FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

The second lawsuit in the 2026 outbreak — and the first to name lettuce supplier Taylor Farms — is filed for an Ohio woman sickened after eating at Taco Bell, as state case counts climb past 8,000 while the government confirms only 1,644.

(BAINBRIDGE ISLAND, Wash. — July 17, 2026) — Marler Clark, Inc., PS, The Food Safety Law Firm, together with Alexander Darr of Darr Law LLC, has filed suit in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, Eastern Division, against Taco Bell Corporation, Taylor Fresh Foods, Inc., and Taylor Farms California, Inc., on behalf of Valerie Caruso of Geneva, Ohio. The case, Caruso v. Taco Bell Corporation, et al., is the second lawsuit the firm has filed in the 2026 multistate Cyclospora outbreak — and the first to name Taylor Farms, the supplier of the shredded iceberg lettuce that federal investigators have tied to the outbreak, as a defendant.

Ms. Caruso ate at the Taco Bell in Austinburg, Ohio, three times in June 2026 — on June 3, June 15, and June 24 — and each meal contained fresh iceberg lettuce. She maintains a very limited diet, and those meals were among her only exposures to fresh produce during the period when her infection would have taken hold. She began experiencing symptoms on or about June 24, and a stool sample collected July 2 tested positive for Cyclospora on July 7. Because Ms. Caruso is allergic to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (Bactrim) — the standard treatment for cyclosporiasis — she could not take the recommended medication and remains on an alternative course of treatment. Her recovery is ongoing. The Ashtabula County Health Department contacted her on July 10 as part of its investigation of the outbreak.

The suit follows the July 16 FDA and CDC advisory tying the outbreak to shredded iceberg lettuce from Mexico served at Taco Bell restaurants in Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and West Virginia. The FDA said its traceback converged on a single lettuce supplier but declined to name it; press reports and this lawsuit identify that supplier as Taylor Farms. The government’s confirmed outbreak count stands at 1,644, with 94 hospitalizations — even as state health departments report more than 8,000 illnesses, Michigan alone over 5,000. That gap is the difference between the cases the government can lab-confirm and the thousands more that are real but uncounted.

Twenty Years of Taco Bell and Taylor Farms Outbreaks, in the Government’s Own Words

Neither company is new to this. Over the last twenty years both have been tied to outbreak after outbreak, a striking number of them running through the same ingredient: lettuce. The record below is drawn from the government’s own outbreak reports — including the ones where investigators documented the outbreak but declined to print the company’s name, calling it only “Restaurant Chain A” or “a single supplier,” and one deadly 2024 romaine outbreak they closed without naming anyone at all.

Taco Bell

YearOutbreakScale (per the government report)Source
2006E. coli O157:H7 — shredded iceberg lettuce, Northeast71 sick (52 confirmed), 53 hospitalized, 8 with HUS; NJ, NY, PA, DE, SCCDC
2010Salmonella Baildon & Hartford (two concurrent outbreaks)155 illnesses, 42 hospitalized, ~21 statesFood Safety News (CDC named it only “Restaurant Chain A”)
2011–12Salmonella Enteritidis68 sick, 10 states, 31% hospitalizedCDC (reported as “Restaurant Chain A”)
2026Cyclospora — shredded iceberg lettuce from Mexico1,644 confirmed, 94 hospitalized, no deaths; 5 states (IN, KY, MI, OH, WV)FDA

Taylor Farms

YearOutbreakScale (per the government report)Source
2013Cyclospora — bagged salad mix, Taylor Farms de Mexico (Olive Garden / Red Lobster, IA & NE)643 cases in 25 states overall; Iowa (153) and Nebraska (86) tied to the salad mix (a separate Texas cluster was traced to cilantro)CDC MMWR
2015E. coli O157:H7 — celery/onion blend (Taylor Farms Pacific) in Costco rotisserie chicken salad19 sick across 7 states; nationwide recallCDC
2024E. coli O157:H7 — slivered onions (Taylor Farms) on McDonald’s Quarter Pounders104 sick in 14 states, 34 hospitalized, 4 with HUS, 1 deathCDC · FDA
2024–25E. coli O157:H7 — romaine lettuce (Taylor Farms); catered events, restaurants & a St. Louis school89 sick in 15 states, 36 hospitalized, 7 with HUS, 1 death (onsets Nov 2024). CDC/FDA closed the investigation in Jan 2025 without publicly naming a source; the Taylor Farms link was established through Marler Clark’s investigation and lawsuits.Marler Blog
2026Cyclospora — shredded iceberg lettuce supplied to Taco BellPart of the 1,644 / 5-state outbreak aboveFDA (FDA: “a single supplier,” unnamed; a federal official told the AP it is Taylor Farms of Salinas)

Sixteen years separate the first outbreak on this list from the one making people sick today. The label on the produce keeps changing — from “Restaurant Chain A” to “a single supplier” — but the people on the other end of it keep getting sick.

“For ten weeks the government could not bring itself to say the words ‘Taco Bell’ and ‘Taylor Farms.’ Both names are on this complaint,” said William “Bill” Marler, managing partner of Marler Clark. “And neither is new to this. Twenty years of outbreaks run through these same two companies and the same shredded lettuce. Valerie Caruso stands in for thousands of people the official count still refuses to fully acknowledge — and this is the second case, not the last.”

About Marler Clark

Marler Clark, Inc., PS, The Food Safety Law Firm, is the nation’s leading law firm representing victims of foodborne illness. For more than three decades its lawyers have represented thousands of people sickened in outbreaks involving E. coliSalmonellaListeriaCyclospora, and other pathogens. Firm founder William “Bill” Marler began his food-safety career representing Brianne Kiner, the most seriously injured survivor of the 1993 Jack in the Box E. coli O157:H7 outbreak, and founded Food Safety News in 2009.

Media Contact

William D. Marler, Marler Clark, Inc., PS

180 Olympic Drive S.E., Bainbridge Island, WA 98110

1-800-884-9840  |  bmarler@marlerclark.com

Co-counsel: Alexander Darr, Darr Law LLC

After ten weeks and thousands of sick people, the government finally put a name to it. The FDA and CDC announced on July 16 that the summer’s Cyclospora outbreak is tied to shredded iceberg lettuce from Mexico served at Taco Bell, in Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and West Virginia. The traceback, the FDA said, has converged on a single lettuce supplier — though the agency declined to name it, even as the Washington Post reported the supplier is Taylor Farms. The official tally: 1,644 confirmed sick, 94 hospitalized, no deaths.

That 1,644 is where the story really starts. Because the same week the FDA counted 1,644, the state health departments were reporting more than 8,000 — Michigan alone over 5,000, a number that climbed nearly 700 in a single day while the government’s confirmed count did not move at all. Ask the FDA to explain the gap and you get a footnote: the agency counts only laboratory-confirmed cases, while states also count “probable” ones and illnesses not yet reported. That is true. It is also an admission. The CDC’s entire national confirmed count is about 1,645 — meaning nearly every confirmed Cyclospora case in the country right now is this one Taco Bell outbreak, and the other roughly 6,500 sick Americans are real, diagnosed, and simply uncounted.

This is what a hollowed-out counting system produces: an official outbreak that is not the outbreak, but the sliver of it the government can still confirm. A year ago, the CDC made the parasite optional to report under its FoodNet program. Cyclospora is invisible on a routine stool test unless a doctor asks for it by name. Put those together and “confirmed” stops measuring how many people are sick and starts measuring how many happened to get the right test, in the right state, and land in a federal database before the advisory went out. Roughly 6,500 people fell through that gap. They are not a rounding error. They are most of the outbreak.

Then there is the supplier the government won’t name. The FDA says its traceback converged on one company; the Washington Post says that company is Taylor Farms — a name that has sat at the center of foodborne-illness outbreaks before, from a 2013 Cyclospora outbreak traced to its Mexican salad mix to the 2024 E. coli outbreak in McDonald’s Quarter Pounders. While regulators weigh what they can say on the record, the lettuce may still be moving — the FDA has increased screening at the border and Taco Bell has agreed to stop buying from the supplier. Every day that name stays redacted is a day someone else can eat the same salad.

I spent yesterday on a food-safety-conference stage in Mexico talking about exactly this — the slow starving of the systems that catch outbreaks — while the largest Cyclospora outbreak the country has ever recorded was getting its name. This week my firm filed the first lawsuit of the outbreak, Ayyad v. Pacific Bells, LLC, on behalf of an Ohio man who ate at his local Taco Bell, fell ill, and tested positive — one of the 1,644 the government will admit to, standing in for the thousands it won’t.

The Rap Sheet: Twenty Years of Taco Bell and Taylor Farms Outbreaks, in the Government’s Own Words

Two names now sit at the center of the largest Cyclospora outbreak the country has ever recorded — Taco Bell and Taylor Farms. Neither is new to this. Over the last twenty years both have been tied to outbreak after outbreak, and a striking number of them run through the same ingredient: lettuce. What follows is the record, drawn from the government’s own outbreak reports — including the ones where investigators documented the outbreak but declined to print the company’s name, calling it only “Restaurant Chain A” or “a single supplier,” and one deadly 2024 romaine outbreak they closed without naming anyone at all.

Taco Bell

YearOutbreakScale (per the government report)Source
2006E. coli O157:H7 — shredded iceberg lettuce, Northeast71 sick (52 confirmed), 53 hospitalized, 8 with HUS; NJ, NY, PA, DE, SCCDC
2010Salmonella Baildon & Hartford (two concurrent outbreaks)155 illnesses, 42 hospitalized, ~21 statesFood Safety News (CDC named it only “Restaurant Chain A”)
2011–12Salmonella Enteritidis68 sick, 10 states, 31% hospitalizedCDC (reported as “Restaurant Chain A”)
2026Cyclospora — shredded iceberg lettuce from Mexico1,644 confirmed, 94 hospitalized, no deaths; 5 states (IN, KY, MI, OH, WV)FDA

Taylor Farms

YearOutbreakScale (per the government report)Source
2013Cyclospora — bagged salad mix, Taylor Farms de Mexico (Olive Garden / Red Lobster, IA & NE)643 cases in 25 states overall; Iowa (153) and Nebraska (86) tied to the salad mix (a separate Texas cluster was traced to cilantro)CDC MMWR
2015E. coli O157:H7 — celery/onion blend (Taylor Farms Pacific) in Costco rotisserie chicken salad19 sick across 7 states; nationwide recallCDC
2024E. coli O157:H7 — slivered onions (Taylor Farms) on McDonald’s Quarter Pounders104 sick in 14 states, 34 hospitalized, 4 with HUS, 1 deathCDC · FDA
2024–25E. coli O157:H7 — romaine lettuce (Taylor Farms); catered events, restaurants & a St. Louis school89 sick in 15 states, 36 hospitalized, 7 with HUS, 1 death (onsets Nov 2024). CDC/FDA closed the investigation in Jan 2025 without publicly naming a source; the Taylor Farms link was established through Marler Clark’s investigation and lawsuits.Marler Blog
2026Cyclospora — shredded iceberg lettuce supplied to Taco BellPart of the 1,644 / 5-state outbreak aboveFDA (FDA: “a single supplier,” unnamed; a federal official told the AP it is Taylor Farms of Salinas)

Sixteen years separate the first outbreak on this list from the one making people sick today. The label on the produce keeps changing — from “Restaurant Chain A” to “a single supplier” — but the people on the other end of it keep getting sick.

Can I send you a T-Shirt?

Senator Bill Cassidy, who chairs the Senate HELP Committee, has expanded his investigation into the safety of infant formula, and this time the letter landed on the desk of Nara Organics. Good.

The demand follows an outbreak of infant botulism tied to Nara Organics Whole Milk Organic Powdered Infant Formula. On June 12, the FDA recommended that the company pull the product; at least three infants in three states have been identified with suspected or confirmed infant botulism after consuming it. Cassidy wants Nara Organics to answer, question by question, by July 29 — when it first knew of a problem, how it is getting recalled formula off the shelves, what testing it actually does, and what it found, or didn’t, at its plant in Stendal, Germany.

If this feels familiar, it should. Cassidy raised the same alarm over ByHeart, whose formula sickened 48 infants across 17 states with the same rare and terrifying illness. I represent families in both outbreaks — parents who watched a floppy, silent, struggling baby get rushed to an ICU because of a can of powder sold to them as the safest thing they could buy.

The most important question in the Senator’s letter is buried near the bottom. He notes that Nara Organics used a whole milk supplier that also fed a different manufacturer — one that recalled its own formula after its own infant botulism outbreak. In other words, two outbreaks traced back through the same ingredient. That is not a coincidence. That is a supply chain nobody was watching closely enough, and it is exactly the kind of thread that, left unpulled, produces the next sick baby.

I spend a lot of my time criticizing this administration’s approach to food safety, so let me be just as clear when someone gets it right: this is the oversight these families have been begging for. Last week I wrote to Chairman Cassidy and Ranking Member Sanders asking them to finish what the Senate started — to pass a formula-safety bill that actually names botulism on the testing list, hold hearings that put the 2025 disclosure failures on the record, and give the ByHeart and Nara families a seat at the witness table. A demand letter to Nara Organics is a good start. What these babies need is what comes after — real testing standards, real supplier accountability, a recall system that moves before, not after, an infant stops breathing, and parents allowed to tell Congress what all of it was like.

I have been suing formula and food companies since 1993, and I would happily go out of business tomorrow if Congress made the products safe enough that no one needed me. Senator Cassidy just took a step in that direction. I hope he keeps walking — all the way to a hearing room.

This week the investigation moved into court. My firm filed the first lawsuit of the outbreak in federal court in Ohio — Ayyad v. Pacific Bells, LLC — on behalf of a North Olmsted man who ate at his local Taco Bell twice in mid-June, fell ill days later, and tested positive for Cyclospora. The suit names the company that operates that restaurant, along with the still-unnamed growers and suppliers behind the produce, and it won’t be the last.

The likely source of the summer’s Cyclospora outbreak now has a supplier and a restaurant attached to it. Investigators have traced the suspected vehicle to shredded iceberg lettuce grown by Taylor Farms and served at Taco Bell, the Washington Post reported on July 16, citing two people familiar with the investigation. The thread runs through all four of the hardest-hit states: a high share of the sick had eaten at Taco Bell, lettuce was the menu item they had in common, and when the FDA asked the chain where that lettuce came from, the answer — in Michigan, Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky alike — was Taylor Farms. No agency has confirmed it on the record, the source is still called “potential,” and neither company had responded as of publication. But neither name is new to this kind of story.

Taco Bell has been the name in a lettuce outbreak before — more than once. In 2006, the CDC publicly named the chain in an E. coli O157:H7 outbreak across the Northeast that sickened 71 people, hospitalized 53 and left eight with hemolytic uremic syndrome, a form of kidney failure; investigators first blamed green onions, then settled on shredded lettuce. In 2010 and again in 2011, multistate Salmonella outbreaks were traced to the chain the CDC would only call “Restaurant Chain A” — later confirmed to be Taco Bell — in which roughly nine in ten of the sick had eaten lettuce. Further back sit a 1999 E. coli outbreak tied to its beef tacos and a 1995 hepatitis A outbreak traced to an infected worker. The produce that keeps surfacing in Taco Bell’s outbreaks is lettuce.

Taylor Farms’s record is heavier still. In 2013, the FDA traced a multistate cyclosporiasis outbreak — the illness clusters at Olive Garden and Red Lobster restaurants in Iowa and Nebraska — to salad mix from Taylor Farms de Mexico. In 2015 the company recalled a celery-and-onion mix tied to an E. coli outbreak in Costco chicken salads that sickened nineteen. And in 2024, Taylor Farms slivered onions were the likely source of the E. coli O157:H7 outbreak linked to McDonald’s Quarter Pounders — more than a hundred people sick across fourteen states, dozens hospitalized, one dead — after which FDA inspectors documented poor handwashing and dirty equipment at the company’s Colorado processing plant. A Cyclospora outbreak traced to Taylor Farms lettuce would not be the first time the parasite, or a supplier by that name, sat at the center of one.

All of this is unfolding while the official count sleepwalks. Every new case added to the national tally this week came from the same handful of states that still bother to update; Michigan alone drove the running total past 7,500. The rest have gone quiet — Ohio’s dashboard hasn’t moved in a week, sixteen states appear only as a range of “one to ten,” and the CDC’s own confirmed count froze at 1,645 three days ago. The outbreak isn’t slowing down. The counting is.

Look at how lopsided it has become. Michigan’s 4,312 cases — more than half the country’s total — dwarf the CDC’s entire four-state “outbreak,” which the agency still pegs at just over 400. In a normal year the state sees forty or fifty. Set one state’s dashboard against the federal cluster and the official number stops looking like the outbreak and starts looking like the slice of it investigators have so far been able to stitch together.

Ask all fifty health departments whether they are part of this and you get three different answers. Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky say yes and are working the case alongside Michigan. Indiana, sitting on 206 cases, calls itself part of a nationwide outbreak. And then a run of states carrying real, elevated counts says, in effect, nothing unusual here: New York, at roughly 470 cases, calls it “not a major deviation from the norm”; Illinois, at 216, says there is “no evidence of a large outbreak”; New Jersey, at 46, is “not experiencing … outbreaks”; Massachusetts, at 18, calls it a “normal seasonal amount”; and Virginia, at 10, says its cases are not a pattern that would “constitute an outbreak”. Two of the largest states never entered the outbreak at all: California is seeing fewer cases than last year, and Washington says flatly that it “is not seeing an outbreak.” Whether a sick person is counted as part of an outbreak depends heavily on which state line they were standing behind when they got sick.

This is what last summer’s paperwork looks like once it reaches the produce aisle. When the CDC quietly made Cyclospora reporting optional under its FoodNet program in July 2025, it weakened the very machinery that turns a scatter of state counts into one fast national picture. The parasite is nationally notifiable in only 47 states, it is invisible on a routine stool test unless a physician asks for it by name, and every figure in the chart below is a floor, not a ceiling. When Oklahoma and Kansas finally opened their own books this week, each found roughly five times the cases the CDC had listed for it. The gap widens: a parasite moving through the national salad supply on one side, and on the other an official tally that trails the real one by thousands of cases.

For the person on the third week of watery diarrhea, whether their state is “officially” part of the outbreak is a distinction without a difference. They are sick, the source is still on the shelf, and the system built to find it is being asked to do the job with fewer people and a smaller net.

Here is where all fifty state health departments stood as of July 15, 2026 — the number each reports for 2026, and whether it calls those cases part of the outbreak.

State2026 cases reportedPart of the outbreak?Source
AlabamaNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Alaska1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / NBC
Arizona1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / NBC
ArkansasAs many as 10 (Jul 15)Not declared part of the outbreak; not in 4-state clusterAR DOH / WMC
California41 provisional (Jan–Jun 2026); fewer than 2025; mostly internationalNo — CDPH: not among states with an increase; no local outbreaksCDPH
Colorado90 (Jan–Jun 2026); mostly travel-relatedNo — CDPHE: not in any multistate outbreakCDPHE
Connecticut35 (Jul 13)Links its cases to the national outbreakCT DPH
DelawareNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Florida96 (May 1–Jul 11); nearly doubled from 50 in a week; 29 countiesNo — FL DOH: “seasonal disease that affects Floridians every year”FL DOH / WUSF
Georgia11–30 (CDC band, Jul 13)No local increase reported (Coastal Health District); not in 4-state clusterGA DPH / WTOC
HawaiiNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
IdahoNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Illinois216 (Jul 14)No — “no evidence of a large outbreak”IDPH/WGN
Indiana206 since May 1 (Jul 14)Yes — calls itself part of the nationwide outbreakIN DOH
Iowa1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / NBC
Kansas55 (Jul 15): 37 domestic, 17 travel; 6 hospitalizedDomestic cases rising sharply since late June; no KS source identifiedKDHE / WIBW
Kentucky100 reported / 61 confirmed (Jul 13)Yes — in the 4-state outbreakKY DPH alert
Louisiana1–10 (CDC band); “seasonal spike”Not declared part of the outbreak; not in 4-state clusterLA DOH / WAFB
MaineNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Maryland32 (28 since May 1; Jul 7)No — “nothing out of the ordinary”MD DOH/WYPR
Massachusetts18 (May 1–Jul 7)No — “normal seasonal amount”MA DPH/WBUR
Michigan4,312 (Jul 16); 102 hospitalized — tripled in a weekYes — leads the 4-state outbreak; lettuce/greens suspectedMDHHS
Minnesota1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13); MDH annual only (2025: 68)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / MDH
MississippiNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
MissouriNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
MontanaNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Nebraska1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / NBC
NevadaNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
New Hampshire1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / NBC
New Jersey46 (Jul 11)No — “not experiencing … outbreaks”NJ DOH
New MexicoNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
New York~470 statewide incl. NYC (NYSDOH, Jul 10)No — NYSDOH: “not a major deviation from the norm”; no single unified outbreakNY DOH / CBS NY
North Carolina307 (May 1–Jul 14); 13 hospitalizedInvestigating; not in 4-state clusterNCDHHS
North DakotaNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Ohio~397 confirmed (Jul 13)Yes — in the 4-state outbreakOhio DOH
Oklahoma56 confirmed + 1 probable (Jul 14); 6 hospitalizedPart of the national outbreak; no OK source identifiedOSDH / KFOR
OregonNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Pennsylvania28 (14 in SE PA; voluntary reporting)No — mostly imported / travel-relatedPA DOH/WHYY
Rhode Island1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / NBC
South CarolinaNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
South DakotaNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
TennesseeAs many as 30 (Jul 15); rising yearly since 2016Investigating; not in 4-state clusterTN DOH / WMC
Texas68 through Jul 13; 15 hospitalizedMeets CDC outbreak case definition; not in 4-state clusterTX DSHS
Utah1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / NBC
VermontNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Virginia10 (Jul 7)No — not a pattern that would “constitute an outbreak”VDH
Washington27 since May 1 (22 travel-related; 3 domestic)No — WA DOH: not seeing an outbreak; not linked to other statesWA DOH / FOX 13
West Virginia69 (Jul 13)Yes — 4-state outbreak; statewide outbreak declaredWV OEPS
Wisconsin35 since May 1 (≈double 2025; <10 domestic)No — WI DHS: travel-driven, not a domestic outbreakWI DHS / WPR
WyomingNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC

In the morning I’ll stand in front of a room of Latin American growers, processors, and auditors at the Congreso Latam de Inocuidad Alimentaria in Puerto Vallarta and say something that ought to be Washington’s job to say: the United States has stopped counting the sick honestly and stopped holding anyone accountable when the counting stops. When the public system goes quiet, the private system — the people in that room, the ones who control the irrigation water and the fields — becomes the firewall.

And I’m not the only one saying it this month. Two people I respect, from opposite ends of the food-safety world, just published the same warning about the Cyclospora outbreak tearing through the US right now.

Thomas Gremillion runs food policy at the Consumer Federation of America and comes at it as a consumer advocate — he even gave the moment a name I’m going to borrow, MANHEDA: Make America Not Have Explosive Diarrhea Again. Frank Yiannas comes at it from the opposite corner. He ran food safety at Disney and then Walmart before he became the FDA’s Deputy Commissioner for Food Policy and Response — about as far inside the industry, and then inside the government, as a résumé gets. When the consumer watchdog and the former FDA food chief wave at the same fire from opposite ends of the room, the people who can put it out should look.

Start with a number. Or rather, start with the fact that nobody has one. Pull the states’ own tallies together and eleven of them are already past 4,900 cases. Michigan alone — because it actually went looking — is up to 3,309, nearly double the CDC’s entire confirmed national total. And the CDC? Its official count has crept from 145 to 843 to 1,645 across 34 states, even while the agency quietly concedes the true figure is closer to 7,000. A count that keeps climbing and never catches up isn’t reassuring. It’s an admission that we stopped looking.

Cyclospora makes the counting hard. Symptoms don’t appear for a week after the contaminated bite and can hide for two, so investigators are asking sick people to reconstruct meals from nine days back — and the culprit is usually a “stealth ingredient,” a garnish of cilantro or a handful of greens folded into a dozen dishes nobody remembers ordering. Unlike E. coli O157:H7 or Salmonella, the parasite doesn’t grow well in a lab, so the whole-genome sequencing that cracked the Boar’s Head Listeria outbreak barely helps here.

It takes shoe-leather epidemiology — interviews, shopper cards, case-control studies. Michigan did the shoe-leather: from more than a thousand interviews it pointed at lettuce and bagged salad greens, and Ohio pointed the same way. The states named the food. The CDC still calls it “clusters.”

That silence is Gremillion’s target, and he’s blunt about why it happened. Since January 2025 the CDC’s workforce has shrunk by more than a quarter; the clawback of $11.4 billion in grants triggered health-department layoffs across the country; and roughly 80% of the CDC’s domestic money flows to state and local partners, so cutting Atlanta means firing the epidemiologist in Lansing who’d otherwise be knocking on doors. The current budget proposes cutting the agency’s discretionary funding another 40%. And on July 1, 2025, the CDC quietly told FoodNet — the thirty-year backbone of U.S. foodborne surveillance — that its sites no longer had to report six of the eight pathogens it was built to track. Cyclospora was one of the six. Stop requiring the count and you get to say you can’t see the sick. That’s not a lag. It’s a policy.

Yiannas doesn’t throw those punches — he credits the state and local people and keeps his eyes on the fix. His argument is that we’ve treated Cyclospora like hurricane season, an unavoidable summer visitor, when we should treat it as a preventable problem: stronger seasonally-aware sourcing, better agricultural water, tighter controls early in the produce chain — the field, not the shopper’s sink. And he revives an idea that deserves its own line: a National Foodborne Outbreak Investigation Board, modeled on the NTSB, to coordinate investigations, force transparency, and actually bank the lessons after a major outbreak instead of losing them. The man who ran food safety for Disney, Walmart, and the FDA is telling you the federal coordination isn’t there.

Here’s what strikes me after a career spent representing the people on the wrong end of these outbreaks — the children with failing kidneys, the families burying a grandparent over a salad. When a consumer advocate and a former FDA commissioner, standing in opposite corners, land on the same diagnosis — we can’t count, we can’t trace, we can’t coordinate — that isn’t a partisan talking point. It’s a system failing in daylight. Every one of these outbreaks gets dressed up as bad luck; almost none of it is. And when the public count and the public consequence both go quiet, the only firewall left is the room I’m walking into in the morning — its water, its suppliers, its willingness to name a food fast and pull it on a hunch.

I’ve said for years that I’d happily be put out of business by a food supply that stopped poisoning people, and the room in Puerto Vallarta is one of the few that can actually do it. Gremillion asks whether Cyclospora will finally spur a MANHEDA movement; with Yiannas saying a version of the same thing from the other end of the spectrum, maybe this is the summer it does. The alternative is more outbreaks we can feel but can’t count — and more clients in my office.

The CDC’s official multistate outbreak of cyclosporiasis is four midwestern states — Michigan, Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky — and just over 400 cases it has managed to tie to a  yet unnamed, common, source. That is the number the word “outbreak” gets attached to. On its own surveillance page, the CDC counts 1,645 lab-confirmed domestic cases across 34 states and admits it is aware of more than 5,100 more it has not finished confirming. Add up what the state health departments are actually reporting and the total sits closer to 7,000. The official outbreak and the real one are not the same size.

Start with Michigan, which has passed 3,700 cases on its own dashboard in a state that in a normal year sees forty or fifty, and whose investigators have named lettuce and salad greens as the likely vehicle. Set that one state against the CDC’s 400-case, four-state cluster and the federal figure stops looking like the outbreak and starts looking like the slice of it investigators have so far been able to stitch together.

Ask all fifty health departments whether they are part of this and you get three different answers. Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky say yes and are working the case alongside Michigan. Indiana, sitting on 206 cases, calls itself part of a nationwide outbreak. And then a run of states carrying real, elevated counts says, in effect, nothing unusual here: New York, at roughly 394 cases, calls it “not a major deviation from the norm”; Illinois, at 216, says there is “no evidence of a large outbreak”; New Jersey, at 46, is “not experiencing … outbreaks”; Massachusetts, at 18, calls it a “normal seasonal amount”; and Virginia, at 10, says its cases are not a pattern that would “constitute an outbreak”. Two of the largest states never entered the outbreak at all: California is seeing fewer cases than last year, and Washington says flatly that it “is not seeing an outbreak.” Whether a sick person is counted as part of an outbreak depends heavily on which state line they were standing behind when they got sick.

This is what last summer’s paperwork looks like once it reaches the produce aisle. When the CDC quietly made Cyclospora reporting optional under its FoodNet program in July 2025, it weakened the very machinery that turns a scatter of state counts into one fast national picture. The parasite is nationally notifiable in only 47 states, it is invisible on a routine stool test unless a physician asks for it by name, and every figure in the chart below is a floor, not a ceiling. When Oklahoma and Kansas finally opened their own books this week, each found roughly five times the cases the CDC had listed for it. So, the gap widens: a parasite moving through the national salad supply on one side, and on the other an official tally that trails the real one by thousands of cases.

The four-state outbreak isn’t the outbreak. It’s the part of the outbreak we can still see.

For the person on the third week of watery diarrhea, whether their state is “officially” part of the outbreak is a distinction without a difference. They are sick, the source is still on the shelf, and the system built to find it is being asked to do the job with fewer people and a smaller net.

Here is where all fifty state health departments stood as of July 15, 2026 — the number each reports for 2026, and whether it calls those cases part of the outbreak.

State2026 cases reportedPart of the outbreak?Source
AlabamaNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Alaska1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / NBC
Arizona1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / NBC
ArkansasAs many as 10 (Jul 15)Not declared part of the outbreak; not in 4-state clusterAR DOH / WMC
California41 provisional (Jan–Jun 2026); fewer than 2025; mostly internationalNo — CDPH: not among states with an increase; no local outbreaksCDPH
Colorado90 (Jan–Jun 2026); mostly travel-relatedNo — CDPHE: not in any multistate outbreakCDPHE
Connecticut35 (Jul 13)Links its cases to the national outbreakCT DPH
DelawareNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Florida60 year-to-date (50 May 1–Jul 4); 42 in JuneNo — FL DOH: “seasonal disease that affects Floridians every year”FL DOH / FOX 35
Georgia11–30 (CDC band, Jul 13)No local increase reported (Coastal Health District); not in 4-state clusterGA DPH / WTOC
HawaiiNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
IdahoNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Illinois216 (Jul 14)No — “no evidence of a large outbreak”IDPH/WGN
Indiana206 since May 1 (Jul 14)Yes — calls itself part of the nationwide outbreakIN DOH
Iowa1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / NBC
Kansas55 (Jul 15): 37 domestic, 17 travel; 6 hospitalizedDomestic cases rising sharply since late June; no KS source identifiedKDHE / WIBW
Kentucky100 reported / 61 confirmed (Jul 13)Yes — in the 4-state outbreakKY DPH alert
Louisiana1–10 (CDC band); “seasonal spike”Not declared part of the outbreak; not in 4-state clusterLA DOH / WAFB
MaineNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Maryland32 (28 since May 1; Jul 7)No — “nothing out of the ordinary”MD DOH/WYPR
Massachusetts18 (May 1–Jul 7)No — “normal seasonal amount”MA DPH/WBUR
Michigan~3,762 (state dashboard)Yes — leads the 4-state outbreak; lettuce/greens suspectedMDHHS
Minnesota1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13); MDH annual only (2025: 68)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / MDH
MississippiNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
MissouriNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
MontanaNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Nebraska1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / NBC
NevadaNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
New Hampshire1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / NBC
New Jersey46 (Jul 11)No — “not experiencing … outbreaks”NJ DOH
New MexicoNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
New York~394 statewide incl. NYC (NYC 400+)No — NYSDOH: “not a major deviation from the norm”NYC Health
North Carolina307 (May 1–Jul 14); 13 hospitalizedInvestigating; not in 4-state clusterNCDHHS
North DakotaNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Ohio~397 confirmed (Jul 13)Yes — in the 4-state outbreakOhio DOH
Oklahoma56 confirmed + 1 probable (Jul 14); 6 hospitalizedPart of the national outbreak; no OK source identifiedOSDH / KFOR
OregonNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Pennsylvania28 (14 in SE PA; voluntary reporting)No — mostly imported / travel-relatedPA DOH/WHYY
Rhode Island1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / NBC
South CarolinaNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
South DakotaNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
TennesseeAs many as 30 (Jul 15); rising yearly since 2016Investigating; not in 4-state clusterTN DOH / WMC
Texas68 through Jul 13; 15 hospitalizedMeets CDC outbreak case definition; not in 4-state clusterTX DSHS
Utah1–10 (CDC band, Jul 13)Cases reported; not in 4-state clusterCDC / NBC
VermontNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC
Virginia10 (Jul 7)No — not a pattern that would “constitute an outbreak”VDH
Washington27 since May 1 (22 travel-related; 3 domestic)No — WA DOH: not seeing an outbreak; not linked to other statesWA DOH / FOX 13
West Virginia69 (Jul 13)Yes — 4-state outbreak; statewide outbreak declaredWV OEPS
Wisconsin35 since May 1 (≈double 2025; <10 domestic)No — WI DHS: travel-driven, not a domestic outbreakWI DHS / WPR
WyomingNo domestic cases in CDC listNot partCDC

Notes: State figures mix confirmed and probable cases and use different start dates (some “since May 1,” some “year-to-date”), so they are not strictly comparable. “In CDC count” means the state appears in the CDC’s 34-state domestic tally but has not published its own 2026 number; “no domestic cases” means the state is not in that tally (it may still have travel-related cases). Every count is a floor. Figures current to July 15, 2026.

On July 14, Senator Amy Klobuchar sent a letter to the acting heads of the CDC and FDA asking them to restore the food-safety programs this administration cut and start tracking foodborne illness again. She named them — FoodNet, the Food Emergency Response Network, the Food Safety Inspection Service, the Public Health Infrastructure Grants, and the Preventive Services Block Grants. I’ve spent thirty years representing the people those programs protect, and I’ll say it plainly: she’s right, and everyone who eats should be behind her.

Here’s what she’s pointing at. Last year the administration cut FoodNet’s tracking from ten foodborne pathogens down to two — and Cyclospora, the parasite now tearing through the country, was one of the eight it dropped. Reporting it became optional. The FDA’s Food Emergency Response Network was suspended after its scientists were let go, and the grants that pay for state lab capacity and disease tracking were terminated. Her letter lands the consequence in one sentence: there is no longer a central place to report and compare this data across state lines. 

A word about the numbers, because they make her case stronger than her letter does. She cites nearly 2,800 cases and 86 hospitalizations as of July 9. Those figures are already old and low. As I write this, the CDC has 1,645 confirmed cases and admits it is aware of more than 5,100 more under investigation — nearly 7,000 people. Michigan alone has counted 3,309. Add up just the eleven states that still publish their own tallies, and you are past 4,900.

That is the whole argument. The Senator could only cite “nearly 2,800” because the system meant to count the rest was defunded. The distance between her number and the real one isn’t a weakness in her letter — it is the proof of it. When you stop tracking a pathogen, you don’t make a single sick person well. You just lose the ability to see them. The people are still out there — children and grandparents living through weeks of dehydrating illness from a bag of salad greens — now invisible to the one agency we count on to sound the alarm.

I’ve watched this before. I started after the Jack in the Box E. coli outbreak in 1993, and the biggest improvement since has been our ability to catch outbreaks early, link cases across state lines, and pull tainted food before it kills someone. Every one of those abilities runs on the programs in Klobuchar’s letter. Strip them out and we are worse off than in 1993: the food supply is bigger and more national than ever, and a single lot of contaminated greens can reach dozens of states before anyone connects the first two cases.

So yes — I support her request without a caveat. Restore FoodNet, the Food Emergency Response Network, the Food Safety Inspection Service, the Public Health Infrastructure Grants, and the Preventive Services Block Grants. Put Cyclospora back on the list of things this country bothers to count. And do it now, while the outbreak is still climbing — because the alternative is what we are living: an agency reporting 1,645, a reality closer to 7,000, and a widening gap where real people get sick and no one in Washington is required to notice.

Senator Klobuchar is asking the right question. The rest of us should make sure it does not go unanswered.

Depending on where you look, each state in this outbreak has as many as three different case counts, and they rarely match. The CDC’s public map reports a range of lab-confirmed, domestically acquired cases. Each state health department keeps its own tally, which usually mixes confirmed and probable cases and runs higher. And the press, polling those departments day to day, often carries a third figure. The chart and maps below put all three side by side, state by state.

The national totals tell the same story in one line. As of July 13–14, the CDC’s map shows 1,645 lab-confirmed cases. The CDC says it is aware of nearly 7,000 once the more than 5,100 cases still under investigation are counted — the figure the media is now reporting nationally. And the eleven states that publish their own numbers already sum to roughly 4,900 on their own, triple what the CDC’s map shows.

Suspected source.  No source has been confirmed and no recall has been issued. Michigan, based on more than 1,000 interviews with people who tested positive, has pointed to lettuce and bagged salad greens. The CDC and FDA are investigating a possible link to Taco Bell, and several Taco Bell locations have voluntarily pulled lettuce, pico de gallo, guacamole, cilantro, and onions from their menus. Michigan officials are advising people to buy whole heads of lettuce rather than pre-packaged bags.

The counts also disagree for structural reasons, not because anyone is lying. They use different cutoff dates, the CDC reports only what it has confirmed as domestic while states report what they see, and there is roughly a six-week lag between illness and the federal tally. Ohio shows the split at its widest: the CDC bins it at 1 to 10, the state’s last official release counted 177, and reporters now put it near 400. Washington shows the opposite — a state where all three roughly agree it is low: King County reports 15 cases but only about one acquired locally, and the state reports no surge.

Each state’s three numbers, with national totals and the suspected source boxed at right. The band is the CDC bin; the filled dot (●) is the state health department’s count; the open ring (○) is the current media figure.

The same comparison as three maps, each with its running total: what the CDC counts (1,645), what the states say (~4,900 across 11 states), and what the media reports (~7,000 nationally).

Every state with a published number, where each number comes from, and the national totals:

StateCDC binState dept.MediaSource(s)
Michigan501–9003,3093,309MDHHS; TODAY (Jul 14)
New York161–300~394~394NY DOH; TODAY (Jul 9)
Ohio1–10177~400ODH release (Jul 2); WOIO (Jul 14)
North Carolina81–160240240NC DHHS; NBC (Jul 13)
Illinois31–80216216IDPH; NBC (Jul 14)
Indiana31–80206206Indiana DOH; NBC
Kentucky31–80100 †100KDPH (Jul 13)
Colorado1–109090CO Public Health; NBC
West Virginia11–306969WV OEPS (Jul 13)
Florida11–305050FL DOH Merlin (Jul 4); CBS (Jul 9)
Texas31–804848Texas DSHS (Jul 6); TODAY
Washington1–1015 ‡15PH–Seattle & King County (Jul 12)
National total1,645 conf.~4,900~7,000CDC (map / incl. under investigation); state depts.

Totals: “1,645 confirmed” is the CDC’s lab-confirmed domestic count (the map). “~4,900” is the sum of the eleven outbreak-state health-department counts above; Washington is shown for reference but excluded, as its cases are mostly travel-related. “~7,000” is the CDC’s confirmed-plus-under-investigation figure as reported nationally by the press. † Kentucky: 100 reported statewide, 61 lab-confirmed. ‡ Washington: 15 cases in King County (Seattle), only about one acquired locally — the rest travel-related; the state reports no local surge, so unlike the outbreak states its cases are mostly imported. Florida earlier appeared in the press as 11, a stale CDC-derived figure, while the state’s Merlin system reports 50. A separate 440 travel-associated cases nationwide are not included here. Figures as reported roughly July 2–14, 2026, and still moving.

It is hard to keep up with the fast moving story.

The headlines this week put Taco Bell at the center of the Cyclospora story, and there is a real thread there. Credit to the Washington Post’s Lena H. Sun, who broke the news that federal and state health officials are investigating whether Taco Bell restaurants played a role in the outbreak. What set it off wasn’t an agency announcement: Detroit-area Taco Bell locations quietly posted signs that they couldn’t sell lettuce, cilantro-onion, pico de gallo, and guacamole “due to a nationwide recall” — a recall that doesn’t publicly exist. Sun is careful about the limits, and so am I: some of the sick reported eating at Taco Bell, and plenty didn’t, which tells you the chain is not the sole source of this thing. No grower, no supplier, and no Taco Bell ingredient has been named by the CDC or FDA.

Here is the part getting lost in the noise: this appears to not be one outbreak. The CDC now says as much in its own words, describing a large multistate outbreak across Michigan, Ohio, West Virginia, and Kentucky — the lettuce-and-salad-greens track Michigan has been pointing at — while separately tracking multiple additional clusters. And those other clusters point somewhere else entirely. Back on July 7, CNN obtained a CDC email showing the FDA’s Coordinated Outbreak Response and Evaluation network running traceback on cilantro, white and green onions, and cucumbers for a different set of cases — in Illinois, New York City, New York State, Pennsylvania, and Texas — that appear to be linked to Mexican-style restaurants, a grocery chain, and a catered event. Different states, different foods, different points of sale. The FDA’s own outbreak table now lists several distinct investigations running at once, each with the product not yet identified and traceback initiated. 

And that single number moved this week — hard. I spend a lot of time on this blog holding the CDC’s feet to the fire, so let me do the opposite for once. On Tuesday the agency issued a formal Health Alert Network advisory and revised its count from the 843 confirmed cases it was reporting late last week to 1,645 lab-confirmed, plus more than 5,100 under investigation — nearly 7,000 people nationwide, across 34 states, with 141 hospitalized and no deaths. The CDC put the scale in plain language: 1,645 confirmed is substantially higher than the 249 cases reported nationally over the same stretch last year. Michigan alone has now confirmed 3,309. For weeks the distance between what the states were counting and what Atlanta was publishing was the whole story; this week the agency finally revised upward, pushed the alert to every clinician and lab in the country, and named the outbreak. That is what a functioning surveillance system is supposed to do. Credit where it’s due.

And credit to the reporters who wouldn’t let it go. Beyond Sun’s work at the Post, NBC News’ Erika Edwards has been on this outbreak for weeks — chasing the state-by-state counts the federal dashboard wasn’t capturing and putting the surveillance gap in front of a national audience while the CDC’s number still read 843. Her colleague Aria Bendix reported last year that the CDC had quietly dropped Cyclospora from FoodNet — the decision that set this whole counting mess in motion. Good beat reporting isn’t glamorous; it’s showing up, day after day, on a story about a parasite most people would rather not read about over breakfast, and making sure the families getting sick actually get counted. Sun and Edwards did that.

None of this means the problem is solved. The only reason the states had to lead is that the CDC made Cyclosporareporting optional on July 1, 2025, and the federal count spent this outbreak playing catch-up from behind. The CDC is updating its state map as cases come in, and for once it is moving faster than it was a week ago. But the honest headline isn’t “Taco Bell did it.” It’s that a fractured food-safety system is now chasing several Cyclospora outbreaks at once — and the people getting sick deserve to have every one of them counted, traced, and named.

Somewhere north of 4,000 people are sick with Cyclospora this summer, and the agency that is supposed to track them says it can confirm 843. That is not a rounding error. That is the whole story.

State health departments, tallied by NBC News as of July 13, put the national count above 4,000 across more than 30 states. Michigan alone reports more than 2,600 cases — a state that in a normal year sees about 50. Ohio, New York, Illinois, and North Carolina are among the hardest hit. Meanwhile the CDC’s own surveillance page lists 843 laboratory-confirmed, domestically acquired cases in 31 states as of July 9, with 86 hospitalized, no deaths, and another 1,500-plus cases it says still require further analysis. The agency insists it has no evidence of a single, multistate outbreak tying these illnesses together.

There is a reason the federal number and the real number have come unmoored. On July 1, 2025, FoodNet — the CDC’s foodborne-illness surveillance backbone — made Cyclospora reporting optional, cutting the pathogens states are required to track down to two: Salmonella and Shiga toxin–producing E. coli. States like Michigan kept counting. Plenty didn’t. So when the biggest wave of this parasite in years arrived, the country’s early-warning system was running with the lights half off. Michigan has already flagged salad greens among the likely culprits; the CDC and FDA still say they can’t name a vehicle.

Which raises a fair question: how big is this, really, measured against the outbreaks we actually managed to count? Here is every prior U.S. Cyclospora outbreak that crossed 500 known sick — still a short list, ranked by size.

  1. 2019 — 2,408 sick — imported fresh basil, Mexico. The 2,408 domestically acquired, lab-confirmed casesreported to the CDC in 2019 were the largest peak-season total since Cyclospora became nationally notifiable in 1999. It carries an asterisk, though — and it’s the same asterisk hanging over 2026. Only about 10 percent of those cases were ever tied to the confirmed vehicle: fresh basil distributed by Siga Logistics de RL de CV of Morelos, Mexico, served through restaurants in Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Rhode Island, South Carolina, and Wisconsin. The rest were scattered across smaller clusters that were never pinned to a food. Even our “biggest outbreak” was, for the most part, never traced to a source.
  2. 1996 — 1,465 sick — Guatemalan raspberries. The outbreak that put Cyclospora on the map in North America: 1,465 cases across 20 states, the District of Columbia, and two Canadian provinces, traced to fresh raspberries imported from Guatemala. It is the textbook example — literally, in the New England Journal of Medicine — of local clusters that turned out to be one continental outbreak, and a warning that a handful of sick people at a luncheon can be the visible edge of something enormous.
  3. 1997 — 1,012 sick — Guatemalan raspberries, again. The sequel arrived the very next spring: 1,012 cases in the U.S. and Canada, same vehicle, after the growers’ voluntary risk measures failed to hold. Guatemala eventually stopped exporting raspberries to the U.S. altogether — a reminder that when we chased this parasite hard enough, we could follow it all the way back to a farm.
  4. 2020 — 701 sick — Fresh Express bagged salad. 701 laboratory-confirmed cases across 14 states — iceberg lettuce, red cabbage, and carrots out of a Fresh Express plant in Streamwood, Illinois, with 38 hospitalized. Epidemiology and traceback nailed the vehicle. I know this one well: my firm represented about 100 of those families. And note the food category — a bagged salad, exactly what Michigan is warning about right now.
  5. 2013 — 631 sick — salad mix and cilantro, Mexico. The CDC counted 631 cases across 25 states and New York City and was candid that this was more than one outbreak: restaurant illnesses in Iowa and Nebraska traced to salad mix from Taylor Farms de Mexico in Guanajuato, and a wave of Texas cases traced to fresh cilantro from Puebla. One summer, two vehicles, one number.
  6. 2015 — 546 sick — cilantro from Puebla, Mexico. 546 cases across 31 states; the mid-summer snapshot that circulated at 495 climbed to 546 by the time the season closed. Clusters in Texas, Wisconsin, and Georgia were tied to Puebla cilantro — a source the FDA had already flagged in 2013 and 2014 and eventually put under import alert. The vehicle for the cases outside those clusters was never identified.
  7. 2018 — 511 sick — salad served at a fast-food chain. 511 cases across 16 states linked to salad mix distributed to McDonald’s restaurants across the Midwest — one of two outbreaks that summer, the other being 250 sick from prepackaged vegetable trays, which fell just short of this list.

Notice what that list is, and what it isn’t. Seven outbreaks in three decades cleared 500 counted cases, and four of the seven were leafy greens or herbs — bagged salad in 2020 and 2018, cilantro in 2015 and 2013 — with raspberries and basil sitting at the top. The 2026 outbreak has already blown past every one of them on the states’ own numbers, with Michigan pointing squarely at salad greens, and the federal government is telling you it sees 843 illnesses and no connection between them.Behind every one of those numbers is a person who spent weeks on the bathroom floor because of something a rinse under the tap was never going to fix. The parasite didn’t get harder to count this year. We decided to stop counting it.