Food Safety News begins its 7th week of online publication on Monday.
Believe or not, we will be having our first face-to-face staff meeting this week in Chicago.
We did
Sometime in the middle of next week, Oklahoma’s “poultry litter” trial against the mostly Arkansas-based chicken industry will begin its second month in U.S. District Court in Tulsa.
America’s oldest tofu company, San Francisco-based Quong Hop, has agreed to pay a $90,000 fine and without admitting to any wrongdoing agreed to comply with a list of
The parasite in the water at Seneca Lake State Park in the summer of 2005 is finally working its way through the New York Court of Claims.
Judge Nicholas Midey
In an apparent plea agreement reached prior to formal charging, an Eastern Pennsylvania cattle feed company agreed to pay $650,000 to settle federal charges that it shipped formaldehyde and
One of the nastiest chapters in unsafe food is still unfinished business due to an ongoing federal lawsuit that is focused on fraud in the school lunch program.
The lawsuit
$12 Million Insurance Policy to Fund Partial Settlement for Salmonella Victims
U.S. bankruptcy judge William E. Anderson said today he will sign an order establishing a $12 million fund
Twelve Oklahoma families yesterday sued the Country Cottage restaurant in Locust Grove for injuries they endured from the largest recorded outbreak of E. coli O111.
Pryor’s Blevins Law Firm
A June 2006 outbreak of E. coli O121:H19 at a Wendy’s restaurant in Ogden, Utah continues to make news.
Salinas, CA-based Pacific International Vegetable Marketing Inc., a privately-held
When Oklahoma’s “poultry litter” trial resumes next Wednesday in Tulsa, there might be six weeks of trial ahead. In the end, however, Judge Gregory Frizzell will have to choose
A dozen Oklahoma families are about to sue the Country Cottage restaurant in Locust Grove and its owners for the injuries they and their children received in the largest outbreak