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Washington State Audit Fails to Explain Loss of 200,000 Cattle

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

A review of Washington state brand inspection records has failed to find discrepancies that would explain how one of the nation’s largest meatpackers could have lost 200,000 cattle through business dealings with a Mesa, Washington-based rancher, the Spokane Spokesman-Review reported. The Washington State Department of Agriculture initiated the audit earlier this year after Tyson Fresh Meats, which operates a packing plant near Pasco, alleged in a lawsuit that Easterday Ranches Inc. defrauded the meatpacker of $225 million by claiming to have purchased and fed for the company about 200,000 cattle that never existed. “Given the two operations are engaged in this legal dispute involving the number of cattle, the program undertook this because it seemed like a prudent step to take to ensure there were no areas of concern or issues with this information we received,” department spokesperson Hector Castro said. The state reviewed brand inspection reports that Easterday Ranches are required to provide monthly that show how many cattle it had in feedlots from January 2019 to January 2021. Inspectors then compared those documents to reports submitted by Tyson reflecting the number of cattle it processed at the meatpacking plant at Wallula. “They didn’t find any discrepancy between the numbers,” Castro said. He said that the department’s review of documents didn’t look at the in-person inspections but focused instead on those monthly paper audits of how many cattle Easterday Ranches reported feeding in its pens. According to court records, Easterday Ranches would bill Tyson for cattle it purchased and then fed to slaughter weight. But late last year, Tyson officials said they became aware of problems. “Its investigation, including the admissions of Defendant’s President Cody Easterday, showed there were over 200,000 head of cattle that Defendant reported to be in inventory, but which did not exist,” Tyson attorney Alan D. Smith wrote in court records. After the lawsuit was filed in state court, Easterday Ranches Inc. and Easterday Farms both filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in early February, alleging that each owed creditors, including Tyson, more than $100 million.