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Peanut Corp. Of America Files For Bankruptcy

KATE BRUMBACK and GREG BLUESTEIN   02/13/09 09:24 PM ET   AP

Peanut Butter

ATLANTA — The peanut processing company at the heart of a national salmonella outbreak is going out of business. The Lynchburg, Va.-based Peanut Corp. of America filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Virginia Friday, the latest bad news for the company that has been accused of producing tainted peanut products that may have reached everyone from poor school children to disaster victims.

"It's regrettable, but it's inevitable with the events of last month," said Andrew S. Goldstein, a bankruptcy lawyer in Roanoke, Va., who filed the petition.

The salmonella outbreak was traced to the company's plant in Blakely, Ga., where inspectors found roaches, mold and a leaking roof. A second plant in Plainview, Texas was shuttered this week after preliminary tests came back positive for possible salmonella contamination. So far, the outbreak has been suspected of sickening more than 630 people and may have caused nine deaths. It also has led to more than 2,000 product recalls, one of the largest recalls in U.S. history.

Companies file Chapter 7 to liquidate their assets and distribute the proceeds to creditors. A trustee is automatically appointed to oversee the wind down, as opposed to a Chapter 11 filing that gives a company breathing room while it tries to reduce its debts and continue in business. The company said in the filing that its debt and assets both ranged between $1 million and $10 million.

The board had considered a Chapter 11 bankruptcy but decided on an outright liquidation. It said in a court filing that the recalls had been "extremely devastating" to the company's financial condition.

"We kicked the tires on trying to reorganize, but the fact of the matter is they've absolutely closed down," Goldstein said. "They're prevented from carrying on business. There didn't seem like there would be any prospects."

The company's problems have multiplied since the link to its Georgia plant.

The government is working on a criminal investigation into the case, and more than a dozen civil lawsuits have been filed. This week, Peanut Corp. president Stewart Parnell repeatedly refused to answer questions before the House Energy and Commerce investigations subcommittee, which is seeking ways to prevent another outbreak. But e-mails surfaced indicating he ordered products the company knew were tainted to be shipped anyway.

Reached by telephone, Parnell said his attorneys had advised him not to talk. "If I could do it, I would," he said.

Despite Friday's bankruptcy filing, food safety lawyers are optimistic that victims and their families can still be compensated. The bankruptcy proceeding could postpone litigation against the company, but lawyers plan to push a judge to allow civil lawsuits to go forward anyway. And many have also filed lawsuits against Solon, Ohio-based King Nut Co. and Battle Creek, Mich.-based Kellogg Co., which they say used the tainted ingredients in their products.

"Even if Peanut Corp. doesn't have enough insurance and enough assets to cover the damages, King Nut and Kellogg will have to step up," said Bill Marler, who has filed seven lawsuits against the company and represents more than 40 possible victims.

Fred Pritzker, a food safety lawyer in Minneapolis who filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the company, said it could delay justice for his clients.

"For all the people whose loved ones have been killed or people who have been out of work or suffered serious injury or who have incurred medical bills, right now they're just left with a lump of uncertainty," he said.

The company began as a family business in 1977, and Parnell, his father and two younger brothers turned the struggling peanut roasting operation into a $30 million operation before selling it in 1995.

But in 2000 Stewart Parnell bought his own peanut plant in Texas, and a year later he bought the Blakely, Ga. operation after teaming up with a financial backer, David Royster III of Shelby, N.C. He also operated a plant in Suffolk, Va.

It all came crashing down when federal investigators identified the Georgia plant as the sole source of the salmonella outbreak, and questions began emerging about how the company operated its plants.

The company faced more scrutiny once it was revealed that its Texas plant, which opened in March 2005 and was run by a Peanut Corp. subsidiary, Plainview Peanut Co., was not inspected by state health officials until after problems arose at the company's Georgia plant. Texas health officials asked the company to close the plant Monday after samples sent to a private lab for testing showed possible salmonella contamination.

On Friday, companies began destroying products made with anything that came from the plant after Texas health officials said they discovered rodents, feces and feathers in a crawl space above a production area. An air handling system sucked debris from the crawl space into an area where peanuts are processed, officials said, so Texas officials took the highly unusual step of ordering all products ever made at the plant recalled.

"The reason we went back to March of 2005 is because it could not be determined how long those conditions had existed in that facility and ... it would have been risky to guess," said Doug McBride, a spokesman for the Texas Department of State Health Services.

___

Associated Press Writers Vinnee Tong in New York, Sue Lindsey in Roanoke, Va., Jeff Carlton in Dallas and AP Business Writer Emily Fredrix in Milwaukee contributed to this report.

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ATLANTA — The peanut processing company at the heart of a national salmonella outbreak is going out of business. The Lynchburg, Va.-based Peanut Corp. of America filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy i...
ATLANTA — The peanut processing company at the heart of a national salmonella outbreak is going out of business. The Lynchburg, Va.-based Peanut Corp. of America filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy i...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
nippyfan
01:51 PM on 02/16/2009
Good riddance to bad business. They should also be brought up on charges of murder through negligence. How can you ignore rats roasting on an open fire? You can't. It will poison and kill people. And bring in the health inspectors and put them on the stand too. Where were you? Did you accept a bribe? They provided the peanut butter for free lunches delivered to children. THE HORROR! It's just as bad as the tainted baby formula in China. It seems to all be going to hell in a handbag. Overhaul to commence.....now!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:11 PM on 02/16/2009
Overhauling the FDA should be one of President Obama's most important priorities. This company recently had a shipment to Canada that was rejected. They called the product filthy and unfit for human consumption.

That report should have made it to the FDA. And we need a system in place to make sure that in the future they do.
11:58 AM on 02/16/2009
Nuts
09:29 AM on 02/16/2009
No one that had any knowledge of this should benefit in any way....workers should have blown their whistle's....managers should have protected the consumers.
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05:48 PM on 02/15/2009
Stewart Parnell should be charged with 1st degree murder. Any other people who knew what was going on in that plant should be charged with manslaughter. I am not surprised this was allowed to happen in Georgia. Could there possibly be kick backs to inspectors? This should be investigated. I have no sympathy for this company or its employees. What selfish, cruel people!!!!!!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zigzag1
agnostic/progressive
02:32 AM on 02/16/2009
Need to hang Parnell from a bridge
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CR46
spay/neuter and adopt
03:19 PM on 02/16/2009
There were no inspections EVER at his Palinview Tx plant...why???....Because no one knew it existed!!! This plant was not shutdown with the first 2, it was found through paperwork and shutdown a week after the others.
09:42 PM on 02/14/2009
Looks like President of this company has lost his nuts.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tim303
08:20 PM on 02/14/2009
Thanks for the peanuts, W!
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abbeyroad
Does this rag smell like chloroform to you ?
07:36 PM on 02/14/2009
i remember watching the news and seeing paramedics taking all those poor little school children off to the hospital with food poisoning.

my neighbor and her elderly mother were deathly ill for 2 weeks.

i hope parnell gets charged with m urde r and goes to jail for a VERY long time.
i also hope mr. peanut gets a good old-fashioned beat-down in the jailyard every day he's there.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
shockmagog
Infrared hair, UV shades, SPF 110 dome.
06:28 PM on 02/14/2009
The workers should be provided for, but the managers and CEO should be brought up on charges of negligent homicide.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TJCole
05:08 PM on 02/14/2009
It's really a form of domestic terrorism and bio terrorism at that...!

It should all be investigated by Homeland Security as well as any other applicable agency..

They killed 8 so far but made who really knows how many sick as many cases go unreported people recover and never make it to the hospitals or know they can't afford a hospital visit as our polticians seem to see fit to maintain..
01:53 PM on 02/15/2009
During WW2 parnell would have been brought up on charges and sent to jail by now.
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castlerider
"A man's home is his castle"
01:47 PM on 02/14/2009
The company hoarded their reserves, more then likely hired managers who were impressive with their "Bottom line" approaches which was all about paying out as little as possible, and I bet they stomped on many on their way.
They didn't want to spend the money and do things right. Now they've made an example of themselves. Too bad for the families of the hard working people in the company's background. Hopefully they'll go on to better things.

It's a good example for influencing companies to go out of their way to deliver clean and wholesome products in our country.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freedoms Friend
01:10 PM on 02/14/2009
Maybe the Chinese milk scandal punishments should be followed !

Sanlu Group, was sentenced to life last month and fined $3.6 million for her role in the scandal.
Sanlu had borrowed $132 million to pay medical fees for the 300,000 children that fell ill last year after they drank milk laced with melamine, a toxic industrial compound, adding to its debt burden, said Xinhua.
Tian was convicted last year at Shijiazhuang Intermediate People's Court of manufacturing and selling fake or substandard products.
Two men were sentenced to death and three former Sanlu executives received jail terms of five to 15 years.

Talk about change in a hurry.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
motoGpifupleez
watching with amusement
01:19 PM on 02/14/2009
You Sir or Ma'am are truly "Freedoms friend".
Exceptional commentary. Thank you for posting it.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Antifascist-08
12:44 PM on 02/14/2009
GOOD RIDDANCE

A lesson for all of the types out there who only care about money.

Next stop for Saxby- JAIL.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Antifascist-08
12:50 PM on 02/14/2009
Sorry, I meant Parnell goes to jail.
07:37 PM on 02/14/2009
they could be "shower buddies"...
TakeTheCanolis
Still waiting for supply-side economics to work
12:04 PM on 02/14/2009
Good riddance to this evil company. I hope the executives are criminally prosecuted. Those eight people poisoned to death are victims of the Republican Party's agenda to deregulate all industries.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jadedat51
More jaded at 56
11:49 AM on 02/14/2009
First, Stewart Parnell knowinly sells a tainted product.
Next, Stewart Parnell "Pleads the 5th"
Then, Stewart Parnell files for bankruptcy.
How does this man sleep at night?
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JessWonderin
01:58 PM on 02/14/2009
Quite WELL . . . sold business for $30 MILLION a few years ago to a "partner", then went on to open an unlicenses plant in TEXAS . . . .

Gacy had no problems sleeping, neither did Ted Bundy . . . .
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jacqmac
04:40 PM on 02/14/2009
Of course!! Texas is pretty much a 'free for all' state when it comes to companies like this.
Labor is 'cheap'--how'd you like to BET the farm that well over 50% of the workforce was either new arrivals or 'illegal' labor from Mexico? I'm not faulting the poor schnooks who worked on the floor of either plant and followed their boss's orders to scrape up contaminated peanuts and throw them in the grinders---I'm faulting the alleged 'governments' of Georgia and Texas--for looking the other way after hefty 'payoffs'.
I'm faulting the Federal Government for failing to keep US safe. I'm faulting Parnell especially--for being a money-grubbing capitalist PIG of the first order. The assets received from the sale of this company NEED TO GO TO THE PEOPLE WHO HAVE BEEN HURT THE MOST BY THE ACTIONS AND INACTIONS OF THE COMPANY AND THE US FDA. That's 2,000?
TIME FOR CLASS ACTION--AND DON'T 'SETTLE' for LESS THAN YOU BELIEVE IS "FAIR AND EQUITABLE." And it's also TIME TO THROW PARNELL IN THE SLAMMER--MURDER HAS BEEN COMMITTED!