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- From: msb@sq.sq.com (Mark Brader)
- Subject: More details on the "cat food sold as tuna" story
-
- There was some discussion not too long ago about an entry in the FAQ
- list that was something like "woman removes tuna label from can, finds
- cat food label underneath".
-
- While the general circumstances were made clear in that discussion,
- the business about the label was not. However, it turns out to be True;
- it happened in July 1991. While looking at something else in the Toronto
- Star of March 24, 1992, I came across a story by John Deverell under the
- headline "Tainted tuna sold for humans 7 years later". For copyright
- reasons I won't post the whole thing, but here are some excerpts...
-
- Canada's most famous cat food, the tainted Star-Kist tuna, is still
- being eaten by people. Yesterday, U.S. federal agents seized [in
- Teterboro, N.J.] 38,640 cans of "decomposed fish product" that had
- been relabelled as tuna for human consumption. ... All canned foods
- are sterilized during processing so the tuna wasn't dangerous, the
- agency said. ...
-
- [The] cans were part of the original 20 million recalled to the
- Star-Kist cannery in St. Andrews, N.B., in 1985. [It closed down
- the same year, reopened in 1988, and closed again in 1990.] The tuna
- had been rejected by inspectors from Canada's Department of Fisheries
- and Oceans ...
-
- David Bevan, director of Canada's fish plant inspection branch, said
- last night that "no Canadian and no Canadian cat has to worry about
- that stuff. There's none in the country." Several million cans of
- the substandard tuna were exported to the 7th Heaven pet food company
- in Houston, Texas, on condition that it not come back to Canada in
- any form...
-
- [But someone relabelled some of the cans.] Some tuna labels were
- pasted on top of cat food labels. A recall ordered after consumers
- in Minnesota and Wisconsin complained in July wasn't effective so
- the FBI decided to seize the cans ...
-
- One complaint came from Darlene La Musga of St. Paul, Minn., who opened
- a can, took a bite, then prepared to make tuna salad. "I went to pull off
- the label and I saw there was another label underneath," she said last
- July. "It said... 7th Heaven cat food. It gagged me and I threw up in
- the wastebasket."
-
- I therefore suggest the FAQ list entry be revised as follows:
-
- T. Woman removes label from "tuna" can, finds cat food label underneath
- T. The cat food actually was tuna canned 6 years earlier in Canada, declared
- unfit for human consumption, allowed to be exported as pet food, and then
- illegally relabeled as tuna again. (Toronto Star, March 24, 1992)
-