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Electronic Article Surveillance (EAS) Labels.

Contrary to what some consumers believe, a “Security Protected” label on a product is not a food-safety warning and it does not mean the food has been “tampered with” in the past or is unsafe.

The sticker in the photo shown hereunder is exactly what it says on the wrapper “security protected” and is, over recent months, found on items like butter or meat.
Same is a retail anti-theft security label or Electronic Article Surveillance (EAS) label.

“Security Protected” is the deterrent message retailers print on/over the tag so would-be shoplifters can see it at a glance.
Loss-prevention groups explicitly note this wording is used on tags/labels as a visible warning.

Why butter and meat?
Because same are high-theft, easy-to-conceal, relatively high-value grocery items (especially branded butter and premium cuts). Irish reporting has specifically noted security tagging spreading to staples like butter and meat in some stores and Irish retailers have described meat and other small, high-value groceries as common targets.

The label says “SECURITY PROTECTED” and includes a “signal/waves” style icon, used on retail security labels.

The small print says “REMOVE ALL PACKAGING BEFORE DEFROSTING AND COOKING”. That wording is common on meat/chilled security labels, because some EAS label types aren’t intended to go into heating/defrosting and retailers want the label/outer wrap removed first.

How it works. In plain terms the label contains a thin electronic element that can set off the exit gates within grocery outlets if it’s still active. At your checkout, it’s usually deactivated (often automatically as part of scanning in grocery setups).

Why you’re seeing it recently on butter/meat in Ireland:
Irish stores have increasingly been tagging everyday groceries like butter and meat as an anti-shoplifting measure.
Practical tip: you don’t need to do anything special—just pay as normal.
If the alarm ever sounds on the way out, it’s typically because the label wasn’t deactivated properly, and staff can sort it quickly back at the till.

What happens if the sticker is removed in shop by a customer?
If a customer removes it within the shop before paying, it can trigger suspicion immediately. That label is there as a theft-deterrent, so peeling it off on the shop floor looks like an attempt to defeat security.
In Ireland, theft is defined as dishonestly appropriating property without consent, with intent to deprive.
Also, any person may arrest without warrant someone they reasonably suspect is in the act of committing an arrestable offence (with conditions set out in law).
Practically, most shops will simply detain/store-policy stop you, review CCTV, and/or call Gardaí if they believe something is happening.

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