big Tyson truck with company logo and photo of chicken on white plate with corn and green beans
Tyson Foods' former CFO John Randal Tyson will not return to his position after a DWI charge.
  • Tyson Foods' former CFO John Randal Tyson will not return to his position after a DWI charge.
  • Tyson who is an heir to the founder, was suspended following a DWI charge in June.
  • Curt Callaway, interim CFO, will take over as CFO permanently, the company said.

Tyson Foods' chief financial officer is out of his job — but not out of the company.

John Randal Tyson, an heir of founder John W. Tyson, was suspended from the company after being arrested on charges of driving while intoxicated in June. That marked his second alcohol-related arrest since his CFO appointment in 2022.

On Thursday, the meat juggernaut announced that longtime staffer Curt Callaway, who was interim CFO, will take over.

Tyson will stay on as an employee but will be on health-related leave, the food company said in a release.

Tyson was appointed to the role in 2022 at age 32, making him the youngest CFO of any Fortune 500 company at the time. The fourth-generation Tyson family member became CFO three years after he joined the company. He previously worked in investment banking at JPMorgan and graduated from Harvard and Stanford.

Tyson Foods did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment sent outside regular business hours.

The company, known for its Hillshire and Sara Lee brands, is worth $23 billion, and the Tysons are worth $3.1 billion, per Forbes.

Two arrests in recent years

During the first incident in 2022, Tyson was found intoxicated and asleep in a stranger's bed around 2am, Business Insider previously reported.

The home where Tyson was found belonged to a woman who said she thought Tyson came through her unlocked front door. He was released later that evening after being charged with public intoxication and criminal trespass.

In June, Tyson was charged with driving while intoxicated and careless driving after he misjudged a turn and rode up onto a curb.

The scion's run-ins with the law are not the company's only controversy in recent months.

In September 2023, The New York Times Magazine published an investigation that showed children as young as 14 were knowingly employed as overnight cleaning staff at plants run by companies including Tyson Foods. Some were gravely injured on jobs that federal law prohibits children from doing.

Tyson Foods did not respond to a request for comment from BI at the time.

The Department of Labor subsequently investigated child labor at Tyson and Perdue Farms as part of a broader probe. No charges have been filed.

In November, Tyson Foods recalled almost 30,000 pounds of its frozen dinosaur-shaped chicken nuggets after complaints that the nuggets contained small metal pieces, the US Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service said.

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