Opinion: From apple juice to caramel apples - a 20-year journey to the same place

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Opinion: From apple juice to caramel apples - a 20-year journey to the same place

By food poisoning attorney and food safety advocate Bill Marler

bill-verticalNearly 20 years ago, a growing, all organic, all raw juice company saw its sales and profits ever rising. Looking for new markets to sell its "Superfood," it reached out to the U.S. Army to sell the juice to healthy young men and women. The Army sent a food safety group to visit the plant. In a letter to Odwalla after the plant inspection and product-testing, the Army stated that it had determined that "your plant sanitation program does not adequately assure product wholesomeness for military consumers. This lack of assurance prevents approval of your establishment as a source of supply for the Armed Forces at this time." Hmm, if you cannot sell your juice to the Army, why would you continue to sell it to the general public, including pregnant women and children?

Just a few months after receiving the above notice from the Army, an E. coli O157:H7 outbreak linked to the company's organic, raw apple juice sickened dozens. The outbreak caused several people to have acute kidney failure, and killed one child. The company pleaded ignorance that its product could be the cause. Eventually, the company paid out US$15,000,000 to my clients in settlements and was fined by the FDA for US$1,400,000. A tough lesson for the company on the realities of bacteriology and pasteurization; however, a deadly lesson for at least one young customer.

In early December 2014 came the announcement of a Listeria outbreak linked to caramel apples that had sickened over two dozen, sending all to the hospital. Eventually the number of outbreak victims would rise to at least thirty-two in ten states, with several dead. Given the long incubation period (up to 70 days), the illness and death toll will surely rise.

After an extensive traceback and traceforward, the grower and processor of two types of apples were implicated, which prompted an apple recall. A strain of Listeria matching that which had sickened and killed so many was found in the plant. Moreover, the recall that had initially been limited to the U.S. now spans the globe. Warnings have been issued from Malaysia and Vietnam to refrain from eating U.S. apples. There is no lack of irony in this warning, given that over the years I have watched U.S. food producers attempt to scare domestic consumers away from "foreign grown food." The eventual cost of the worldwide recall and the consumer litigation from the apple outbreak will be in the tens of millions of dollars.

Of course the inevitable refrain has arisen, "how could we have known, this is the first Listeria outbreak linked to caramel apples. It has never happened before." We heard the same whine following the Listeria outbreak that left 147 sick with 33 dead in 2011 linked to cantaloupe grown in Eastern Colorado. That outbreak was not only one of the deadliest in U.S. history, but I am making sure that it will also be one of the most expensive.

When I am not suing companies for poisoning and killing their customers, I am telling them a few simple concepts gleaned from the tatters of companies that cannot seem to learn from the past or pay attention to warning signs from the future. They are three simple ideas:

1. Arm yourself with good, current information – including paying attention to the past.
2. Since you have a choice between doing nothing and being proactive, be proactive.
3. Make food safety a part of everything you do.

Chances are good that if you follow the above simple principles, reading this editorial will be the very last you hear of me.

www.freshfruitportal.com

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