Case Update 💼

Unjust enrichment and consumer fraud case against Cargill, Mars, and Mondelēz for ongoing child labor in Ghana

On November, 29th 2023, we filed a landmark lawsuit on behalf of nine children against Cargill, Mars, and Mondelēz for profiting from brutal conditions classified as the “worst forms” of child labor on the plantations where they source their cocoa in Ghana, West Africa.

Background

Building on the momentum from two recent legal victories, our team has recently returned from on-the-ground investigation of ongoing child labor violations on chocolate plantations. CBS Evening News aired a groundbreaking segment on November 29 2023 shedding light on our investigation of cocoa plantations in Ghana, where we captured staggering footage of extensive child labor and even outright theft from cocoa farmers through the use of weighted scales. Based on our investigation and explosive whistleblower statements, we can prove for the first time that these companies have been intentionally defrauding the public at a massive scale.

For the first time, we have whistleblower testimony proving that Cargill, Mars, and Mondelēz have defrauded the public by knowingly padding their pockets through pervasive child labor. This lawsuit exposes their decades of denial, evasion, and falsified social programs for the fraud they are.

“This time will be different,” Executive Director Terry Collingsworth stated. “We are using time-tested common law claims to hold Cargill and the other companies accountable for their serious human rights crimes against children.”

The CBS feature above was a vivid portrayal of the brutal conditions children like our 9 plaintiffs face, including machete scars and sicknesses from the unsafe chemicals they regularly handle. For decades these companies have stated a commitment to “phasing out” this type of child labor, plastering photos of smiling children holding bookbags on their website and sharing lists of names of the youth they claim to have rehabilitated through their benevolent programs.

We now can prove the malevolent nature of these photo-ops. Some of our child plaintiffs shared that they were handed a backpack and a workbook with the slogan, “I am a child, I play, I go to school,” before heading right back to work on the plantation the next day. Other children listed by these companies as rehabilitated don’t even exist - the names were fabricated to create a semblance of progress while the profits from exploited labor continued to roll in.

We know the road to justice is a long one - we have been fighting against these types of exploitative practices in the cocoa industry for decades. With the courage of our nine young plaintiffs and the shocking testimony of this whistleblower, we are thrilled to finally have the evidence to hold companies accountable.

Case Details

Docket No. N/A Op. Below District of Columbia District Court Argument N/A Opinion N/A Vote: N/A Judge: N/A Term: N/A

Holding

Pending

Judgment

Pending

Documents

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John Doe 1 et. al v. Nestlé and Cargill