The FDA investigation said that the epidemic has led to 36 hospitalizations, 7 cases of kidney failure due to hemolytic uremic syndrome and a death.
ST. County of Louis, Mo.-A law firm representing families of people from Saint-Louis and other parts of the country is sick by E. coli at the end of last year, points their finger on a farm which, according to them, is responsible for the multi-state epidemic, and they declared that the CDC and the FDA were not enough to warn the public.
In a press release Thursday, Marler Clark, Inc. said that he changed five of his previous combinations and filed three others to appoint Taylor Farms as a source of the Roman lettuce who caused more than 100 people in the county of St. Louis. Turner Farms was also identified as the source of onions that caused an E epidemic. Coli in October 2024.
Lawyer Bill Marler, specializing in E business. Coli, said that the epidemiologist of his law firm had linked the cases he was in charge of Taylor Farms Roman. Marler said that the FDA survey, which the law firm obtained, noted that all cases in 15 states were linked to the same producer and the same distributor, but the names of the producer and the distributor were expared.
The investigation is now closed and Maller said that the CDC and the FDA had “neglected to inform the public” that Taylor Farms was the source. He described the “emptied” departments due to reported layoffs.
“Because we represent people and families of several states that were WGS matches to each other, it was not long long now long in the staff determined that the common bond was that all customers consume the Roman lettuce of Taylor Farms during the epidemic period,” said Marler in the press release. “If the CDC and the FDA had been allowed to do their job, they would have made the same conclusion known.”
The FDA report indicates that the epidemic has led to 36 hospitalizations, 7 cases of renal failure due to hemolytic uremic syndrome and a death.
The six pursuits based on Saint-Louis are located below: