Attorney General Dustin McDaniel today filed a consumer-protection lawsuit
against a butcher shop with locations in Conway and Heber Springs, alleging that
the owner sold adulterated and mislabeled ground beef and ground lamb.
The lawsuit against Lonnie’s Meat Market and
Catering, Inc. and its owner, Lonnie Copeland, contends Copeland mixed ground
beef into products that he sold and labeled as ground lamb, in violation of the
Arkansas Deceptive Trade Practices Act. This came after Copeland entered into an
agreement with the Attorney General to cease the practice of including beef
heart in the ground beef he sold.
“Arkansas consumers were duped into buying
adulterated meat so that this business could undercut its competitors and
increase its profits,” McDaniel said. “Consumers need the assurance that they
get what they pay for, and that food products are of the quality and type that
are represented on the label.”
McDaniel’s lawsuit states that USDA investigators
determined that a package of ground lamb purchased from the Lonnie’s Meat Market
location in Conway contained components of ground beef. The state maintains that
Copeland intentionally intermingled beef with lamb to decrease his costs.
McDaniel also alleges that Copeland is in
violation of an Assurance of Voluntary Compliance with the Attorney General’s
Office that he agreed to on Oct. 12. The Attorney General sought the AVC after
learning that USDA investigators had found beef heart meat in five of the nine
samples of ground beef, ground chuck and ground sirloin they had taken from his
stores. Heart meat, which is classified by the USDA as an unacceptable
ingredient in ground beef, was found in four ground beef samples and one ground
sirloin sample.
In October, Copeland acknowledged that he had used
beef heart in his ground beef products, but pledged to cease using it. Under the
terms of the AVC, Copeland would be fined $25,000 if a court were to find that
there were further violations of the Deceptive Trade Practices Act.
McDaniel’s lawsuit seeks the $25,000, in addition
to an injunction to prohibit Lonnie’s Meat Market from adulterating or
misbranding meat. The suit also seeks civil penalties plus attorneys’ fees and
costs.
The lawsuit was filed in Pulaski County Circuit
Court.
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