US News

Pasta maker in hot water for allegedly under-filling boxes

The world’s leading pasta company has landed in hot wateꦆr with some of its customers, who are accusiꦍng it of cheating them out of their beloved carbs by under-filling its boxes by as much as 25 percent.

Four New York consumers say that the Barilla corpo💫ration is using “deceptive packaging” to fool consumers into thinking they are getting more pasta then they really a𓆉re in the food maker’s specialty lines, according to a class-action suit filed in Brooklyn.

Barilla is allegedly putting their ✃extra-protein, whole-grain and gluten-free pastas into the same-sized blue boxes that they use for their regular enriched macaroni, even though the boxes are filled with significantly fewer noodles.

“Barilla relies on consumers’ familiarity with the box size and appearance, known due t꧒o decades of marketing, to mislead consumers into thinking they are purchasing the same quantity of pasta when, in reality, the company is filling the boxes with materially less pasta,” the lawsuit says.

The New York-based customers complain that they are getting 9.4-percent less in boxes of Protein Plus pasta, 17.4-percent less in their whole🐻-grain pasta and 25 percent less in their gluten-free pasta.

The “new reduced net weight” of th𒁃e pasta is indicated on the box, the suit notes, but customers are otherwise uninformed that there’s been a change in the quantity of product “or that the boxes are substantially under-filled.”

Plaintiffs Alessandro Berni of The Bronx, Domenico Salvata and Mossimo Simioli of Brooklyn and Giuseppe Santochirico of Queens are suing for unspecified damages.
𝓡൲ All four claim they were “overcharged” and suffered “out-of-pocket loss” after buying various boxes of Barilla this year that were under-filled.

“Barilla’s deceptive practice . . . is known as ‘slack-fill,’ ” the suit says. “By misleading 🐷consumers in this manner, Barilla is able to capitalize on the market . . . while preserving and/or increasing its margins.” A rep for Barilla didn’t return a message.

One of the lawyers for the plaintiffs d🍬eclined to comment.

Outrage against B🐟arilla boiled over in 2013 following anti-gay remarks made by lo🌠ngtime CEO Guido Barilla on an Italian radio show.

“I would never do [a commercial] with a♌ homosexual family, not for lack of resp🍌ect, but because we don’t agree with them,” Barilla said at the time.

The macaroni maker also recently came under fire after it wa🔜s revealed it partly funded a health study that claimed eating pasta could actually help you lose weight.