Health

Dutch authorities raid butcher in horsemeat probe

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — Dutch prosecutors say food safety experts have raided a meat processing plant as part of a criminal investigation into horsemeat fraud.

Prosecutors said Friday the company in North Brabant province is believed to have processed horsemeat from the Netherlands and Ireland, and mixed it with beef before selling the mixture as "pure" beef.

Prosecutors said in a statement the company is suspected of "fraud and money laundering." The company was not named, in line with Dutch privacy laws. Food safety investigators raided business premises and a home, seized documents and took samples of meat for analysis.

The Dutch Food Safety Authority announced Thursday it has launched a large-scale investigation throughout the food chain — from slaughterhouses to supermarkets — as part of Europe-wide efforts to trace fraudulently traded horsemeat.

Related Headlines

  • Runners and riders in Europe's horsemeat scandal

    The European Union agreed Friday to begin random DNA checks on meat products in a bid to put a lid on a spreading scandal over horsemeat, while British authorities announced ... 

  • Horsemeat scandal reaches Sweden

    Sweden on Friday became the newest European country to be hit by a widening meat products scandal, as frozen-food company Findus said it was recalling beef lasagna meals there ... 

  • Suppliers, grocers turning to DNA testing on meat

    Ireland's surprise discovery this month of horsemeat traces in factory-produced burgers is boosting business for one trade: Forensics labs that use DNA fingerprinting to tell ... 

  • After meatballs, Ikea withdraws sausages

    After withdrawing meatballs from stores across Europe, home furnishings company Ikea said Wednesday its own tests confirmed "a few indications of horse meat" and that it would ...