WASHINGTON (AP) - See the jar, the congressman challenged Stewart Parnell, holding
up a container of the peanut seller's products and asking if he'd
dare eat them. Parnell pleaded the fifth.
The owner of the peanut company at the heart of the massive
salmonella recall refused to answer the lawmaker's questions - or
any others - Wednesday about the bacteria-tainted products he
defiantly told employees to ship to thousands of manufacturers of
cookies, crackers and ice cream.
"Turn them loose," Parnell had told his plant manager in an
internal e-mail disclosed at the House hearing. The e-mail referred
to products that once were deemed contaminated but were cleared in
a second test last year.
Summoned by congressional subpoena, the owner of Peanut Corp.
of America repeatedly invoked his right not to incriminate himself
at the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee hearing on the
salmonella outbreak that has sickened some 600 people, may be linke
d to nine deaths - the latest reported in Ohio on Wednesday - and
resulted in one of the largest product recalls of more than 1,900
items.
Parnell sat stiffly, his hands folded in his lap at the
witness table, as Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., held up a clear jar of
his company's products wrapped in crime-scene tape and asked if he
would eat them.
"Mr. Chairman and members of the committee, on advice of my
counsel, I respectfully decline to answer your questions based on
the protections afforded me under the U.S. Constitution," Parnell
responded.
After repeating the statement several times, lawmakers
dismissed him from the hearing.
Shortly after Parnell's appearance, a lab tester told the
panel that the company discovered salmonella at its Blakely, Ga.,
plant as far back as 2006. Food and Drug Administration officials
told lawmakers more federal inspections could have helped prevent
the outbreak.
"We appear to have a total systemic breakdown," said R ep.
Bart Stupak, D-Mich., chairman of the committee's investigations
subcommittee.
Cookies, candy, crackers, granola bars and other products
made with contaminated peanuts have been shipped to schools, stores
and nursing homes, prompting the massive recall. The government
raided the company's Georgia plant on Monday, and Peanut Corp.
closed its Plainview, Texas, facility.
A federal criminal investigation is under way.
The House panel released e-mails obtained by its
investigators showing Parnell ordered products identified with
salmonella to be shipped and quoting his complaints that tests
discovering the contaminated food were "costing us huge $$$$$."
In mid-January, after the national outbreak was tied to his
company, Parnell told Food and Drug Administration officials that
he and his company "desperately at least need to turn the raw
peanuts on our floor into money."
In a separate message to his employees, Parnell insisted that
the outbreak d id not start at his plant, calling that a
misunderstanding by the media and public health officials. "No
salmonella has been found anywhere else in our products, or in our
plants, or in any unopened containers of our product," he said in a
Jan. 12 e-mail.
In another exchange, Parnell complained to a worker after they
notified him that salmonella had been found in more products.
"I go thru this about once a week," he wrote in a June 2008
e-mail. "I will hold my breath .......... again."
Last year, when a final lab test found salmonella, Parnell
expressed concern about the cost and delays in moving his
products.
"We need to discuss this," he wrote in an Oct. 6 e-mail to Sammy
Lightsey, his plant manager. "The time lapse, beside the cost is
costing us huge $$$$$ and causing obviously a huge lapse in time
from the time we pick up peanuts until the time we can
invoice."
Lightsey also invoked his right not to testify when he appeared
alongside Parnell before the subcommittee.
"Their behavior is criminal, in my opinion. I want to see jail
time," said Jeffrey Almer, whose 72-year-old mother died Dec. 21 in
Minnesota of salmonella poisoning after eating Peanut Corp.'s
peanut butter. Almer and other relatives of victims urged lawmakers
to approve mandatory product recalls and improve public notice
about contaminated food.
Darlene Cowart of JLA USA testing service said the company
contacted her in November 2006 to help control salmonella
discovered in the plant.
Cowart said she made one visit to the plant at the company's
request and pointed out problems with peanut roasting and storage
of peanuts that could have led to the salmonella. She testified
that Peanut Corp. officials said they believed the salmonella came
from organic Chinese peanuts.
An FDA inspection report had placed the earliest presence of
salmonella in June 2007, the first of a dozen times the company
received private lab results identi fying the bacteria in its
products.
Cowart said she believed Peanut Corp. stopped using her company
for lab tests because it identified salmonella too many times.
The company's internal records show it "was more concerned with
its bottom line than the safety of its customers," said committee
Chairman Henry Waxman, D-Calif.
Charles Deibel, president of Deibel Laboratories Inc., said his
company was among those that tested Peanut Corp. products and
notified the Georgia plant that salmonella was found. Peanut Corp.
sold the products anyway, according to an FDA inspection
report.
"What is virtually unheard of is for an entity to disregard
those results and place potentially contaminated products into the
stream of commerce," Deibel said.
Deibel said he hopes the crisis leads to a greater role for FDA
in overseeing food safety and providing more guidance to food
makers.