Trump’s DOJ Drops the Hammer on JBS Corruption Just as Socialist Lula Comes Knocking

By Hotspotnews

 

Washington, D.C. — As Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva prepares to stroll through the White House gates this week for high-level talks with President Trump, the Department of Justice has launched a major antitrust crackdown on the very meatpacking giants who helped grease the wheels for warmer U.S.-Brazil relations. At the center of it all sits JBS, the Brazilian-owned behemoth whose owners have a rap sheet longer than a São Paulo traffic jam.

The timing is no coincidence. Just days before Lula’s arrival — expected around May 7-8 — the Trump administration signaled it will intensify a sweeping probe into the “Big Four” meatpackers, with JBS squarely in the crosshairs. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins and senior officials have made clear: American ranchers are getting squeezed by foreign-dominated processors controlling roughly 85 percent of the beef market. Prices at the grocery store are too high for families, too low for producers, and the whole system reeks of concentrated power.

This isn’t some random regulatory flex. JBS and its parent company J&F Investimentos, run by the Batista brothers, have a documented history of systemic bribery that would make even seasoned D.C. lobbyists blush. The brothers admitted to paying off more than 1,800 politicians in Brazil’s sprawling Operation Car Wash scandal. They’ve faced massive fines in Brazil and the United States, including Foreign Corrupt Practices Act penalties during Trump’s first term. Yet somehow, a JBS subsidiary — Pilgrim’s Pride — became the single largest donor to Trump’s 2025 inaugural committee with a cool $5 million. Not long after, Joesley Batista scored a private sit-down at the White House. Tariffs eased. The SEC fast-tracked JBS’s NYSE listing. And suddenly, the chill between Trump and Lula began to thaw.

Conservatives have every right to be skeptical. For months, voices in the Brazilian opposition — including allies of former President Jair Bolsonaro — have warned that big business interests were quietly working to soften America’s stance on Lula’s socialist regime. The payoff? Talks on rare earth minerals and critical supply chains, a move pitched as countering China’s dominance. Fair enough on paper. Brazil sits on the world’s second-largest reserves of these vital resources, and reducing Beijing’s stranglehold is a legitimate national security priority.

But at what cost? Lula’s government has cozied up to adversaries abroad while cracking down on conservatives at home. His party’s history of corruption scandals makes the Batista brothers look like small-time operators. Now, with Lula literally knocking on the door for a state visit, Trump’s team is sending a crystal-clear message: America First doesn’t mean rolling out the red carpet for cronies — foreign or domestic.

The DOJ investigation is a welcome dose of reality. Ranchers and cattle producers have been sounding the alarm for years about JBS’s market muscle driving down live cattle prices while jacking up consumer costs. Independent farmers feel betrayed when multinational players with sketchy foreign ties get special access in Washington. Trump campaigned on lowering grocery bills and protecting American agriculture from unfair foreign competition. This probe delivers on that promise.

Critics on the left are already crying “pay-to-play,” pointing to the inaugural donation and early policy wins. Fair point — optics matter. But Trump has never been shy about playing hardball with flawed actors when it serves U.S. interests. The difference this time is the follow-through: engage on trade and minerals if necessary, then hit back hard on domestic monopolies that hurt American workers and families.

Still, the parallel tracks raise legitimate questions inside conservative circles. Is the Lula summit worth the political risk if it appears tied to JBS influence? Bolsonaro supporters in Brazil and their American friends aren’t wrong to feel sidelined after years of fighting Lula’s return. Pragmatism has its place, but conservatives didn’t elect Trump to trade principle for mineral deals brokered by operators with a corruption rap sheet.

As Air Force One readies for whatever photo-ops Lula’s team has planned, the real story is unfolding in federal courtrooms and on American farms. Trump’s DOJ is showing it can walk the transactional tightrope without falling into the swamp. If the investigation yields real reforms — breaking up market concentration and prioritizing U.S. producers — it will prove once again that America First means putting American interests above backroom deals.

The message to JBS, Lula, and any other global players watching: The free ride is over. Trump is watching the bottom line, but he hasn’t forgotten who he was elected to serve.

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