Complaint

  • Posted: April 4th, 2012 - 2:52pm by Doug Powell

    An Oregon City man who told a government hotline last summer his mother had been harmed by bottled water has pleaded guilty to making a false report of consumer product tampering, a federal crime that carries a potential five-year prison term.

    He may have been stoned.

    The Oregonian reports Curtis A. Purdy, 34 (right, exactly as shown), acknowledged in court papers that he lied last summer to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's Consumer Complaint Line about how his mother came to be injured after drinking a bottle of Crystal Geyser water.

    Purdy reported to the FDA hotline on Sept. 1 that the water, purchased from an Albertson's grocery, had caused burns to his mom's mouth, throat and stomach and that she had vomited and suffered diarrhea, according to a criminal complaint affidavit.

    He later told investigators that he had put in the bottle some rubbing alcohol, which he kept around to clean his marijuana pipes. His memory of the incident was hazy, according to the complaint, because he was undergoing opiate withdrawal.

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  • Posted: March 3rd, 2011 - 4:34pm by Doug Powell

    Food contaminated with teeth, zips and washers were among the 10,898 queries and complaints received by the folks that run the food batphone in Ireland in 2010.

    The Food Safety Authority of Ireland reports that one in four of all calls related to consumers reporting issues concerning food and food establishments. Representing an increase of over 7% on 2009, these 2,126 (1,981 in 2009) complaints ranged from reports of unfit food, low hygiene standards, inaccurate labelling information and suspected food poisoning.

    The 2,126 complaints lodged by consumers were:

    • 914 complaints on unfit food
    • 433 complaints on suspect food poisoning
    • 402 complaints on hygiene standards
    • 156 complaints on incorrect information on food labeling
    • 25 complaints on incorrect advertising of food products
    • 196 other.

    The FSAI confirms that contamination with foreign objects was frequently reported by consumers. In 2010, these reports included food contaminated with live and dead insects; a tooth; a needle; safety pins; stones; and a cotton bud.

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