During the pandemic, the lockdowns imposed in certain countries also led to an initial sudden shut down of the food service sector. Consumers increasingly began shopping closer home or via online platforms.
Consumers began to stockpile products like dry pasta and frozen vegetables, thereby putting the retail supply routes under considerable stress. The purchase of food online, however, has its own set of challenges, including uncertainty about regulation and reduced traceability.
What is particularly distressing about the pandemic is the fact that a demand for cheaper food products has led to an increased likelihood of food crime. Due to stressed food supply chains, there was lesser attention to the quality of the food being purchased and tracing its source. This can lead to criminal elements amongst traders attempting to monetise low quality or actually harmful to health food products at very low prices.
Though not always the case, most food crimes are invariably the handiwork of people hailing from the food industry. Their modus operandi would generally be to use what might be a partially legitimate food business to sell unsafe and adulterated food products. On the whole, there doesn’t seem to be the hand of any organized crime groups or syndicates.
That being stated, there certainly is some involvement of organized crime groups in food crime. They may use the food business as a conduit to launder money, indulge in smuggling and the exploitation of people. They do so by infiltrating international supply chains to conceal banned and illegal commodities like drugs and weapons. One very lucrative target for criminals in the food industry has to be alcohol, which allows them to make a killing by buying it cheaply, avoid paying taxes and selling it very profitably at the market rate.