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by Ariel Zilber
November 24, 2025
from
NYPost Website

A
Campbell Soup Company vice president was
secretly recorded ripping the food giant's products,
-
mocking
"poor people" who buy them
-
blasting Indian co-workers as "idiots"
-
admitting he sometimes showed up to work
'high',
...and the employee
who reported it says he was the one to get fired.
Robert Garza, a former cybersecurity analyst from
Monroe, Mich., says he hit record on instinct when he sat down with
Campbell's vice president and chief information security officer
Martin Bally for
what was supposed to be a routine salary meeting late last year.
Instead, he captured what he describes as an
explosive, hour-long tirade that left him feeling "pure disgust."

Robert Garza,
a former cybersecurity analyst from
Monroe, Mich.,
has filed suit against Campbell's Soup Company.
Local
News 4
Garza began working at the company's Camden, NJ,
headquarters in September 2024.
He said he trusted a gut feeling that "something
wasn't right with Martin" before the meeting in November last year -
and within minutes, Bally allegedly started unloading.
According to the lawsuit filed Thursday in Wayne
County Circuit Court, Bally railed against the very products he
oversaw.
"We have s–t for f–king poor people. Who buys
our s–t? I don't buy Campbell's products barely anymore," Bally
said, according to the over 75-minute recording.

Campbell's vice president
and chief information security officer
Martin Bally.
Linkedin/Martin Bally
"It's not healthy now that I know what the f–k's
in it."
At another point, Bally dissed the ingredients in
Campbell's soups:
"Bioengineered meat - I don't wanna eat a
piece of chicken that came from a 3-D printer."
The suit alleges he then tore into Indian
colleagues.
"F–king Indians don't know a f–king thing,"
the person on the recording raved.
"They couldn't think for their f–king selves."
A Campbell's spokesperson told The Post that
Bally is,
"temporarily on leave while we conduct an
investigation."
"If the comments were in fact made, they are unacceptable. They
do not reflect our values and the culture of our company.
We were not aware of the recording," the
spokesperson said in a statement.
"We are proud of the food we
make, the people who make it and the high-quality ingredients we
use. The comments heard on the recording about our
food are not only inaccurate - they are patently absurd."
Garza told
Local 4 News he was stunned.
"He has no filter," he said.
"He thinks he's a C-level executive at a
Fortune 500 company and he can do whatever he wants because he's
an executive."
According to the filing, Bally also disclosed he
often came to work 'high' from marijuana edibles - an admission that
Garza said he also captured on the recording.

Bally allegedly
mocked "poor people" who buy Campbell's products,
blasted Indian co-workers as "idiots"
and admitted he sometimes
showed up to work high.
Garza said he at first kept the audio to himself because he needed
time to process what he heard. But weeks later, he decided he had to
speak up.
He recounted that in January, he went to his manager JD Aupperle
to report Bally's behavior. Garza claims Bally praised his work
during the very same meeting in which the rant occurred and that he
had no performance issues on his record.
Attorney Zachary Runyan told Local 4 the fallout was swift.
"[Garza] reached out to his supervisor and
told the supervisor what Martin was saying, and then out of
nowhere, my client was fired," Runyan said.
The lawyer added:
"He was really sticking up for other people."
Garza said he was terminated 20 days after
speaking up - blindsided by an action he believes was meant to
silence him.
The lawsuit alleges he was fired on Jan. 30 in retaliation for
reporting discriminatory and harassing conduct. The suit claims the
company maintained a racially hostile work environment and acted
with intentional disregard for Garza's rights.
The fired worker said he received no follow-up from human resources
after raising the concerns.
He told Local 4 it took 10 months to find another
job, calling the company's handling of the situation "simply
terrible."
"They have a motto: 'We treat you like family
here at Campbell's - come work for us'," Garza said.
"That's not the case."
"This situation has been very hard on Robert.
He thought Campbell's would be thankful that he reported
Martin's behavior, but instead he was abruptly fired.
We look forward to obtaining Robert the
justice he deserves," Runyan said in a statement to The Post.
Video
Campbell's exec on leave
after recording allegedly calls soup
'for poor people'...
Video also
HERE
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