like a minor annoyance rather than a serious risk. The danger of tailgating comes from physics, human reaction time, and chain-reaction crashes, not just irritation.

While tailgating feels minor, from a safety standpoint, it’s one of the most mathematically unforgiving driving behaviors because it:

  • Eliminates reaction time

  • Makes collisions unavoidable

  • Causes chain-reaction crashes

  • Amplifies small mistakes

  • Turns ordinary braking into emergencies

5. Driving Under the Influence (DUI)

  • Officers will pull over vehicles that exhibit erratic driving behavior, such as swerving, slow or fast speeds, and inconsistent braking, which are often signs of impaired driving.

While DUI is often associated with drinking alcohol, DUI includes many more things and in many ways non-alcohol DUIs are just as dangerous—or more dangerous—because drivers often don’t realize they’re impaired.

DUI (Driving Under the Influence) generally means driving while impaired, not just drunk.  Depending on the state, it may also be called:

  • DUI (Driving Under the Influence)

  • DWI (Driving While Intoxicated or Impaired)

  • OUI / OWI (Operating Under/While Intoxicated)

The common legal standard is:  Impairment to the extent you cannot safely operate a vehicle.  Alcohol is just one way that impairment happens.

Substances that can cause a DUI (besides alcohol) include:

A. Prescription medications

B. Over-the-counter (OTC) medications that cause sedation, blurred vision or reduced altertness.

C. Marijuana (THC).  THC can slow reaction time, impair attention and tracting, and distort perception of time and distance.

D. Illegal drugs like Cocaine, Methamphetamine, heroin, MDM, and LSD.

E. Combined substances such as:

  • alcohol + marijuana

  • alcohol + prescription meds

  • multiple prescriptions together

F. Inhalants and household substances like nitrous oxide, solvents, or aerosols.

G. Non-substance impairment can also count. In some states, DUI laws also cover:

  • Extreme fatigue (sleep deprivation)

  • Certain medical episodes (if known and ignored)

6. Expired Tags or Registration

  • If your license plates are expired, officers may pull you over to check the registration and ensure the vehicle is properly insured.

While money is part of the system — expired tags are a pull-over offense mainly because of administrative control and accountability, not because it’s a high-profit enforcement tool. In fact, like DUI, expired-registration stops often cost more to enforce than they money they generate.

7. Broken or Non-Functional Lights

  • A malfunctioning brake light, headlight, or turn signal could result in a traffic stop. Police often look for vehicles that are unsafe or in violation of basic equipment regulations.

Police often issue fix-it tickets as a way to get drivers to keep cars safe (for other drivers).  Fix-it tickets (sometimes called corrective action tickets) are minor traffic citations that don’t carry heavy fines or points, but instead require the driver to correct a violation and prove it to the court or DMV.  

The good thing about fix-it tickets is that they are often cheaper and less burdensome than standard citations. For minor issues:

  • Drivers who can’t immediately pay a big fine can still comply

  • This avoids a cycle of escalating penalties for small infractions

8. Driving Without a Seatbelt

  • Failing to wear a seatbelt is a primary offense in many states. Officers often stop drivers and passengers if they notice they are not buckled in.

The thing is that seatbelt laws just feel like a money grab because seatbelt tickets are often low-cost fines and enforcement is easy — officers can issue a citation on sight.

However, the purpose of seatbelt laws is safety first, not money. Wearing a seatbelt reduces the risk of death in a crash by about 45%.  Wearing seatbelts also reduce the risk of serious injury by about 50% and unbelted occupants can become projectiles, injuring passengers or first responders.  In fact, before mandatory seatbelt laws, hospital and insurance data showed huge costs from preventable injuries

9. Unusual or Erratic Driving Behavior

  • Sudden lane changes, inconsistent speeds, or driving in a way that suggests distraction or lack of control may prompt a police officer to pull you over for a safety check.

Years ago, the law office i worked represented a guy who was charged with driving erratically (essentially, he was weaving back and forth in his lane.  At the time, we thought, as did the judge when we won, that the copy had lost his mind.  Weaving back and forth in his lane?  What's the harm in that?


Which is what I thought until I was driving on the 5 freeway in Orange County (California) one night out of Buena Park when I had this nutjob swerve right next to me, then over to the other side and back and forth.  

If you don't know what's doing on, you're liable to swerve to get out of his way because you don't know if he's going to ram into you causing you then to swerve into the other lane causing a chain reaction.

Yeah, scary stuff this one is.

10. Failure to Yield to Pedestrians

  • Not stopping or yielding for pedestrians in crosswalks is a traffic violation that can lead to a stop, especially in areas with heavy foot traffic. 

There are a whole lot of loonies in traffic land and many of them are pedestrians.  However, drivers must always yield to pedestrians in crosswalks or where pedestrians have the right-of-way, regardless of who the pedestrian is.

So why is the law is absolute when it comes to pedestrians? Traffic laws are designed around predictability, not moral judgment because the system assumes everyone must follow the rules for safety. If exceptions were allowed, roads would become chaotic and deadly.

Consequently, if you see a pedestrian and you're driving, you gotta slow down - even if the pedestrian is being a jerk (staring at their phones instead of paying attention to cars around them).

Yep, there are a whole lot of reasons police are gunning for you.  However, if you're able to keep your wits about you, you can avoid police and tickets and fines and other miserable things.

 

Monday, April 6, 2026

Word of the Month for April 2026: Food Fraud

Do you like to cook?  Specifically, bake, grill, BBQ - essentially anything that takes food in it's raw form and converts it into a form that can be safely consumed by humans.

That's what I'm talking about.  Food that you (a person) can eat.  That's not to say that there isn't problems related to animal (dog, cat, horse, etc) food/products.  It's just that this time round, we're looking at human food.

Imagine, if you will, you are prepping some chicken to grill and you realize you've run out of olive oil.  

I hate when that happens.

So, you run over to the store to buy some extra virgin olive oil.   

Just by chance, you look at the ingredients and see that it is EXTRA VIRGIN oil and made from olives from Italy - just what you were looking for.  

But is it really? How would you know?!

What if you were to find out that the olive oil you had been using for the past decade wasn't was what you thought it was?  What if the store passed off what they marketed as extra virgin olive oil was actually refined (and slightly used) motor oil with added flavoring?

Ick!  Gross!  Can you say lawsuit?!?

Before we get deep into all this, let's define what Food Fraud is.  

For our purposes, FOOD FRAUD is the deliberate and intentional substitution, addition, tampering, or misrepresentation of food, ingredients, or packaging for economic gain.  It also includes false or misleading statements about a product for financial advantage.

This can happen at any stage of the food supply chain — from farming to processing to retail — and can involve lowering quality, hiding defects, or selling one thing as another.

As it happens, there are two common categories related to Food Fraud, namely:

  1. Economically Motivated Adulteration (EMA) — cutting costs by adding/substituting something cheaper.

  2. Counterfeit/Mislabeling — passing off a product as higher quality, premium origin, or even an entirely different species.

As it turns out, there are 15 categories of Food Fraud:

  1. Olive oil adulteration — Mixing extra virgin olive oil with cheaper vegetable oils like soybean or sunflower.

  2. Honey dilution — Adding sugar syrup, corn syrup, or rice syrup to bulk up honey volume.

  3. Fish mislabeling — Selling cheaper species (e.g., tilapia) as more expensive ones (e.g., red snapper).

  4. Ground meat substitution — Mixing beef with pork, horse meat, or other animal proteins without disclosure.

  5. Maple syrup fraud — Replacing maple syrup with colored, flavored corn syrup.

  6. Wine mislabeling — Misstating grape variety, region, or vintage to command a higher price.

  7. Organic labeling fraud — Selling conventionally grown produce as “organic” without certification.

  8. Spice adulteration — Adding brick dust, lead chromate, or starch to bulk up turmeric, paprika, or saffron.

  9. Milk watering — Diluting milk with water, sometimes adding melamine to fake protein content (China, 2008).

  10. Juice mislabeling — Selling apple juice as “100% pomegranate” or “100% cranberry” with only flavorings and colorants.

  11. Coffee blending fraud — Mixing high-grade Arabica with cheaper Robusta while selling it as 100% Arabica.

  12. Caviar substitution — Selling dyed fish roe (e.g., lumpfish or paddlefish) as sturgeon caviar.

  13. Parmesan cheese filler — Adding cellulose (wood pulp) or cheaper cheeses and still labeling as “100% Parmesan.”

  14. Vanilla extract substitution — Using synthetic vanillin instead of real vanilla from beans without disclosure.

  15. Shrimp mislabeling — Selling farmed shrimp as “wild-caught” or substituting smaller shrimp for premium-sized ones.

So, looking back on our example regarding the extra virgin olive oil, what would you want to happen if the company you bought your extra virgin olive oil sold you something other than what was labeled?

In 2017, prosecutors in Turin, Italy, investigated multiple brands (including Bertolli and Carapelli, owned by Deoleo at the time) for selling lower-grade oil as “extra virgin.”  

Consequently, a class action lawsuit was filed in the United States under Koller v. Deoleo USA, Inc., No. 3:14-cv-02400-RS (N.D. Cal., San Francisco) for two reason.  

First, the statement "Imported from Italy” on Bertolli olive oils was misleading because much of the olive oil came from olives grown/pressed in countries other than Italy; Second, products labeled “Extra Virgin” wouldn’t remain extra-virgin through retail sale/best-by date due to clear bottles and handling (heat/light).  

Have you ever noticed the bottles you buy olive oil in?  "Higher quality" olive oil is sold in dark, glass bottles.  Without going into the nitty gritty of things, olive oil sold in in plastic bottles tend to leach chemicals into the oil like Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET), High-Density Polyethylene (HOPE), and bisphenol A (BPA).  

So, just be careful with what you're buying.

Anyway, one thing led to another and all parties settled on August 9, 2018 for $7 million resulting in serious changes to labeling and how the oil was bottled.

Thing is, if you search around long enough, you can find LOTS of cases of Food Fraud.  

Wait, there's more of this going on???  

You bet there is (and I've broken some of it into the 15 different categories):

1. Olive Oil Adulteration

  1. Deoleo USA (Bertolli/Carapelli) – Mislabeling “Imported from Italy” & selling oils that didn’t meet extra virgin standards: Koller v. Deoleo USA, Inc., 3:14-cv-02400 (N.D. Cal., 2018 settlement).

  2. Operation Mamma Mia (Italy, 2019) – Carabinieri seized 2,000+ tons of oil falsely sold as Italian extra virgin; actually blended with low-grade oils from abroad.

2. Honey Dilution

  1. 2013 European Honeygate – Testing revealed honey from China diluted with rice syrup; seized in Germany & UK (EU anti-dumping measures evasion).

  2. Sweet Harvest Foods v. United States, (Slip Op. 23-162 (Ct. Int’l Trade Nov. 17, 2023) – U.S. Customs seized adulterated honey with corn syrup and undeclared antibiotics. 

3. Fish Mislabeling

  1. Oceana 2013 Study – 33% of U.S. seafood mislabeled; red snapper often substituted with tilapia or rockfish.

  2. 2019 Canadian Food Inspection Agency probe – 47% of fish tested in restaurants/grocery mislabeled, often swapping cheaper species.

4. Ground Meat Substitution

  1. 2013 EU Horsemeat Scandal – Beef products in UK/Ireland contained undeclared horse meat (Findus, Tesco).

  2. 2015 U.S. Federal Indictment – Company sold goat meat mixed with mutton/lamb without disclosure.

5. Maple Syrup Fraud

  1. Maple Grove Farms Lawsuit (2016) – Class action alleged “maple” syrups were mostly corn syrup with artificial flavor.

  2. Quebec, 2012 “Great Maple Syrup Heist – 3,000 tons stolen from strategic reserve, replaced with inferior product.

6. Wine Mislabeling

  1. 2010 French “PineauGate – 18 million bottles labeled as Pinot Noir were actually Merlot/Syrah; E.&J. Gallo unwittingly bought.

  2. 2018 Brunello di Montalcino Probe – Italian producers accused of blending non-Brunello grapes to boost volume.

7. Organic Labeling Fraud

  1. 2017 Missouri Grain Dealer Case – Randy Constant sold $140M in non-organic grain as “organic” (largest U.S. organic fraud case).

  2. 2010 Aurora Dairy Class Action – Allegations cows weren’t pastured per USDA organic rules; settled with labeling changes.

8. Spice Adulteration

  1. Turmeric Recall – Found lead chromate contamination to enhance color.

  2. 2016 Indian Chili Powder Seizures – Brick powder and salt adulteration for weight and color.

9. Milk Watering

  1. China Melamine Scandal (2008) – Melamine added to watered-down milk to fake protein content; 300,000 affected, 6 infant deaths.

  2. 2004 Milk Fraud – Diluted powdered milk sold in Kabul schools under aid contracts.

10. Juice Mislabeling

  1. 2010 POM Wonderful Lawsuit vs. Coca-Cola – “Pomegranate Blueberry” juice mostly apple & grape; SCOTUS ruled POM could sue under Lanham Act.

  2. 2014 FDA Warning to Apple & Eve – Mislabeling cranberry juice blends as “100% cranberry.”

11. Coffee Blending Fraud

  1. 2025 Brazil Investigation – Coffee contained corn, soybeans, wood; passed off as pure coffee.

  2. Widespread fraud in the coffee industry – Arabica-Robusta blends sold as 100% Arabica in premium lines.

12. Caviar Substitution

  1. Caviar Trafficking in Missouri – Paddlefish roe mislabeled as beluga caviar; Lacey Act violation.

  2. Fake Caviar from Bulgaria and Romania – Dyed lumpfish roe sold as sturgeon caviar in upscale restaurants.

13. Parmesan Cheese Filler

  1. 2016 Castle Cheese Inc. (PA, USA) – FDA found wood pulp (cellulose) & cheaper cheeses in “100% Parmesan.”

  2. 2018 Italian Grana Padano Fraud – Producers mixed in non-approved cheeses to stretch supply.

14. Vanilla Extract Substitution

  1. 2019 U.S. Class Action vs. Blue Diamond – “Vanilla” almond milk flavored mostly with synthetic vanillin.

  2. Is it vanilla or just vanilla flavoring? – Multiple ice cream brands labeled “vanilla” using artificial flavor only.

15. Shrimp Mislabeling

  1. 2014 Oceana Study – 30% of shrimp in U.S. mislabeled; farmed sold as “wild-caught.”

  2. 2018 CBC Marketplace – Found 47% of Canadian shrimp mislabeled, including species swaps.

Looking over all this you might say, yeah but that's all ancient history.  Isn't there anything more recent or is that all there is?  To which I'd reply, what kind of blogger do you think I am that I can't produce more recent events/happenings, like:

1. Feeding Our Future Pandemic Food Aid Fraud (2020–2025)

A Minnesota nonprofit, Feeding Our Future, orchestrated a massive fraud scheme by diverting over $250 million in federal funds intended for child nutrition during the COVID-19 pandemic. The organization submitted false claims for meals that were never served, leading to significant financial losses.

In September 2022, 47 individuals were federally charged, with the total indictments rising to 70 by late 2024. In June 2024, during the first trial, a juror was offered $120,000 to vote not guilty—the offer was rejected and reported and in March 2025,  Founder Aimee Bock was convicted on all counts (fraud, bribery, wire fraud).   

Consequently, Abdiaziz Shafii Farah received 28 years in prison and was ordered to pay nearly $48 million in restitution and Abdinasir Abshir pleaded guilty to wire fraud and witness tampering, forfeiting a Range Rover and agreeing to $2.3 million restitution.

The Feeding Our Future fraud scheme is formally documented in federal criminal cases filed in the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota. Key cases include:

2. EU & Global Fraud Alerts (2025)

In May 2025, The European Commission's Alert and Cooperation Network (ACN) flagged multiple suspected food fraud issues, including:

  • Olive oil adulteration with other oils.

  • Artificial instead of natural vanilla in Austria.

  • Pork mislabeled as wild boar, forged documentation, extended expiry dates on frozen beef, unauthorized dyes in spices, and more.

  • The Global Food Fraud Index (FoodAkai) highlighted sharp surges in suspicious activity in:

    • Nuts, dairy, cereals & bakery, fish & seafood, non-alcoholic beverages, and garlic—while fraud in coffee, honey, and olive oil saw declines.

  • The FAN 2024 Global Food Fraud Report showed:

    • Main commodity targets: seafood, honey, dairy

    • Leading fraud types: botanical origin fraud, animal origin fraud, and use of non-food substances (e.g., unauthorized dyes or preservatives).

  • FoodChain ID’s 2024 data revealed ~665 food fraud incidents, particularly affecting seafood, honey, and dairy.

3. FDA Honey Adulteration Investigations (2022–2023)

  • The FDA conducted investigations into imported honey products, identifying violations where honey contained undeclared added sweeteners. These actions aimed to prevent fraudulent honey from entering the U.S. market.

4. Olive Oil Enforcements: Operation OPSON (2023)

  • In late 2023, Europol, Spain, and Italy led Operation OPSON, dismantling a transnational olive oil counterfeiting ring:

    • Seized 260,000 liters of oil labeled “extra virgin” but deemed unfit for consumption

    • Arrested 11 individuals and confiscated cash and adulterated oil.

5. India Food Adulteration Convictions (2025)

  • In the first quarter of India’s 2025–26 fiscal year, the state of Rajasthan convicted 489 individuals for food adulteration—only 10 acquitted out of 499 cases.

    • Between April–June 2025, officials tested 18,213 samples: 863 unsafe, 3,734 substandard, and 131 misbranded.

6. Rajasthan Food Adulteration Cases (2025)

  • In the first quarter of the financial year 2025–26, courts in Rajasthan convicted 489 individuals for food adulteration offenses, with only 10 acquitted. This highlights the ongoing issue of food fraud in India. 

7. FDA Health Fraud Recalls (2020–2025)

  • The FDA issued recalls for various health fraud-related products, including dietary supplements and unapproved drugs, to protect consumers from potentially harmful or fraudulent products. 

8. Honey Fraud Impacts (2024)

  • In late 2024, the World Beekeeping Awards suspended its honey category due to widespread adulteration:

    • In recent competitions, 39–45% of honey entries were rejected due to suspected sugar syrup adulteration.

    • The decision was driven by unreliable testing and insufficient regulatory response.

9. Mawa (Khoya) Adulteration in Hisar, India (2025)

  • Authorities in Hisar seized 8.5 quintals of adulterated mawa (khoya) stored in unsanitary conditions. The adulterated product was supplied to sweet shops, including Bikaner Sweets, and sold at inflated prices.

10. FDA Economically Motivated Adulteration (EMA) Research (2020–2025)

  • EMA includes adulteration, mislabeling, and substitution of lower-quality ingredients. This can involve seafood getting mislabeled as a more expensive product, spices getting mixed with other parts of a plant to bulk production, and juices being diluted with water to boost profit margins. The FDA conducted research to identify and prevent economically motivated adulteration (EMA) in food products. This includes detecting intentional substitutions or additions to food to deceive consumers and increase profits.  

These cases illustrate the ongoing challenges and enforcement efforts related to food fraud in the United States and globally.  This just goes to show that fraud isn't just a domestic issue - it's everywhere.  Any time there is a chance to make money or take advantage, there will be someone who will step up and do so.

Sad that.