Skip to content
Personal information

Certain meat sold online was not inspected; USDA warns public not to eat it

Certain meat sold online was not inspected; USDA warns public not to eat it

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) is warning the public to not eat certain beef and lamb products because they were produced by One Meat Corp., doing business as Eastern Asia Trading Corp. without the benefit of federal inspection.

A recall was not recommended because it is believed that the affected products are no longer available to be purchased by consumers, according to the public alert posted by the FSIS. However, the label information reported in the notice does not include any expiratory dates. The products were sold nationwide via internet sales. The warning did not include any product photographs.

“FSIS is concerned that some product may be in consumers’ freezers. Anyone concerned about an illness should contact a health care provider,” the recall notice says. “Consumers who have purchased these products are urged not to consume them. These products should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase.”

The beef and lamb products subject to the alert are:

While some products have the establishment number “EST. 45557” inside the USDA mark of inspection on their labels, the products were not produced by federal establishment 45557.

The items were shipped to an online retailer, Weee! Corporation, and sold directly to consumers through online sales nationwide.

Consumers with questions regarding the public health alert should call Bruce Park, president of One Meat Corp. at 213-238-7863.

(To sign up for a free subscription to Food Safety News, click here.)

News Desk

News Desk

The News Desk team at Food Safety News covers breaking developments, regulatory updates, recalls, and key topics shaping food safety today. These articles are produced collaboratively by our editorial staff.

All articles

More in Enforcement

See all

More from News Desk

See all

Sponsored Content

Your Support Protects Public Health

Food Safety News is nonprofit and reader-funded. Your gift ensures critical coverage of outbreaks, recalls, and regulations remains free for everyone.