Hersehy candy cocaine, hershey, Hershey chocolate, Hershey co., Hershey Ice breakers, ice breakers cocaine, Ice breakers pacs
Hersehy candy cocaine, hershey, Hershey chocolate, Hershey co., Hershey Ice breakers, ice breakers cocaine, Ice breakers pacs

Hershey Shelves Cocaine Look-Alike Candy

PETER JACKSON | January 24, 2008 05:17 PM EST | AP


stumbleupon :Hershey Shelves Cocaine Look-Alike Candy   digg: Hershey Shelves Cocaine Look-Alike Candy   reddit: Hershey Shelves Cocaine Look-Alike Candy   del.icio.us: Hershey Shelves Cocaine Look-Alike Candy

HERSHEY, Pa. — The Hershey Co. is halting production of Ice Breakers Pacs in response to criticism that the mints look too much like illegal street drugs, the company's president and chief executive officer said Thursday.

Hershey CEO David J. West disclosed the decision during a conference call about the company's newly released fourth-quarter earnings report.

Ice Breakers Pacs, which first hit store shelves in November, are nickel-sized dissolvable pouches with a powdered sweetener inside. The pouches come in blue or orange and bear the Ice Breakers logo.

Members of Philadelphia's police narcotics squad said the mints closely resemble tiny heat-sealed bags used to sell powdered street drugs. They charged that the consequences could be serious if, for example, a child familiar with the mints found a package of cocaine.

"Some community and law-enforcement leaders have expressed concern" about the shape of pouch and the Xylitol sweetener inside, and about the possibility of the mints being mistaken for illegal substances, West said.

"We are sensitive to these viewpoints and thus have made the decision that we will no longer manufacture Ice Breakers Pacs," he said.

Ice Breakers Pacs remain on store shelves but are expected to be sold out early this year and no more are being made, West said. Kirk Saville, a company spokesman, said they had been distributed nationally on a limited basis.

Hershey has said the mints were not intended to resemble anything, and West said consumers who tested and purchased the product liked it.

Linda Wagner, a narcotics officer with the Philadelphia police whose daughter died of a heroin overdose in 2001, had protested the product in letters to both company and government officials. She said she was pleased by Hershey's decision but questioned why it took so long.

"I will not buy a Hershey's product" again, she said. "I think they were really irresponsible" in marketing the product.

Bill Katzel, a community activist who lives near Tucson, Ariz., and worked with Wagner in fighting Ice Breakers Pacs, said the product remains widely available at stores near him.

"A better solution would have been a total recall of this product," said Katzel, a retired medical administrator for the federal government.


 
Comments
30
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 Next › Last » (2 pages total)
- MA I'm a Fan of MA permalink

Gee! My heat-sealed cocaine packets never dissolved in my mouth or ass for that matter!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:57 PM on 01/25/2008

Actually if the box in the back was completely removed from the picture and the only think that was left was the little blue packet with the white powder coming out of it, I would have thought the same thing...yeah, it's drugs...It's kinda funny though...there's a lot of candy out there that looks like drugs, they still sell candy cigarettes, which I used to love when I was a kid, you would have though I would grow up to be a smoker by the way I scarfed them down, alas the whole myth that kids will grow up to do drugs just because their parents do or because they are exposed to candy and other products that are reminiscent of drugs has been way overblown...a small teeny tiny percentage of these kids may grow up to be a drug user/smoker/alcoholic whatever, but it will not be because they ate some candy when they were 8 years old...I think this is just a fear tactic to make the public more afraid of drugs and give the perception that they are more dangerous than they actually are...The amount of people who die from taking legally prescribed drugs is WAY HIGHER than the number of people who die from taking illegal drugs (not including alcohol and ciggs of course) And you know what, the percentage of people who used drugs before they were made illegal is the same as it is now, except now we waste billions of dollars on locking people up and funnel money to criminal organizations and fuel corruption within our law enforcement agencies, destroy communities by taking away parents from their kids, and created a black market and all the problems that come with it. Man I just wish these people would cool it with the drug user witch hunt, and quit it with the morality, holier than thou, crap while yer at it too!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:01 PM on 01/25/2008

Whats worse for you coke or white sugar ( now fructose corn syryp) put in every single food we eat? I'd have to say the latter has done more harm overall

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:25 PM on 01/25/2008

I had no idea these were out there. I'm totally going to go buy a few packs before they are gone from shelves.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:43 PM on 01/25/2008

Now if Hershey would just stop growing the real thing on their plantations in Columbia we'd be in business.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:36 PM on 01/25/2008

eh..prefer the real stuff.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:39 AM on 01/25/2008

Milton would be apalled and turning in his grave.

This is just like the hypodermic needle shaped writing pens-also quickly pulled from store shelves.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:39 AM on 01/25/2008
photo

Hmmmm, candy is a drug. Addictive and mood altering and yes, it can even kill you if you use too much of it.

Let's get rid of sugar all togther and while we're at it, let's throw out corn syrup.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:43 AM on 01/25/2008

Altoids and countless other candies look like pressed pills. Mike & Ike and countless others look like gel caps. Pixie Sticks look like portable lines of crushed pharmaceuticals. Listerine pocket strips look a bit like tabs of acid. My dishwasher detergent tablets look like they could be tasty...

Despite the fact that candies have been made to look like drugs for generations, children are far more likely to die of diabetes from consuming too much sugar than from overdosing on narcotics mistaken for candy. Get back to me when somebody markets a candy that's intended to be smoked or injected.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:31 AM on 01/25/2008
photo

So, almost 300 million American would idenify this
candy with cocaine or heroin? If that is true,then you
have a real problem,if not it seems over the top to me.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:07 AM on 01/25/2008

Sugar is addictive, mood-altering and dangerous to health.

High-sugar junk food - especially the 'straight dope' of candy that's nothing but sugar, flavour and colouring - is a little bit like training-crack. Baby's First Powder Drug (TM).

Artificial sweetener may be less addictive (or not) may be less mood altering (or not) and does indeed have fewer calories than sugar (while being carcinogenic and possibly brain-destroying).

Amusing that Hershey's experimented with being honest about the packaging of their drug.

Wasn't it a fad a few years back for Pepsi reps to roll up to schools in tinted-window Escalades and distribute their Product to the kids as they were leaving school?

Hmmm, hard to see the message there...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:04 AM on 01/25/2008
photo

I don't think it's too early to conclude this was one the stupidest ideas a company has ever come up with.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:15 AM on 01/25/2008
photo

"They charged that the consequences could be serious if, for example, a child familiar with the mints found a package of cocaine."

It can happen. Really!

"Linda Wagner, a narcotics officer with the Philadelphia police whose daughter died of a heroin overdose in 2001 ...

Now there's an authority.

"A better solution would have been a total recall of this product"

Why?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 AM on 01/25/2008
- caps I'm a Fan of caps permalink

this would explain why my disco records have sounded like crap lately

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:05 AM on 01/25/2008

police worry about this candy when plastic toy guns and knives are for sale at every grocery store and walmart in the usa?...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:43 AM on 01/25/2008
Page: 1 2 Next › Last » (2 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

You must be logged in to reply to this comment. Log in  or  Connect