Peanut Butter Recall – It’s Deja Vu all Over Again

The current Peanut Corporation of America (PCA) peanut butter / peanut product recall is eerily similar to the ConAgra / Peter Pan peanut butter recall of 2007.    So why did Peanut Corporation of America (PCA) fail to learn from the prior outbreak?  

Just look at the similarities:

Both involve peanut manufacturing plants in rural Georgia.

Both involve salmonella-contaminated peanut butter.

Both investigations revealed prior positive results of salmonella contamination which were not disclosed to the FDA.

Both investigations revealed rat, rodent, and insect infestation of the production plants.

Both investigations revealed severely leaking roofs at each plant.

Both sickened 700 American citizens (PCA also killed 9).

So what ever happened to ConAgra?

First, ConAgra sent a reported $80 million to completely rebuild the plant, fix the roof, and install new machinery along the production line.  Then ConAgra spent the next 2 years spending millions more settling lawsuits around the country with the citizens that had been sickened.  Then ConAgra spent countless millions more on advertising to “rebuild” the Peter Pan brand name.

A worse fate awaits PCA.  PCA is out of business.  Stuart Parnell – PCA’s owner – is facing criminal charges for shipping salmonella-contaminated product  across the country.  The Hartford Insurance company (PCA’s insurer) is faced with numerous lawsuits seeking all $24 million in Hartford’s insurance proceeds.

Simon & Luke prosecuted and settled over 750 claims in the Peter Pan outbreak.  We currently represent over 50 families (and children of 2 persons who died) in the current outbreak.   We will not rest until every person affected by this outbreak is fully compensated, those responsible are put behind bars, and the food industry changes the way they do business. 

So here is a fair warning to sloppy, greedy, unsafe manufacturers:  Look out - we are coming after you.

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This entry was posted on Saturday, April 4th, 2009 at 5:23 pm and is filed under Salmonella Outbreaks. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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