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Still, the outbreak strain of salmonella typhimurium had been identified and peanuts were known to be the culprit in some way. Leads were taking federal officials and their state counterparts across the country ever closer to the source. Only by knowing who caused this could it be stopped. THE WHODUNIT The tainted peanut butter found in Minnesota carried the King Nut label and that company was quickly investigated by the Food and Drug Administration, as were other suppliers to institutions. King Nut issued a precautionary recall. This trail also led farther back to the plant that supplied the peanut butter to King Nut
-- the Blakely, Ga., operation of Peanut Corp. of America. An initial round of recalls was announced by Peanut Corp. The company's products leave the plant in containers of up to 1,700 pounds for peanut butter, and 35 pounds to entire tanker trucks for its peanut paste. Those supplies go to hundreds of companies for reprocessing as ingredients in well over 1,000 foods. In mid-January officials in Connecticut found the outbreak strain in a previously unopened jar of King Nut peanut butter, made by the Blakely plant. Federal officials say this was the first strong indication that the peanut butter was contaminated before it left the plant. How to explain the fact that some victims hadn't eaten peanut butter in a school, at a nursing home or out of a jar at all? Scientists were looking hard at that question. First, they determined that many victims had eaten other products containing peanut butter as an ingredient. Then they focused on two brands of prepackaged peanut butter crackers. Both were made at one plant, and that plant had been supplied with paste by the Peanut Corp. operation. Now the investigation had crossed borders. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency retrieved intact packages of crackers from a patient in Canada who had bought them in the U.S. A test found the outbreak strain of salmonella in the crackers. Three more intact packages bought by a victim in Oregon were tested, too, and found to be contaminated. One mystery solved. And rapidly unfolding events at the Blakely plant would soon settle the whodunnit. The FDA said its inspection, ending Jan. 27, found two salmonella strains at the plant. Although different from the outbreak strain, the discovery was telling. So was the observation of roaches, mold, a leaking roof and other sanitation problems. The government, which says the outbreak might have contributed to eight deaths, has started a criminal investigation. The company denies any wrongdoing. WHERE IT WENT As well as tracing the contamination back to the source, officials have to follow serpentine trails forward to try to figure out all the final destinations. The list of recalls, and possibilities, keeps growing. Recalls now include cookies, crackers, cereal, candy, ice cream, pet treats and much more. In addition to having its products spread through the marketplace, Peanut Corp. has been a supplier to the government. Federal officials said Friday they are shipping 660,000 new emergency meal kits to Arkansas and Kentucky after discovering many packages they sent earlier, to help people recover from an ice storm, contained the recalled peanut butter. The Agriculture Department said it had shipped some of the company's potentially contaminated peanut butter and peanuts to eight states, including school lunch programs in California, Minnesota and Idaho, in 2007. The department has suspended business with the company. Also Friday the government said a closer examination of company records shows that in 2007, it shipped chopped peanuts after salmonella was confirmed by private lab tests. In other cases, officials said, the company sold products that had tested positive without waiting to receive a second round of testing that eventually came back negative. That raised another question about Peanut Corp. executives, one familiar to Washington from its own history of political scandal: What did they know and when did they know it? ___ On the Net: PulseNet: http://www.cdc.gov/pulsenet/ Peanut Corp. of America: http://www.peanutcorp.com/
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