Exposing JBS: The Brazilian Beef Baron at the Heart of America’s Price-Gouging Scandal
By Hotspotnews-November 10, 2025
If there’s one name that embodies the foreign cartel strangling American ranchers and families at the checkout line, it’s JBS. This Brazilian behemoth—once a humble sausage maker, now a global glutton controlling a massive chunk of U.S. beef processing—has been feasting on our markets for years, all while its founders dodged justice back home and padded political pockets here. President Trump’s executive order on November 7, directing the Department of Justice to unleash antitrust hell on the “Big Four” meatpackers, puts JBS square in the crosshairs. And thank God for it. This isn’t just about inflated ground beef hitting $6.32 a pound—up 66% since 2019—it’s about reclaiming our food supply from a company rotten with corruption, from the Amazon rainforests to the halls of Washington.
Let’s peel back the layers on JBS, the undisputed kingpin of this probe. Owned by the Batista brothers—Wesley and Joesley, who built an empire on taxpayer loans from Brazil’s development bank BNDES while allegedly funneling cash into bribes for 1,829 politicians in the Lava Jato (Car Wash) scandal—the company slithered into America through a series of acquisitions bankrolled by those same shady funds. By 2007, JBS was eyeing a U.S. IPO, but it took until 2025—under Trump’s watch—for it to finally go public, raising eyebrows about who pulled the strings. Today, JBS USA processes about 25% of America’s beef, part of the Big Four’s iron grip on 85% of the market. Ranchers get pennies on the dollar—down to 40% of retail prices—while JBS rakes in billions, exporting prime cuts to China and leaving Americans with the scraps at premium rates.
The timing of this DOJ hammer couldn’t be sweeter. Beef prices have surged 20% year-over-year, the smallest U.S. herd in 75 years thanks to droughts and feed costs, and yet JBS’s profits balloon amid whispers of bid-rigging and market allocation. Trump’s order calls it what it is: “illicit collusion, price fixing, and price manipulation” by foreign-influenced giants threatening our food security. Attorney General Pam Bondi confirmed the probe’s launch, with antitrust chief Gail Slater—a Vance pick with 25 years dismantling cartels—leading the charge alongside USDA’s Brooke Rollins. No more kid gloves; this is America First antitrust, aimed at breaking monopolies that treat our heartland like a cash cow.
But JBS’s sins run deeper than price hikes. Back in Brazil, the Batistas pled guilty to bribery in 2017, paying $200 million in fines and facing a whopping $3.2 billion more for ties to Amazon deforestation and embezzlement. Operation Bullish, a still-simmering probe, alleges they used BNDES loans to snap up U.S. plants like Swift and Pilgrim’s Pride, laundering corruption into American soil. And get this: Just as Trump ramps up scrutiny, JBS’s U.S. arm, Pilgrim’s Pride, drops $5 million—the largest single donation—to his inaugural committee. Coincidence? In swamp terms, that’s called “access insurance.” Critics like Rep. Thomas Massie call BS, demanding country-of-origin labels to expose the foreign flood of unlabeled imports. Even as stocks tanked post-announcement, with Joesley Batista’s “mamata” (sweet deal) in U.S. courts looking shakier by the hour, the stench of pay-to-play lingers.
The left and industry shills cry “political theater,” pointing to past probes that fizzled under Biden. But this is different. Trump’s not regulating; he’s liberating. By targeting JBS’s collusion with Tyson, Cargill, and National Beef, the DOJ could force divestitures, boost independent processors, and slash prices without a whiff of socialism. Ranchers from Texas to Montana are cheering—finally, a president who hears their howl after decades of ignored pleas. And with tariffs on Brazilian beef imports already biting at 76%, plus sanctions on their corrupt judiciary, this is geopolitical judo: Use their own playbook against them.
Skeptics whisper about that $5 million check, wondering if it’ll buy a blind eye. But Trump’s track record—from draining the swamp to tariff triumphs—says otherwise. This probe, if it indicts the Batistas and cracks their empire, could jail execs, levy hundred-million-dollar fines, and hand rural America a lifeline. JBS thought it could bribe its way to impunity, exporting corruption like cheap cuts. Wrong. Under Trump, the cartel crumbles, prices plummet, and American beef flows free again. For patriots tired of foreign fat cats carving up our dinner, this is the steak we’ve been waiting for. Bon appétit, comrades—victory tastes sweet.

