Simon & Luke Settles 752 Peanut Butter Salmonella Cases with ConAgra

Simon & Luke has settled 752 cases for individuals across the United States who became ill from salmonella poisoning after consuming Peter Pan and Great Value peanut butter manufactured by ConAgra Foods, Inc. 

In November 2006, public health officials at CDC and state health departments detected a substantial increase in the numbe of reported Salmonella Tennessee illnesses.  Illness was linked to the consumption of two brands of peanut butter (Peter Pan and Great Value) produced at ConAgra’s plant in Sylvester, Georgia.   Based on these findings, ConAgra ceased production at the plant and recalled both products on February 14, 2007.   As of September 2007, over 714 cases of Salmonella Tennessee illness had been linked to the consumption of the contaminated peanut butter.

Shortly after the recall, Ron Simon of Simon & Luke led a team into ConAgra’s peanut butter plant to inspect and document the conditions that caused the contamination of the peanut butter.

Extensive laboratory testing by the CDC, FDA, and Simon & Luke found the outbreak strain of Salmonella Tennessee in several opened and unopened jars of Peter Pan and Great Value peanut butter.  In addition, Salmonella Tennessee was found in environmental samples obtained from the plant during inspections.  Salmonella Tennessee is a rare serotype of Salmonella.  

Prior to reaching the settlements, Simon & Luke had filed over 50 peanut butter lawsuits in jurisdictions all over the United States.

The cases were settled for confidential amounts.

Simon & Luke is continuing to prosecute the firm’s remaining Salmonella Tennessee peanut butter claims against ConAgra.

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This entry was posted on Friday, May 29th, 2009 at 10:55 am and is filed under Recent Settlements, 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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