Former Head of SK Foods Indicted for Food Fraud and Mislabeling

Frederick Scott Salyer, 54, former owner of  California-based SK Foods, which grows, processes and distributes tomatoes, was indicted on Friday on charges of racketeering, wire fraud, mail fraud, money laundering and obstruction of justice. Tomatoes from SK Foods are widely used in tomato-based products including sauces, ketchups and juices.

Salyer is alleged to have manipulated the industry through price fixing, bribery and mislabeling. Specifically, he is alleged to have bribed purchasing managers at food companies to guarantee that the companies purchased SK Foods' products over its competitors and for its competitors' pricing information. Salyer is also alleged to have ordered the mislabeling of products  As a result, consumers received dated and moldy products, and products mislabeled as organic at higher prices. In some cases, products as much as three years old with a shelf life of one year, or containing mold levels beyond limits set by the Food and Drug Administration, were alleged to have been placed on the market.

Salyer was arrested earlier this month at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York upon arriving on a flight from Switzerland. He had allegedly fled the U.S. last fall to relocate to a country where he could not be extradited after some of his subordinates pled guilty to charges in relation to the investigation, a joint effort by the FBI, IRS, FDA and Department of Justice Anti-trust Divison, nicknamed Operation Rotten Tomatoes. Salyer is alleged to have arranged for the transfer of millions of dollars to overseas accounts, and to have placed a $7 million home in Pebble Beach on the market. Salyer was denied bail.

SK Foods declared bankruptcy last May and has been acquired by another company.