US meat supplier to McDonald’s and KFC in China disputes court’s ‘unjust verdict’ over expired fast-food meat scandal
OSI Group considers appeal as Shanghai court fines two subsidiaries 1.2 million yuan and jails six staff after old chicken and beef sold to restaurants on mainland and in Hong Kong
A United States meat supplier is disputing a Chinese court’s verdict that its local subsidiary sold expired chicken and beef to McDonald’s, KFC and other fast-food restaurants on the mainland and in Hong Kong.
OSI Group, based in Aurora, in Illinois also said that it was considering appealing against what it called an “unjust verdict” by a Shanghai court on Monday, which fined two of its Chinese units and also jailed six employees.
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Ten staff members were convicted of packaging out-of-date and substandard meat as new products, the court ruled, but four of them were given suspended jail sentences.
The scandal was exposed in 2014 by Shanghai’s Dragon TV station, which reported that OSI’s subsidiary had repackaged and sold old meat.
OSI staff had marked products with false expiration dates to “retrieve economic losses”, the court said.
It also added to the long list of Chinese product safety scandals over the past decade, including fake or adulterated goods such as baby milk powder and drugs that have sickened or killed infants, hospital patients and others.