Marler Blog

May 12, 2026

Hey, FDA Commissioner Makary, AI has a wild idea – perhaps a Hallucination?

I asked our AI friends – What are the pros and cons of replacing FDA Commissioner Makary with me – here is the response? This is a very timely question — Makary resigned as FDA Commissioner today, May 12, 2026, amid reports of internal tensions and policy clashes, with the vaping dispute reportedly being a […]

March 17, 2005

Separating the Chaff from the Wheat: How to determine the strength of a foodborne illness claim

Unfortunately, some people make suspect and unsupportable foodborne illness claims. It is important to develop a reliable method of identifying suspect, unsupportable, or illegitimate foodborne illness claims. In my experience, food industry corporations over-emphasize, and thus over react to, the presence of such claims. Such a strategy can lead to the denial of legitimate claims. […]

March 16, 2005

E. coli’s Insidious Spread

A rise in the number of Escherichia coli cases requires diligent detection efforts. By Debby Giusti, MT(ASCP) Ten-year-old Brianne Kiner spent 40 days in a coma in 1993, while teams of medical personnel worked round-the-clock to keep her alive. Brianne has little memory of the 118 days she was on kidney dialysis or the 80 […]

March 10, 2005

At least 29 students die of possible cyanide poisoning after eating food served at school; food safety attorney with Marler Clark speaks out

At least 29 pupils at San Jose Elementary School in Magini, Bohol, Philippines died of likely cyanide poisoning on Wednesday after eating carmelized cassava roots. Health officials said 50 pupils are in critical condition, and at least 100 students became ill with food poisoning after being served the sweetened cassava roots at school. Cassava plant […]

March 02, 2005

Warehouse manager admits sending school bad chicken

As the Post-Dispatch reported on February 25, a manager for a warehouse and transportation company in Madison admitted last month to illegally ordering that boxes of chicken be labeled and shipped without proper inspection – including some sent to a school in Joliet, Ill., where dozens of people fell ill. Edward L. Wuebbels, the manager […]

January 31, 2005

The Jungle’s new century

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer reported yesterday that a human rights group has looked closely at a major industry in one country and found safety conditions like those of a century ago, systematic disrespect for workers’ rights and widespread disregard of international labor standards. Yes, conditions for U.S. meatpacking workers are scandalous. Human Rights Watch last week […]

January 19, 2005

Two win settlement in E. coli lawsuit

As Tim Hay of the San Mateo County Times reported today, a multinational food company and a Salinas vegetable farm have been ordered to pay an undisclosed amount to an elderly woman who was sickened in an outbreak of E. coli in a local retirement home, as well the son of a woman who died […]

January 17, 2005

Creek flooding blamed for ’03 E. coli cases

As the The Salinas Californian reports, legal consequences of two food-borne illness outbreaks that sickened at least 63 people and killed one in 2003 have returned to the Salinas Valley, where state investigators say lettuce and spinach — contaminated at an unknown point before they were eaten — were grown. Beginning with those infected with […]

January 14, 2005

Quotable Quotes: William D. Marler

FOOD IRRADIATION UPDATE January 15, 2005 “People’s perception of the disease (Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy) is coloured by the fact that it’s not a very nice disease,” adding that salmonella, botulism and E. coli are much more effective killers.” Stephen Moore, chairman of bovine genomics, University of Alberta’s department of agriculture “We’ve resolved our differences. Both […]

January 13, 2005

E. coli victims settling claims

As the Herald Salinas Bureau reports, Marler Clark clients who were victims of an E. coli outbreak involving contaminated vegetables grown in Salinas Valley are settling their claims against the restaurants serving tainted produce in 2003. But the legal cases continue while the restaurant owners attempt to pin the blame on Salinas Valley produce companies, […]

January 12, 2005

Food Safety Attorney, William Marler, Speaks Out On Mad Cow

We as Americans have grown up believing that our food supply is the safest in the world. But the CDC estimates that over 300,000 people are hospitalized and over 5,000 die, just from eating food contaminated with a pathogen. In recent years, E. coli outbreaks have been linked to not just ground beef, but also […]

January 12, 2005

Canadians Confirm a New Case of Mad Cow Disease

Canadian officials said Tuesday that they had found a new case of mad cow disease, a report made more worrisome because the cow was born after feed restrictions intended to prevent the spread of the disease were put in place in 1997. It was the second infected cow from the western province of Alberta found […]

January 10, 2005

Meat thought to be E. coli culprit

So far eight families have contacted Marler Clark, and one lawsuit has been filed, over the Wendy’s ground beef E. coli outbreak in Marion County. One family was hit twice when the two sons, a 4-year-old and a 23-month-old, became sick from E. coli. The 4-year-old was released last week from Oregon Health Sciences University […]

January 10, 2005

ODWALLA SETTLES 5 JUICE LAWSUITS ‘SINCERE’ TALKS IMPRESS POISONED SURVIVOR’S DAD

Half Moon Bay fruit-juice maker Odwalla Inc. has reached a settlement — reportedly for $12 million to $15 million — with the families of five young victims of a 1996 food-poisoning outbreak caused by a tainted batch of the company’s apple juice. The hefty settlement brings closer to an end a painful saga for the […]

January 10, 2005

$15.6 MILLION SETTLEMENT OK’D IN HAMBURGER CASE

A Washington state court yesterday approved the settlement of a lawsuit under which a 12-year-old girl who nearly died after eating a tainted hamburger will get $15.6 million. Under the settlement Foodmaker Inc., operator of Jack in the Box restaurants, meat processor Von Stores Inc. and various slaughterhouses will pay the sum to Brianne Kiner, […]

January 10, 2005

Marler Clark: Settlement Announced in Cantaloupe Death and Illness Cases

Marler Clark today announced the settlement of two salmonella cases stemming from the May, 2001 salmonella outbreak tied to contaminated cantaloupe. The cases settled were the wrongful death case of 78-year old Florence Dodds and the personal injury case of fifteen month old Nathan Eget. On May 25, 2001 the FDA issued a press release […]

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