Skittles are toxic, U.S. lawsuit claims
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[July 16, 2022]
By Jonathan Stempel
(Reuters) - Mars Inc has been sued by a consumer who claims that
Skittles candies are unfit to eat because they contain a known toxin
that the company had pledged six years ago to phase out.
In a proposed class action filed on Thursday in the Oakland, California
federal court, Jenile Thames accused Mars of endangering unsuspecting
Skittles eaters by using "heightened levels" of titanium dioxide, or
TiO2, as a food additive.
The lawsuit also said titanium dioxide will be banned in the European
Union next month after a food safety regulator there deemed it unsafe
because of "genotoxicity," or the ability to change DNA.
"A reasonable consumer would expect that [Skittles] can be safely
purchased and consumed as marketed and sold," the complaint said.
"However, the products are not safe."
The lawsuit seeks unspecified damages for fraud and violations of
California consumer protection laws.
Mars did not immediately respond on Friday to requests for comment.
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The McLean, Virginia-based company,
which is private, had pledged in February 2016 to remove artificial
colors from its food products over the next five years.
In October 2016, it confirmed that titanium dioxide was among the
colorants being removed, according to the nonprofit Center for Food
Safety, citing an email from Mars.
According to the lawsuit, titanium dioxide is used in paint,
adhesives, plastics and roofing materials, and can cause DNA, brain
and organ damage, and well as lesions in the liver and kidneys.
Thames, of San Leandro, California, said he bought Skittles at a
local QuikStop in April, and would not have done so had he known
their contents.
He said checking the label would not have helped because the
ingredients on Skittles' bright-red packages are hard to read.
The case is Thames v Mars Inc, U.S. District Court, Northern
District of California, No. 22-04145.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Marguerita
Choy)
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