2018-10-01_Reader_s_Digest_AUNZ

(John Hannent) #1
October• 2018 | 67

READER’S DIGEST


Stier Sentences
But are sentences tough enough? Of
therecord,thereisaresounding‘no’
from investigators. Take the case of
Dutch meat trader Willy Selten, who
wasarrestedin2013byGussowand
her colleagues. Behind factory gates,
Selten was deboning meat from all
over Europe, including 300,000 kilo-
grams of horsemeat that ended up in
supermarket burgers.
The ‘horsegate’ fraud affected Bel-
gium, France, Germany, Ireland, the
Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland
and the UK. Prosecutors demanded
five years. Selten was sentenced to
half that. Five years later, he is still
free pending an appeal.
“Law enforcement officers say sen-
tencesaretoolight,butacademiclit-
erature has consistently shown that
higher sanctions do not actually de-
terfraudsters,”saysGussow.
“Detection is a more important
deterrent, and the fact that on aver-
agewerecovermorethan€1million
[A$1.5 million] from each of the ma-
jor criminals we catch.
“Food fraud is not a victimless
crime. It is an attack on a basic human
righttoknowthatwhatweputinto
our bodies is safe,” she concludes.

transaction, from farm or ocean to
marketstallorsupermarketshelf,is
anopportunityforacriminal,”says
Elliott. “Tracking and tracing them
alliswherewecomein.”
Ta kei sh, one of E l l iot t ’s favou r ite
topics. Norwegian and Russian fac-
toryshipsremovetheheadsandguts
fromthefishtheycatch,whichare
thenfrozen,senttoChina,thawed,
filleted by cheap labour, re-frozen
intolargeblocksandshippedto
SouthKorea.“here,theyhavecold
stores the size of football stadiums
and the traders come to buy,” says
Elliott. “hey in turn sell on to other
traders,whosellthemtoretailers.
“Inajourneyofthousandsofmiles
there is ample opportunity for crimi-
nals to bulk upillets with salty water,
substitutespecies,orlabelbulkcatch
as line caught.
“Supermarketchainsputalotofef-
fort into securing their supply chains
anddotheirowntesting,butnothing
canbe100percentefective.
“I have been threatened because
of the work we do. Where organised
crime is in play, such as the Mafia’s
involvement in adulterated olive oil,
there is always a risk, because wher-
ever you look for fraud you will ind it.”


PAW AND ORDER

A sneaky squirrel crossed the thin blue line when swiping
a US policeman’s doughnut from under his nose. “That’s a
straight-up felony!” decried the cop. “Also, it’s rude.”FOXNEWS.COM
Free download pdf