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Piccadilly chain recalls turnip greens after rat parts found

By The Associated Press
Posted 1:35AM on Tuesday 12th October 2004 ( 20 years ago )
<p>Piccadilly Cafeterias, Inc. has recalled a brand of turnip greens sold at some of its 132 restaurants after a customer at a Georgia outlet bit into greens containing rat body parts.</p><p>A county health department inspection of the Morrow restaurant following the Sept. 1 incident did not find any rodents in the building or mishandling of the product, the chain's regional manager, Clint Celestin, said Tuesday.</p><p>It was determined that the rat parts came into the restaurant frozen with the turnip greens, which were supplied by a vendor, Celestin said. A spokeswoman for the county health department did not immediately return a call seeking comment.</p><p>The chain, which uses turnip greens from several different vendors, has voluntarily recalled turnip greens at its restaurants that were supplied by the vendor in question. Celestin did not know exactly how many restaurants were affected by the recall.</p><p>"We had all that product removed from all of our stores that day," he said. "Anything that was opened was thrown away. Anything that was unopened in the freezer was picked up by our supplier and sent back to the vendor."</p><p>The company did not put out a statement to the public about the recall following the incident.</p><p>"We didn't feel there was any need to," Celestin said. "We had taken care of the problem immediately. We didn't expect and still don't expect this problem to ever occur again."</p><p>The customer who discovered the rat body parts in his food, Collis L. Warren, a 40-year-old truck driver, is planning a lawsuit, said his lawyer, Bobby Aniekwu.</p><p>"Piccadilly has not done anything that shows us this will not continue in the future," Aniekwu said. "They have spent more time trying to pass the buck onto their suppliers."</p><p>Based in Baton Rouge, La., Piccadilly has 6,000 employees and restaurants in 15 states, primarily in the southeast and mid-Atlantic regions. The chain filed for Chapter 11 in 2003. In February, it was sold to a holding company run by two Los Angeles-based private equity firms for $80 million during a bankruptcy court auction.</p><p>___</p><p>On the Net:</p><p>HASH(0x2865824)</p>

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