On Thursday, June 11, 2026, the FDA quietly posted to its website the document those of us investigating the ByHeart infant-botulism outbreak have waited months to see: the complete Establishment Inspection Report (EIR) for Blendhouse Allerton, LLC — the Iowa plant that produced ByHeart’s infant-formula base powder.

Credit where it is due: Bloomberg’s Anna Edney was first to flag the release, reporting that federal inspectors found no evidence ByHeart’s own production “caused” the outbreak and pointed instead toward contaminated ingredients. You can read her piece here: FDA Finds No Evidence ByHeart Production Caused Infant Formula Botulism Cases. She is right — but a 55-page government report holds far more than any headline can, so I read all of it.

So can you. Here is the actual source document: FDA Establishment Inspection Report, Blendhouse Allerton, LLC (FEI 1921383), inspection 11/11/2025–01/22/2026 — https://www.fda.gov/media/192916/download.

This full EIR is a different and much longer document than the three-page Form FDA 483 that issued back in January. The 483 is simply Attachment 1 to this report. The narrative, the findings, and FDA’s conclusions live in the EIR — and the EIR is what went public Thursday.

What the FDA actually concluded:

After weeks on site, FDA’s investigators wrote, on page 35, that the genetic match between the Clostridium botulinum–positive ingredients and both a sick infant and a previously manufactured finished product “appears to indicate that raw materials were more likely the source of the outbreak than the firm’s processing equipment and storage practices.”

In plain English: the spores most likely rode in on an ingredient.

That ingredient is organic whole milk powder. The report lays out how, on January 21, 2026, ByHeart’s VP of Quality told FDA that lots of organic whole milk powder had tested presumptive-positive for C. botulinum, and that one isolate matched both a clinical sample from a sick baby and a ByHeart finished product (pp. 31–32). The CORE team identified organic whole milk powder as “an ingredient of concern” (p. 34). FDA collected a dozen base-powder samples tied to the recalled finished lots — 251131P2, 251261P2, 251481P2, and 243201P2 — and shipped them out for botulinum testing (pp. 47–48).

Follow the milk: Organic West Milk → Dairy Farmers of America → Organic West Milk → ByHeart

The EIR redacts the supplier names, but the supply chain is no longer a secret. As the Associated Press’s Jonel Aleccia first reported, the organic whole milk powder was made from fluid organic whole milk supplied by Organic West Milk, Inc., a California company that pools milk from 55 farms, and was dried into powder at a Dairy Farmers of America (DFA) plant in Fallon, Nevada. DFA dried the milk for Organic West Milk, Inc., that sold the powder to ByHeart, and the lot FDA collected at the DFA plant genetically matched the outbreak strain.

So, the chain runs like this:

  • Fluid whole milk — Organic West Milk, Inc. (California, 55 farms)
  • Powdered whole milk — Dairy Farmers of America, Fallon, Nevada (dries the milk)
  • Infant-formula base powder — ByHeart at Blendhouse Allerton, Iowa
  • Finished, canned formula — ByHeart’s Blendhouse Portland, Oregon plant
  • The Retailers — the stores that sold the can to a parent

The agency was looking hard upstream: FDA’s investigators collected “Audit Observations at DFA” as Exhibit 81 (p. 51), alongside ingredient tracebacks. 

And the finger-pointing has predictably begun — ByHeart points upstream, DFA has emphasized that the maker of the end product bears responsibility to properly process ingredients for safety, while Organic West’s owner has suggested something went wrong in turning milk into powder and powder into formula. Everyone in the chain is pointing at the next link.

What “the ingredients did it” does not mean:

Here is where I want to be very clear, because the spin will be loud: identifying a contaminated milk ingredient does not get ByHeart off the hook. Not legally, and not morally.

Blendhouse Allerton is the sole producer of the base powder used in ByHeart’s formula (p. 1). And the very same report that points upstream also handed ByHeart a fresh three-item Form 483 (pp. 41–44):

  • A process-intrusion flush that was never documented after black rubber pieces were found in the line, with no rationale recorded — 21 CFR 106.50(a)(1);
  • A finding that the firm did not ensure all ingredient-contact surfaces were cleaned and sanitized — specifically, an oil storage silo that did not receive the second caustic wash its own procedure required — 21 CFR 106.30(b); and
  • A base mix that dropped below its required temperature and was fed forward with no management approval, where the firm failed to evaluate the public-health significance of the deviation — 21 CFR 106.6(c)(4).

Worse, two observations from the February 2025 inspection were carried into this report as still “Not Corrected”: failing to maintain the building in a clean and sanitary condition (21 CFR 106.20(a)) and approving and releasing an ingredient that was not held under conditions to prevent adulteration (21 CFR 106.40(f)(3)) (pp. 2–3). Read that last one again. Months before babies got sick, FDA had already cited this plant for releasing an ingredient that wasn’t held under conditions to prevent adulteration — and at the time of this outbreak report, it still wasn’t fixed. And look at what that February 2025 inspection actually found. Its very first observation named the exact ingredient now at the center of this outbreak: FDA cited the plant for receiving and releasing whole organic dried milk powder that was not held under conditions to prevent adulteration (p. 1). The same inspection faulted the firm for failing to eliminate rodent-harborage areas after rodent problems in 2024–2025, and for not adequately monitoring the dryer floor after findings of confirmed Cronobacter sakazakii — a pathogen that can be deadly to infants and that drove the massive 2022 Abbott formula recall (pp. 1–2). This plant was already on notice about the milk, about the rodents, and about a baby-killing organism at its dryer, months before a single child got sick.

And then the central point: Clostridium botulinum spores in dairy are a known, foreseeable hazard. The entire job of an infant-formula manufacturer is to control the hazards in the ingredients it buys — because the end product goes into the most vulnerable humans on earth, whose immature guts allow those spores to germinate and produce toxin. ByHeart’s own June 10 “action plan” now promises C. botulinum-specific testing of every dairy ingredient and every finished batch before release. That is a tacit admission that this hazard was testable and controllable all along. You do not get credit for installing the smoke detector after the house has burned down. Nor was the hazard hypothetical at this plant. In January 2025, BHA’s own records (SNC25-002-BHA) document pallets of organic whole milk powder arriving with visible gnaw holes, spilled powder, and potential rodent droppings (p. 15) — rodent contamination on the very ingredient that carries C. botulinum spores. FDA ultimately concluded those particular contaminated pallets were not the source of this outbreak — they involved different lots received at a different warehouse (p. 35) — but that misses the larger point. A plant that has already watched gnawed, soiled bags of milk powder come through its doors knows exactly how filth rides in on this ingredient, and exactly why every lot of it must be controlled before it ever reaches a baby.

The bottom line:

Forty-eight infants were hospitalized across seventeen states. None died — but botulism can leave lasting harm, and these are babies. The FDA report does real and important work tracing the spores to a milk-powder ingredient and to the companies that supplied and processed it. Organic West Milk and Dairy Farmers of America will have to answer for the lot that carried the outbreak strain, and they should. The scale of the danger is in the report itself: the recall began with two lots on November 8, 2025, grew to every lot of ByHeart formula by November 19, and FDA classified it Class I — the agency’s most serious category, reserved for products that can cause serious injury or death. It was still ongoing when inspectors closed this report (pp. 8–9).

But a company that puts its name on a can of infant formula — that markets it as the closest thing to breast milk — cannot outsource responsibility for what is inside that can. ByHeart chose its suppliers, bought the ingredient, made the base powder, and sold the product to parents who trusted it. Pointing at the milk explains how the spores got in. It does not change who was responsible for keeping them out. The buck — and the baby’s bottle — stopped with ByHeart.

And the responsibility does not stop at ByHeart. Every company that sold this formula to a family is part of the chain of distribution of an adulterated, dangerous product — and under long-settled product-liability law, sellers in that chain can be held strictly liable for placing it into a parent’s hands, whether or not they knew what was in the can. The grocery chains, pharmacies, big-box stores, and online sellers that stocked and shipped recalled ByHeart formula profited from moving this product to the most vulnerable consumers there are. That carries a legal duty, and it carries a moral one. When a retailer chooses to sell infant formula, it vouches for that product to every parent who trusts its shelves — and when the product turns out to be contaminated, it shares in the responsibility to the babies who were harmed.

I have spent more than thirty years representing the families on the wrong end of food that should never have been sold — and this report follows the oldest pattern I know: a contaminated ingredient travels down a chain of companies, and the moment babies are hurt, every one of them points at the next link. 

I am not interested in that game, and neither should you be. Trace this outbreak honestly and it runs in a straight line — from the farms that supplied Organic West Milk, to the Dairy Farmers of America plant in Fallon, Nevada that dried that milk into powder, to ByHeart and its Blendhouse plant in Iowa that turned the powder into base, to the Portland plant that sealed it into a can, to the grocery shelves and online carts that put it within a parent’s reach. 

FDA warned this entire industry, by name, in March 2023 that Clostridium botulinum was a known hazard in powdered infant formula — and that an ingredient supplier whose milk receives no lethal treatment is, in the agency’s words, “an extension of the infant formula manufacturing process.” 

Every company in that line had a duty to the child at the end of it, and the law of strict products liability holds every one of them to it. Forty-eight babies in seventeen states had no say in which of these companies cut which corner. They are owed answers, they are owed accountability, and they are owed the one thing this chain was built to deliver and did not: a can of formula that was safe to feed a baby. From the milk to the shelf, that was everyone’s job — and these babies are everyone’s responsibility.

Why the food industry should embrace whole genome sequencing (WGS) — even when it’s inconvenient

I few weeks ago I was supposed to give a talk about the pros and cons of WGS and the food industry.  I never made it to the talk because my day job got in the way.

When I started suing food companies more than thirty years ago, after E. coli O157:H7 in undercooked Jack in the Box hamburgers killed four children and sickened hundreds, proving where a pathogen came from was slow, painstaking, and often impossible. Investigators matched bacteria using crude “fingerprinting” methods that could tell you two samples looked similar, but rarely that they were truly the same organism.

That world is gone. Whole genome sequencing — reading the complete DNA of a bacterium — has done for foodborne illness what DNA testing did for criminal forensics. Today, when Listeria turns up in a nursing-home resident in California and in a frozen nutritional shake produced two thousand miles away, public-health scientists can say with near-certainty it is the same organism. The FDA’s GenomeTrakr and the CDC’s PulseNet databases and NCBI’s website now hold hundreds of thousands of these genomic fingerprints. The 2025 Lyons Magnus outbreak — 42 sickened, 14 dead across 21 states — was solved this way. So was the largest and deadliest listeriosis outbreak in history: the 2017–2018 South African catastrophe that killed 216 people and was traced, through a single sequence type called ST6, back to polony from one Tiger Brands plant in Polokwane.

For public health, the case is overwhelming. WGS finds the source faster, thereby making outbreaks smaller, narrows recalls so they strike the guilty product instead of an entire commodity, and catches contamination at vanishingly low levels. None of that is seriously in dispute.

The harder question — and the one companies actually ask me — is whether a food producer should run that same technology on its own products and inside its own plant.

Here is the uncomfortable part, and I’ll say it plainly because the industry’s lawyers usually won’t: a positive result you generate today can be used against you tomorrow. If you swab your plant and find Listeria in a floor drain, sequence it, and that genome later matches a sick child’s, you are tied to that case in a way no jury will forget. Some defense attorneys take the logical next step and quietly advise their clients to test less — because what you don’t know can’t be subpoenaed.

I have spent decades on the other side of that advice, and I am here to tell you the bad advice is both morally bankrupt and, in the long run, a legal disaster.

Choosing not to look is not a defense. It is willful blindness, and juries understand it instantly. The company that finds a resident strain, documents it, and surgically eliminates it has a contemporaneous record of doing exactly what a responsible food producer is supposed to do. The company that decided ignorance was safer has a record of nothing — until the outbreak arrives anyway, larger and deadlier for having gone undetected, and a plaintiff’s lawyer like me asks under oath why a company with hundreds of millions in revenue chose not to use a technology that a public-health lab in a developing nation could afford.

And WGS cuts both ways. The same precision that can implicate you can clear you. When your product is swept into an outbreak it had nothing to do with, your genomic data is the fastest route to proving your strain is not the strain — to getting your name out of the headline and your trucks back on the road. I have watched sequencing exonerate an accused producer as decisively as it has condemned a guilty one.

WGS is not magic. It demands real bioinformatics expertise, validated pipelines, and reference databases that still have gaps for rare and emerging pathogens.

But none of that is an argument for staying in the dark. The food industry’s reflex has been to know as little as possible about its own contamination, on the theory that what it didn’t know couldn’t hurt it in court. The genome has ended that bargain. The pathogens in your plant already have a fingerprint. The only question is whether you are willing to read it before someone’s child does.

  • A new outbreak of Salmonella Enteritidis (ref #1378) linked to a not yet identified product has been added to the table. FDA has initiated traceback. 
  • For the outbreak of Listeria monocytogenes (ref #1380) linked to requeson/soft ricotta cheese, FDA has initiated sampling. On June 9, 2026, FDA updated the outbreak advisory to include a downstream recall and provide sampling updates. 
  • For the outbreak of Cyclospora (ref #1375) linked to a not yet identified product, the case count has increased from 7 to 8.
  • For the outbreak of Salmonella Typhimurium and Newport (ref #1358) linked to moringa leaf powder, FDA updated the outbreak advisory on June 3, 2026 with additional recalled products.

New York, Virginia, Maryland each have three illnesses, with one death in Maryland.

As of June 9, 2026, a total of 9 people infected with the outbreak strain of Listeria have been reported from 3 states. Sick people’s samples were collected on dates ranging from March 6, 2023, to May 10, 2026. Of 9 people with information available, 8 have been hospitalized and 1 death has been reported from Maryland.

Epidemiologic, laboratory, and traceback data show that some requesón cheeses supplied by Clover Hill Dairy are contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes and are making people sick. The investigation is ongoing to determine the source of contamination and whether additional cheeses are linked to the outbreak.

New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets (NYS AGM) collected samples at a retail location shopped at by sick people. One sample of requesón that was repackaged at this retailer tested positive for Listeria monocytogenes. WGS confirmed the Listeria in the repackaged cheese is the same as the Listeria making people sick in this outbreak.

NYS AGM also went to the distributor who supplied cheese to the retail location. They collected a sample from an unopened 18-pound bucket of requesón that was supplied by Clover Hill Dairy. This sample tested positive for Listeria monocytogenes. Whole genome sequencing showed the strain from the cheese is the same strain as the sick people.

Recalled products were distributed in North Carolina, New York, Virginia, Maryland, New Jersey and Washington, DC.

This outbreak may not be limited to the states with known illnesses, and the true number of sick people is likely higher than the number reported. This is because some people recover without medical care and are not tested for Listeria.

Listeria:  Marler Clark, The Food Safety Law Firm, is the nation’s leading law firm representing victims of Listeria outbreaks. The Listeria lawyers of Marler Clark have represented thousands of victims of Listeria and other foodborne illness outbreaks and have recovered over $900 million for clients.  Marler Clark is the only law firm in the nation with a practice focused exclusively on foodborne illness litigation.  Our Listeria lawyers have litigated Listeria cases stemming from outbreaks traced to a variety of foods, such as lettuce, polony, deli meat, cantaloupe, cheese, celery and milk.   

If you or a family member became ill with a Listeria infection after consuming food and you’re interested in pursuing a legal claim, contact the Marler Clark Listeria attorneys for a free case evaluation.

Additional Resources:

Clostridium botulinum is an obligate anaerobic, spore-forming, Gram-positive bacillus whose primary, native habitat is the soil.[1] The bacterium that thrives in low-oxygen environments and produces botulinum neurotoxin, one of the most lethal biological substances known. While the bacteria themselves are usually harmless, the toxin they create attacks the nervous system and causes botulism, a severe paralytic illness.

Types of Botulism:

  • Foodborne: Caused by eating foods contaminated with the toxin, often from improper home-canning or poorly preserved foods.
  • Infant: Occurs when babies (under one year old) ingest the bacterial spores, which then germinate and produce toxins in the gut. This is why honey should never be fed to infants.
  • Wound: Happens when C. botulinum spores infect a cut or wound and produce toxins, commonly associated with the use of contaminated injection drugs.
  • Iatrogenic Botulism: A rare type that occurs if too much botulinum toxin is injected for cosmetic purposes (like wrinkle reduction) or medical conditions (like migraines
  • Adult Intestinal Toxemia: An extremely rare condition in older children and adults where spores colonize the intestinal tract and produce toxin (similar to infant botulism)

    Where Does Clostridium botulinum Come From?

    • Soil and Sediment: The Ultimate Natural Reservoir

    Landmark environmental surveys dating back over a century have established that viable C. botulinum spores reside in ground soils, dust, and aquatic sediments across every continent where they have been sought. The distribution of specific toxin types in infant botulism cases typically reflects the geographic prevalence of those strains in the local soil. For example, in the United States, Type A spores are predominantly found in the western states, while Type B spores are more densely concentrated in the eastern and mid-Atlantic states.

    • Airborne Dust and Environmental Displacement

    Because spores are highly resistant to environmental stressors (such as drying, heat, and UV light), they easily become airborne. Presently, dust inhalation or ingestion is considered a primary, unavoidable exposure route.[2] (Dabritz et al., 2025). Epidemiological data significantly associates infant botulism cases with residence in windy or dusty locations, as well as proximity to dust-generating activities.

    • Honey: The Primary Identifiable and Avoidable Food Source

    While environmental exposure is largely unpreventable, honey is universally recognized as the single most significant, avoidable foodborne vehicle for C. botulinum spores.[3] (Arnon et al., 1979; Harris & Dabritz, 2024). C. botulinum is not a disease of the honeybee. Instead, honey becomes an accidental repository when bees carry environmental dust, water, or pollen contaminated with spores back to the hive.[4] (Schneider et al., 2004). Because honey is typically consumed raw (unpasteurized and non-irradiated), and because bacterial spores are uniquely structurally adapted to survive low-moisture environments, the dormant spores remain viable inside the honey matrix indefinitely. Globally, about 4% of retail honey specimens test positive for Clostridium botulinum spores, though regional rates vary widely. While some localized surveys find no spores, others report contamination rates as high as 10% to 20% depending on the source and processing methods. [5]

    • Infant Botulism and Clostridium botulinum

    Infant botulism is a rare but serious paralytic illness of babies, usually affecting infants younger than one year. It is caused when an infant swallows spores of Clostridium botulinum, or rarely related toxin-producing Clostridium species, and those spores survive, germinate, and multiply in the immature intestine. The bacteria then produce botulinum neurotoxin inside the infant’s gut. In plain terms, the baby does not simply ingest a “germ”; the infant’s bowel becomes the place where the toxin is made.[6] [7]

    That mechanism is what separates infant botulism from classic foodborne botulism. In foodborne botulism, a child or adult typically swallows toxin that has already formed in contaminated food. In infant botulism, the infant swallows spores, and the toxin is produced after the spores colonize the intestine. Infants are uniquely vulnerable because their gut microbiome, bile-acid profile, immune defenses, and intestinal motility are still developing, and they do not yet have the mature protective intestinal flora that usually prevent C. botulinum spores from gaining a foothold in older children and adults.[8] [9] Approximately 95% of cases occur in infants under six months of age, with a median age of around three months. Most cases are caused by toxin type A or type B.[10] Because they are so common, in many individual cases the exact source is never identified.[11]

    • Signs and Symptoms in Infants

    Infant botulism often begins subtly and then progresses over hours to days. Constipation is commonly one of the earliest signs, followed by poor feeding, weak suck, weak or altered cry, drooping eyelids, diminished facial expression, reduced gag reflex, poor head control, generalized hypotonia, lethargy, and respiratory difficulty. CDC’s clinical overview specifically lists constipation, poor feeding, ptosis, sluggish pupils, flattened facial expression, diminished suck and gag reflexes, weak or altered cry, and respiratory difficulty or arrest as typical findings.[12] Common signs include:

    • Constipation, often for several days;
    • Poor feeding, with weak sucking and swallowing;
    • A weak, altered, or soft cry;
    • Drooping eyelids (ptosis), sluggish pupils, and reduced eye movement;
    • Generalized weakness and low muscle tone—the classic “floppy baby”;
    • Lethargy and a diminished gag reflex; and
    • Breathing difficulty, progressing in severe cases to respiratory failure—the most dangerous complication.

    Because these early signs mimic more common conditions, a high index of suspicion matters. A baby with poor feeding, a weak cry, and increasing floppiness—especially with any breathing difficulty—needs urgent evaluation.[13]

    • Botulism in Older Children and Adults

    The same toxin can cause serious illness in older children and adults, but the exposure pattern is different. Foodborne botulism occurs when a person eats food in which toxin has already formed, classically improperly canned, preserved, fermented, or stored low-acid foods. Wound botulism occurs when spores contaminate a wound and produce toxin in devitalized tissue; in modern U.S. practice, this is often associated with injection-drug use. Iatrogenic botulism can occur after excessive or improperly administered therapeutic or cosmetic botulinum toxin. Adult intestinal colonization botulism is rare but can occur when the adult gut is altered by surgery, antibiotics, bowel disease, or other disruptions.[14] [15]

    In non-infant botulism, symptoms often begin with cranial nerve findings such as blurred or double vision, drooping eyelids, slurred speech, difficulty swallowing, dry mouth, and facial weakness. Weakness then typically descends symmetrically from the face and neck to the arms, trunk, and legs. Patients are usually awake and afebrile, and sensation is usually preserved, which can make the paralysis especially frightening. Severe cases require intubation and mechanical ventilation. Id.

    • Diagnosis and Laboratory Detection

    Botulism is first and foremost a clinical diagnosis. Laboratory confirmation is important, but treatment should not wait for test results when the clinical picture is concerning. CDC’s 2021 clinical guidelines emphasize that timely diagnosis is crucial because antitoxin is the only specific therapy and should be administered as quickly as possible.Because the antitoxin works best when given early, clinicians treat as soon as infant botulism is reasonably suspected.[16]

    For infants, definitive testing usually requires stool or enema specimens, which can be tested for botulinum toxin and cultured for C. botulinum. Testing is specialized and is generally coordinated through state public health laboratories, CDC, and the California Department of Public Health Infant Botulism Treatment and Prevention Program. CDC advises that this specialized testing often takes days and that clinicians should not delay BabyBIG treatment while awaiting confirmation. [17]

    In outbreak investigations, public health laboratories may also test leftover foods, unopened products, ingredients, environmental samples, and bacterial isolates from patients. Whole-genome sequencing can compare isolates from patients, products, and ingredients to determine whether they are genetically related. In the ByHeart outbreak, that genetic comparison was central because isolates from clinical samples, finished formula, base mix, and organic whole milk powder clustered together.[18] [19]

    • Treatment

    Infant botulism is highly treatable, and the great majority of babies recover fully. Care rests on two pillars: specific antitoxin and supportive care.[20] Treatment has two parts: neutralizing circulating toxin and supporting the patient while nerves recover. For infants, the specific treatment is human botulism immune globulin intravenous, known as BIG-IV or BabyBIG. BabyBIG is FDA-approved for infant botulism types A and B and is obtained in the United States through the Infant Botulism Treatment and Prevention Program. The treating physician contacts the program for immediate consultation; if the presentation supports infant botulism, BabyBIG is released and treatment begins without waiting for final laboratory confirmation. [21] [22]

    The evidence for BabyBIG is strong. In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled California trial of 122 infants with laboratory-confirmed infant botulism, treatment within three days of hospital admission reduced mean hospital stay from 5.7 weeks to 2.6 weeks. It also reduced ICU time, mechanical ventilation time, tube or intravenous feeding time, and hospital charges. In plain language, BabyBIG does not instantly make the baby well, but it stops additional circulating toxin from binding and can substantially shorten the illness.[23]

    Supportive care is equally important. Infants may need close ICU monitoring, respiratory support, mechanical ventilation, suctioning, prevention of aspiration, nutritional support through nasogastric or other tube feeding, bowel care, occupational therapy, feeding therapy, physical therapy, and careful discharge planning. Antibiotics are generally not used to treat infant botulism itself because bacterial killing in the gut may increase toxin release; aminoglycosides and certain other medications that impair neuromuscular transmission are avoided because they can worsen weakness.[24]

    For older children and adults with suspected foodborne, wound, or other non-infant botulism, the specific antitoxin is generally heptavalent botulinum antitoxin, obtained through public health authorities and CDC. As with infants, antitoxin should be given as early as possible, because it neutralizes toxin that has not yet bound to nerves. Wound botulism also requires wound evaluation and debridement, and antibiotics may be used for wound infection after antitoxin decisions are addressed. [25] [26]

    • Prognosis, Recovery, and Complications

    With prompt recognition, BabyBIG, and modern intensive care, most infants survive and recover. The favorable survival statistics, however, should not minimize the seriousness of the acute illness. That favorable long-term prognosis, however, should not obscure the severity of the acute illness, which is frightening, often protracted, and frequently requires weeks of intensive hospital care. The recognized complications include:

    • Respiratory failure, apnea, and aspiration—the principal reason a ventilator may be required (on average roughly three weeks when needed);
    • Prolonged feeding difficulty—safe oral feeding can take many weeks to return;
    • Autonomic effects such as urinary retention, and secondary infections (e.g., pneumonia, ear infection) acquired in the hospital;
    • Prolonged general weakness during recovery. [27] [28] [29]

    A baby with infant botulism may spend days to weeks unable to feed safely, protect the airway, or breathe without support. Families may experience a prolonged hospitalization, transfer to a tertiary children’s hospital, repeated testing, feeding-tube dependence, ventilator care, and months of follow-up. [30] In the 2025 ByHeart-formula outbreak, CDC EIS preliminary data found that approximately two-thirds of evaluated infants required post-hospitalization physical therapy or feeding support.”[31] Reasonable follow-up commonly includes primary care, neurology as needed, feeding or speech therapy, physical and occupational therapy, nutrition monitoring, developmental surveillance, and assessment for residual weakness, dysphagia, oral aversion, motor delay, or caregiver trauma. Id. Lasting neurological after-effects are seldom seen, and most infants regain normal strength and development; severe long-term harm is rare. Follow-up with neurology and physiotherapy is advisable after a severe episode.[32]


    [1]           Jin, J. (2023). What is botulism?. Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA)330(1), 90-90. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/issue/330/1

    [2]           Dabritz, H. A., Chung, C. H., Read, J. S., & Khouri, J. M. (2025). Global occurrence of infant botulism: 2007–2021. Pediatrics155(4), e2024068791.

    [3]           Harris, R. A., & Dabritz, H. A. (2024). Infant botulism: in search of Clostridium botulinum spores. Current Microbiology81(10), 306. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00284-024-03828-0

    [4]           Schneider, K. R., Schneider, R. M. G., Kurdmongkoltham, P., & Bertoldi, B. (2025). Preventing foodborne illness: Clostridium botulinumhttps://ask.ifas.ufl.edu/publication/FS104

    [5]           Harris, R. A., & Dabritz, H. A. (2024). Infant botulism: in search of Clostridium botulinum spores. Current Microbiology81(10), 306. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00284-024-03828-0

    [6]           CDC. Clinical Overview of Infant Botulism. April 24, 2024. https://www.cdc.gov/botulism/hcp/clinical-overview/infant-botulism.html

    [7]           Rao AK, Sobel J, Chatham-Stephens K, Luquez C. (2021). Clinical Guidelines for Diagnosis and Treatment of Botulism. MMWR Recomm Rep. 2021;70(2):1-30. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/70/rr/rr7002a1.htm

    [8]           CDC. Clinical Overview of Infant Botulism. April 24, 2024. https://www.cdc.gov/botulism/hcp/clinical-overview/infant-botulism.html

    [9]           Rosow LK, Strober JB. Infant Botulism: Review and Clinical Update. Pediatr Neurol. 2015;52(5):487-492. PubMed/PMC access: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10332751/

    [10]American Academy of Pediatrics, supra note 3; CDC, National Botulism Surveillance Summary, 2021, https://www.cdc.gov/botulism/php/national-botulism-surveillance/2021.html.

    [11]American Academy of Pediatrics, supra note 3; American Family Physician (AAFP), Infant Botulism, https://www.aafp.org/pubs/afp/issues/2002/0401/p1388.html.

    [12]         CDC. Clinical Overview of Infant Botulism. April 24, 2024. https://www.cdc.gov/botulism/hcp/clinical-overview/infant-botulism.html

    [13]         Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, supra note 2; Merck Manual, supra note 1.

    [14]         Rao AK, Sobel J, Chatham-Stephens K, Luquez C. Clinical Guidelines for Diagnosis and Treatment of Botulism, 2021. MMWR Recomm Rep. 2021;70(2):1-30. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/70/rr/rr7002a1.htm

    [15]         Jeffery IA, Nguyen AD, Karim S. Botulism. [Updated 2024 Nov 25]. In: StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2026 Jan-. Available from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK459273/

    [16]         Rao AK, Sobel J, Chatham-Stephens K, Luquez C. Clinical Guidelines for Diagnosis and Treatment of Botulism, 2021. MMWR Recomm Rep. 2021;70(2):1-30. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/70/rr/rr7002a1.htm

    [17]         CDC. Clinical Overview of Infant Botulism. April 24, 2024. https://www.cdc.gov/botulism/hcp/clinical-overview/infant-botulism.html

    [18]         CDC. Investigation Update: Infant Botulism Outbreak, November 2025. March 4, 2026. https://www.cdc.gov/botulism/outbreaks-investigations/infant-formula-nov-2025/investigation.html

    [19]         FDA. Outbreak Investigation of Infant Botulism: Infant Formula (November 2025). Content current as of June 3, 2026. https://www.fda.gov/food/outbreaks-foodborne-illness/outbreak-investigation-infant-botulism-infant-formula-november-2025

    [20]         Jeffery IA, Nguyen AD, Karim S. Botulism. [Updated 2024 Nov 25]. In: StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2026 Jan-. Available from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK459273/

    [21]         CDC. Clinical Overview of Infant Botulism. April 24, 2024. https://www.cdc.gov/botulism/hcp/clinical-overview/infant-botulism.html

    [22]         Scarborough, A. P., Khouri, J. M., Chung, C. H., Dabritz, H. A., & Read, J. S. (2025). International Experience with Human Botulism Immune Globulin for the Treatment of Infant Botulism. Medical Research Archives13(10). https://esmed.org/MRA/mra/article/view/7026

    [23]         Scarborough, A. P., Khouri, J. M., Chung, C. H., Dabritz, H. A., & Read, J. S. (2025). International Experience with Human Botulism Immune Globulin for the Treatment of Infant Botulism. Medical Research Archives13(10). https://esmed.org/MRA/mra/article/view/7026

    [24]         Rao AK, Sobel J, Chatham-Stephens K, Luquez C. Clinical Guidelines for Diagnosis and Treatment of Botulism, 2021. MMWR Recomm Rep. 2021;70(2):1-30. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/70/rr/rr7002a1.htm

    [25]         Jeffery IA, Nguyen AD, Karim S. Botulism. [Updated 2024 Nov 25]. In: StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2026 Jan-. Available from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK459273/

    [26]         Scarborough, A. P., Khouri, J. M., Chung, C. H., Dabritz, H. A., & Read, J. S. (2025). International Experience with Human Botulism Immune Globulin for the Treatment of Infant Botulism. Medical Research Archives13(10). https://esmed.org/MRA/mra/article/view/7026

    [27]         Scarborough, A. P., Khouri, J. M., Chung, C. H., Dabritz, H. A., & Read, J. S. (2025). International Experience with Human Botulism Immune Globulin for the Treatment of Infant Botulism. Medical Research Archives13(10). https://esmed.org/MRA/mra/article/view/7026

    [28]         Morris, V., Wians, R., Wilson, J., & Stevens, G. (2022). Infant Botulism. Journal of Education & Teaching in Emergency Medicine7(2), S48. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10332751/

    [29]Public Health Agency of Canada, supra note 6.

    [30]         Scarborough, A. P., Khouri, J. M., Chung, C. H., Dabritz, H. A., & Read, J. S. (2025). International Experience with Human Botulism Immune Globulin for the Treatment of Infant Botulism. Medical Research Archives13(10). https://esmed.org/MRA/mra/article/view/7026

    [31]         CDC EIS Conference. Severity of Illness and Clinical Outcomes of Infants Linked to an Infant Botulism Outbreak Caused by Powdered Infant Formula — United States, 2025. April 17, 2026. https://www.cdc.gov/eis-conference/php/abstracts/infant-botulism-outbreak-caused-by-powdered-infant-formula.html

    [32]         AAFP, supra note 5; Public Health Agency of Canada, supra note 6; Botulism Sequelae: A Systematic Review, PMC, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12798721/.

    I have spent time sitting across kitchen tables from people whose lives were upended by a single meal. Some of those conversations stay with me. 

    The ones about raw milk and Guillain-Barré syndrome are near the top of that list, because they involve a complication most people have never heard of, caused by a bacterium most people can’t pronounce, delivered by a product that an entire movement insists is a health food.

    Let me say plainly what I have said in courtrooms, in legislative hearings, and on this blog for the better part of two decades: raw milk can put you in a wheelchair.

    Campylobacter is the most common cause of bacterial gastroenteritis in the developed world, and raw, unpasteurized milk is one of its favorite vehicles. For most people, an infection means a miserable week of cramping, fever, and diarrhea. But in a small and unlucky fraction of cases, the immune system, in its effort to fight the bacteria, turns on the body’s own nerves. The result is Guillain-Barré syndrome — an ascending paralysis that can climb from the feet to the lungs in a matter of days. GBS is an infrequent, but well-documented and well-known, consequence of Campylobacter infection. It is not exotic. It is in the medical literature.

    The cruelest part is that contaminated raw milk gives you no warning at all. It does not look spoiled. It does not smell off. There is no way for a consumer standing at a farm stand or a cow-share pickup to know whether the jug in their hands carries a pathogen. You are, quite literally, taking it on faith.

    In June 2008, Campylobacter jejuni in raw milk from Alexandre EcoDairy Farm in Del Norte County, California sickened sixteen people. The milk was distributed through a “cow-leasing” arrangement — the kind of legal workaround that lets dairies sell raw milk while pretending they are not.

    One of those sixteen was a woman named Mari Tardiff. Within days of drinking the milk, Mari had flu-like symptoms. Then her vision blurred. Then her hands went numb. By the time the doctors landed on the words “Guillain-Barré,” her legs were on fire with a pain that only hot towels could touch. She woke one night unable to move. Her husband had to lift her. She was airlifted to intensive care, intubated, and placed on a ventilator. She remained hospitalized for two and a half months.

    Mari came home to a family room converted into a hospital ward — a hospital bed, a Hoyer lift, a stand-up frame, a portable toilet, a remodeled bathroom, and round-the-clock nursing care her family paid for out of their own pockets. She fought through therapy that her husband eventually could not bear to watch because of how much it hurt her. She has never walked normally again. She lost the plans she had made for her life.

    That is what a glass of “natural,” “living,” “nutrient-rich” raw milk did to one healthy woman.

    If Mari’s story were a freak event, I might not keep telling it. It is not.

    In 2012, a 67-year-old man named Jim Orchard drank raw milk from Pasture Maid Creamery in New Castle, Pennsylvania. He, his wife, and his daughter were among roughly ten people sickened. Everyone recovered — except Jim, who developed Guillain-Barré syndrome and ended up paralyzed in intensive care at UPMC Presbyterian. His wife told reporters that no one could give the family a timeline, because with GBS, everyone is different.

    Here is the detail that should make every regulator’s stomach turn: state officials had already warned the public, back in February 2009, to throw out Pasture Maid’s milk because it contained Campylobacter. Three years later, the same farm, the same bug, and a man on a ventilator. The warning was there. The system simply let it happen again.

    People sometimes treat these cases as cautionary tales from a less careful time. They are not. In 2010 and 2011 alone, I counted at least nine raw milk outbreaks across Washington, Utah, Nevada, New York, Pennsylvania, and a multistate cluster spanning Michigan, Indiana, and Illinois — more than fifty confirmed illnesses involving E. coli O157:H7, Salmonella, and Campylobacter, with at least one Pennsylvania victim left hospitalized with GBS. And just this past November, Illinois public health officials reported eleven Campylobacter infections linked to raw milk — while declining to name the common source.

    Then look at Idaho, which has become a case study in everything I am about to ask for. Last summer, eighteen people were sickened with Campylobacter tied to one dairy. By late November, the state was reporting at least twenty-three Campylobacter cases — six of them in children under twelve — plus three Shiga toxin–producing E. coli infections among raw milk drinkers, with no producer named. And then, just days ago, in early June 2026, Idaho announced two more outbreaks: nearly sixty people sick since mid-May, at least forty-five of them confirmed with Campylobacter, and eight hospitalized. Two milking operations — one in the north of the state, one in the south.

    The state declined to name either dairy. A health department spokesperson explained that they did not name the operations because the danger “is a potential risk for any raw milk producer.” Read that again. The agency’s own justification for staying silent is that the hazard is not unique to one farm — it is inherent to the product. That is not an argument for protecting a dairy’s name. That is the single best argument I have ever heard for not drinking raw milk in the first place.

    And California — the same state that gave us Mari Tardiff — has given us the largest example of all. Beginning in the fall of 2023, raw milk and cream from Raw Farm, LLC of Fresno, the operation formerly known as Organic Pastures, was linked to a Salmonella Typhimurium outbreak that whole-genome sequencing eventually tied to at least 165 illnesses across four states. Health officials called it the largest raw-milk Salmonella outbreak in the country in a decade. Several of those patients were carrying Campylobacter or E. coli on top of the Salmonella. This was not Raw Farm’s first time, or its tenth; the same operation has been tied to outbreak after outbreak and recall after recall stretching back to 2006. And here is the part that should sound familiar: after announcing a handful of San Diego cases in October, state and local officials went quiet, even as the confirmed count climbed past 165. The public only learned the true scope because I obtained the records and handed them to the Associated Press. I should not have to be the one to tell a community how many of its neighbors were poisoned.

    We are still having this conversation. We are still watching people get sick — children among them. And too often, we are still watching agencies stay quiet about where the milk came from, as if the name of a dairy were a trade secret worth more than the public’s right to protect itself.

    I am not asking anyone to ban farms or jail dairy farmers. I have spent my career suing companies, and I would rather they never give me a reason to.

    I am asking for three things I have asked for many times before.

    First, tell the truth on the label. When I urged Wisconsin to reject its raw milk bill years ago, I argued that any raw milk sold should at minimum carry a blunt warning that the product is unpasteurized and may contain E. coli O157:H7, Campylobacter, Listeria, and Salmonella — and that infection can mean hemolytic uremic syndrome, Guillain-Barré syndrome, reactive arthritis, miscarriage, or death, with the highest risk to children, pregnant women, the elderly, and the immunocompromised. Consumers deserve to make an informed choice. They cannot do that in the dark.

    Second, when an outbreak happens, name the source. Fast. Silence does not protect the public; it protects the defendant.

    Third — and this is the simplest of all — pasteurize the milk. Pasteurization is not a corporate conspiracy. It is a 150-year-old public health triumph that turns a high-risk product into a safe one without meaningfully changing what is in the glass. Why should raw milk be held to a lower standard than hamburger, or peanut butter, or bagged spinach? It shouldn’t.

    I understand the appeal of food that feels close to the land. I have nothing against farmers or family dairies. But Mari Tardiff trusted that her milk was clean. So did Jim Orchard. Trust did not keep them out of the ICU.

    Drink pasteurized milk. It is the easiest decision you will ever make to keep yourself off a ventilator.

    TOE RIVER HEALTH DISTRICT

    Avery & Mitchell County Health Departments

    Franklin M. Gardner, MPA, REHS – Health Director

    Frank Craig, MD & Julia Sherrill, MD – Medical Directors

    Joe Miller – Chair, Board of Health

    Press Release

    Toe River Health District, Mitchell County Health Department

    130 Forest Service Drive, Bakersville, NC 28705

    6-5-2026

    Toe River Health District Conducting Foodborne Illness Investigation in Mitchell County

    Ledger, N.C. – Last week, the Toe River Health District (TRHD) was notified of two individuals with confirmed Salmonella infection. TRHD staff immediately developed a plan to conduct an investigation. To date, the investigation has identified four individuals from Mitchell County and two individuals from Yancey County diagnosed with Salmonella with some individuals also diagnosed with Campylobacter. TRHD has been in contact with all individuals and to protect their privacy, no further details will be shared about these individuals.

    TRHD has determined a local restaurant, El Ranchero located at 203 Locust St. in Spruce Pine, as the common source of the foodborne illness. TRHD Registered Environmental Health Specialist (REHS), as well as the NC Division of Public Health REHS, have conducted an inspection and a follow-up site visit at the restaurant. These inspections and site visits included sanitary condition assessments. TRHD has made several recommendations and is working with the restaurant to ensure the public’s health is protected.

    Both Salmonella and Campylobacter are bacteria that can cause gastrointestinal illness and, in some cases, severe infection. Common symptoms for both include diarrhea, which is sometimes bloody for Campylobacter, stomach cramps, fever, and in some cases nausea and vomiting. While both will cause illness for about a week, Salmonella usually causes illness within 6 hours – 6 days of consuming contaminated food and Campylobacter within 2–5 days of consuming contaminated food.

    If you ate food or drank beverages from El Ranchero located at 203 Locust St. in Spruce Pine, North Carolina, on or after May 18, 2026, please email TRHD at mchd@toeriverhealth.org with your name and email address. TRHD will send a survey to individuals who provide their email addresses early next week to evaluate whether any menu items may have contributed to additional reported illnesses. Even if you are not experiencing symptoms currently, we are requesting you contact TRHD using the email above to complete the survey.

    Sounds too familiar:

    In April of 2002, 369 reported becoming ill after eating at the Western Sizzlin’ restaurant in Spruce Pine, North Carolina. Of those with symptoms of Salmonellosis, 39 cases of Salmonella infection were laboratory-confirmed.

    Environmental Health (EH) personnel from the Mitchell County HD inspected the restaurant and noted deficiencies. Testing conducted on a number of different foods served by the restaurant, and various cooking utensils and surfaces, were found to be contaminated with Salmonella. In addition, an epidemiologic investigation of the outbreak revealed that two asymptomatic employees of the restaurant were found to be infected with Salmonella. It could not be determined whether the infected employees contracted Salmonella after eating at the restaurant, or if they were responsible for contaminating food at the restaurant.

    The people who find foodborne outbreaks are being fired, defunded, and disbanded — and the bugs do not care.

    For more than thirty years I have represented the families on the other end of a foodborne outbreak — the parents of children on dialysis with hemolytic uremic syndrome, the survivors of a contaminated hamburger or a bag of spinach, the people left planning funerals. I built a career holding companies accountable when the food safety system failed. I never imagined the federal government itself would become one of the things that fails. Over the past year and a half, it has.

    The cuts this administration has made to the FDA, the CDC, and the USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service are not abstract budget lines. They are going to get people sick, and some of them are going to die. The cruelest part is that it is all being done under a banner that reads “Make America Healthy Again.”

    Consider the FDA, which polices roughly 80 percent of our food. It lost nearly 3,900 employees in 2025 alone, part of an HHS purge of some 20,000 jobs. It began in February with what the agency’s own deputy commissioner for human foods called the “indiscriminate” firing of 89 people from the food program — after which he resigned, saying it was “fruitless” to continue. The administration fired so blindly that it had to scramble to rehire the official in charge of infant formula safety.

    By March, HHS planned to cut a fifth of the FDA’s workforce, including more than 170 people from inspections and investigations. Understand what that means. In 2024 the FDA had all of 443 inspectors to cover more than 36,000 food facilities at home and abroad — against the roughly 1,500 it says it actually needs. We were already running on fumes. ProPublica found that foreign food inspections fell by nearly half in early 2025. We are importing more food than ever and looking at less of it.

    Then there is the surveillance — the quiet, unglamorous detective work that is the entire ballgame in my world. By the time a family calls me, public health investigators have usually already connected a sick child in Ohio to a sick adult in Oregon and traced both to a single contaminated lot. On July 1, the CDC gutted that capacity, scaling its FoodNet surveillance network back from eight pathogens to two. It stopped actively tracking Campylobacter, Listeria, and four others. Listeria — the same pathogen that, in the Boar’s Head outbreak just last year, caused the deadliest listeriosis outbreak in over a decade. We are turning off the smoke detectors and telling ourselves the house won’t burn.

    The USDA has done its part. Its inspection service shed hundreds of positions while line speeds at some slaughterhouses climb and inspectors step back — fewer people asked to catch more contamination moving faster. And in a move that should alarm anyone who believes in evidence, the department disbanded the two scientific advisory committees that had guided federal food safety policy for decades, one of them since 1971. Their combined cost was about $300,000 a year. One was, at the moment it was dissolved, reviewing how to keep Listeria out of deli meat. That work simply stopped. For good measure, FSIS withdrew its proposed rule to limit Salmonella in raw poultry — a pathogen that sickens more than a million Americans a year — after years of work.

    I want to be fair. No one in Washington woke up wanting to poison a child, and the food safety system was underfunded long before this administration; I have said so under presidents of both parties. But you cannot fire the inspectors, blind the surveillance, suspend the lab testing, dismiss the scientists, and abandon the rule making all at once and still claim that food safety is a priority. Actions are what count, and these all point one direction.

    Here is what three decades have taught me. Outbreaks do not announce themselves. They are found by people — inspectors who walk the plants, epidemiologists who connect the dots, technicians who confirm the strain. Take those people away and the outbreaks still come. We just find them later, after more children are on dialysis and more families are planning funerals instead of birthday parties. The bacteria do not care about budget cuts. They never have.

    I have spent my life suing companies that put profit ahead of safety. If these cuts stand, I expect to be busier than ever. That is the worst thing I could possibly tell you.

    Clover Hill Dairy Requesón / Soft Ricotta — What the Outbreak Numbers Are Really Telling Us

    One death, seven hospitalizations out of eight known illnesses, and a contaminated strain that genetic fingerprinting ties back to 2023.

    Let me say that again, because it deserves to be said plainly. Nearly nine in ten of the people we know about ended up in a hospital bed. One of them did not survive. And the bacteria that did this has apparently been circulating, undetected and unaddressed, for the better part of three years.

    One Death and a 7-in-8 Hospitalization Rate

    As of June 4, 2026, the CDC and FDA report 8 people infected with the outbreak strain across 3 states — Maryland, New York, and Virginia — with 7 hospitalizations and 1 death. Do the math on that. An 87.5 percent hospitalization rate is not a statistic you shrug at. Most foodborne pathogens put a fraction of the people they sicken in the hospital. Listeria monocytogenes is different, and it has always been different. It is one of the deadliest bugs we deal with in this work, and these numbers show exactly why.

    And remember what the CDC itself says about counts like these: the true number of sick people is almost certainly higher. It takes three to four weeks to confirm that someone is part of an outbreak, and people who recover at home are never tested at all. So, eight is the floor, not the ceiling. Behind that single reported death is a family that got the worst possible news, and behind those seven hospitalizations are people who, if they were pregnant, elderly, or immunocompromised, were fighting for their lives over a container of soft cheese.

    A Strain That Whole Genome Sequencing Ties Back to 2023

    Here is the part that should make everyone — regulators and the dairy alike — deeply uncomfortable. According to the FDA, the patient samples in this outbreak were collected on dates ranging from March 6, 2023 to May 9, 2026. This is being investigated as a multi-year outbreak, and that is not a casual description. Whole genome sequencing — the genetic fingerprinting that lets public health scientists say with confidence that illnesses years apart were caused by the same bacterial strain — is what links these cases together.

    In plain English: the same Listeria has very likely been making people sick since the spring of 2023. When a strain persists for three years, it usually means it has found a home — a harborage point on equipment, in drains, in the production environment — and has been seeding product the whole time. That is the textbook signature of a sanitation problem that was never found or never fixed. People do not get sick for three years from a one-time slip.

    How Investigators Connected the Cheese to the Cases

    The break in this case came out of New York. On May 13, 2026, the Suffolk County Health Department flagged two related Listeria illnesses in the same family, who had bought food from a retailer in Brentwood, New York. State investigators confirmed both had eaten requesón cheese from that store, pulled five cheese samples, and one repacked requesón sample tested positive. Whole genome sequencing then confirmed that the Listeria in the cheese matched the strain that had sickened the two New York patients.

    From there the trace-back led to the source. On May 27, 2026, New York investigators inspected the retailer’s distributor and identified Clover Hill Dairy, LLC of Mechanicsville, Maryland as the manufacturer. A sample taken from an unopened, sealed 18-pound bucket of Clover Hill requesón also tested positive for Listeria monocytogenes. On June 3, 2026, Clover Hill issued a voluntary recall of its requesón and soft ricotta products, and the Maryland Department of Health suspended the company’s operating license and issued a consumer advisory.

    I want to be fair about where the investigation stands. The FDA is candid that this is early, that additional products may be involved, and that — in its words — there is not yet enough evidence to determine whether the recalled cheese explains the entire outbreak. Of seven people interviewed, five reported eating cheese and two specifically named Clover Hill requesón. That is an investigation still being built. But a sealed bucket of this company’s product testing positive for the pathogen is about as direct a piece of physical evidence as you will find this early in a case.

    What the Recall Covers

    The recall covers all requesón cheese manufactured by Clover Hill Dairy, and people should know a few things about how to spot it:

    • Some varieties carry jalapeño or other flavors.
    • The product may be relabeled under a different brand when it is distributed, so the manufacturer information on the package is what matters.
    • The label should show the Clover Hill Dairy manufacturer permit (plant) number “24-128.”
    • It was sold from Clover Hill’s own retail market in Maryland, at farmers markets, and through third-party distributors, including in New York and Virginia.

    If you have this cheese, do not eat it — throw it out or return it. And because Listeria survives and even grows at refrigerator temperatures, clean and sanitize anything it touched: shelves, drawers, containers, surfaces. This is one of the few pathogens that treats your refrigerator as a comfortable place to live.

    Why This One Matters

    Soft, fresh, Hispanic-style cheeses — queso fresco, requesón, and their cousins — have a long and tragic history with Listeria. They sit at the dangerous intersection of high moisture, minimal processing, and a customer base that often includes pregnant women and their families. For a pregnant woman, Listeria can mean miscarriage, stillbirth, premature delivery, or a life-threatening infection in a newborn. For someone over 65 or with a weakened immune system, it routinely means hospitalization and sometimes death. The CDC’s own guidance is blunt: if you are in one of those groups, soft cheeses like these — even pasteurized ones — are a riskier choice.

    None of this had to happen. That is the line I have repeated for three decades, and I will repeat it again here, because it is still true. Listeria outbreaks are preventable. The tools to find this organism in a plant — environmental monitoring, whole genome sequencing, aggressive sanitation when you get a positive — exist and are well understood. When a strain is allowed to persist for three years and it takes a death and seven hospitalizations to bring it to light, that is not bad luck. That is a failure of food safety, and the people who paid for it were the customers who trusted a label.

    Sources

    I have been suing companies over contaminated ground beef for more than thirty years, and I had hoped I would not be writing this kind of alert in 2026. Yet here we are. Nine people in California — most of them children — were sickened with E. coli O157:H7 after eating beef kofta at The Kebab Shop, and as of this past week we now have genetic confirmation tying their illnesses to the meat. This is what I want the public to know about where things stand.

    Where Things Stand Today

    The California Department of Public Health (CDPH), the USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS), and local health departments are investigating an outbreak of Shiga toxin-producing E. coli O157:H7 linked to grilled beef kofta — seasoned ground beef kebabs — served at The Kebab Shop. As of June 1, 2026, the count stands at nine confirmed patients across five California counties. Six of them are children. Five people have been hospitalized, and two of the children developed hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), the kind of acute kidney failure that haunts these cases. No deaths have been reported. Reported illness onset dates run from March 27 through April 30, 2026.

    The implicated beef kofta was produced as a raw ground beef product by Olympia Food Industries, Inc., doing business as Olympia Foods (Establishment 18743), in Franklin Park, Illinois, on January 6, 2026, and shipped to The Kebab Shop locations in California, Texas, and Florida. The Kebab Shop pulled the beef kofta from every one of its restaurants on May 18, 2026. FSIS issued a public health alert on May 24 rather than a recall, for the simple reason that the product was already gone from sale. Health officials say the exposure risk is not ongoing, and that no cases outside California have been connected to this outbreak.

    The Genetic Match — and Why It Matters

    The most important development came on June 1, when FSIS confirmed that whole genome sequencing of the beef kofta samples it collected — the product made at Olympia Foods — matched the outbreak strain of E. coli O157:H7 that sickened these families. In plain English: the laboratory fingerprint of the bacteria in the meat is the same fingerprint found in the patients. This is no longer a case built on interviews and circumstance. It is a confirmed link from a contaminated raw ground beef product, through the kitchen, and into children who ended up in the hospital.

    That confirmation matters because it removes the convenient “we don’t really know” defense. We do know. The science is in. When a raw ground beef product carries E. coli O157:H7 — an adulterant, plain and simple — and that organism matches the people who fell ill, responsibility runs to the manufacturer of the meat and through the chain that served it.

    The Case We Have Filed

    We have not waited to act. On May 29, 2026, my firm filed suit in Los Angeles County Superior Court on behalf of the family of a young child — identified in court papers by the initials J.A.K. — who was hospitalized with hemolytic uremic syndrome and acute kidney failure after eating beef kofta at The Kebab Shop. The complaint names TKS Restaurants, LLC, the operator of The Kebab Shop, and Olympia Food Industries, Inc., the Illinois manufacturer that supplied the contaminated raw ground beef. It alleges strict product liability, negligence, breach of the implied warranty of merchantability, and violations of the federal food safety laws and USDA performance standards that govern ground beef. We intend to hold every responsible link in that chain accountable, and we stand ready to help any other family sickened in this outbreak.

    What I Have Learned About E. coli and Ground Beef

    My career in food safety began with hamburger. In 1993, the Jack in the Box E. coli O157:H7 outbreak swept through the Pacific Northwest, sickening hundreds and killing four children. I represented Brianne Kiner, a nine-year-old girl who was the most seriously injured survivor of that outbreak — she spent weeks in a coma and nearly lost her life to HUS. Her case ended in a landmark settlement, but more than that, it changed how I see a hamburger. Behind every “outbreak” headline is a Brianne, and a family whose life is divided into before and after.

    In the years since, I have litigated E. coli and HUS cases tied to ground beef against Jack in the Box, Cargill, ConAgra, and others, alongside outbreaks traced to lettuce, spinach, sprouts, and raw milk. Over three decades my firm has recovered more than nine hundred million dollars for the people we represent. I take no satisfaction in those numbers. Every dollar reflects a person who was poisoned by food they trusted, and far too many of them were small children whose kidneys or brains were permanently injured by a pathogen they could not see, smell, or taste.

    Here is what those thirty-plus years have taught me. Ground beef can be made far safer than it was in 1993 — the Jack in the Box outbreak drove real reform, including the designation of E. coli O157:H7 as an adulterant in raw ground beef and the testing and process controls that followed. Grinding commingles meat from many animals, so a single contaminated carcass can taint an enormous lot, and the bacteria live in the gut of healthy cattle and arrive at the plant on otherwise normal-looking meat. That is precisely why a manufacturer’s job is to test, to verify, and to keep the adulterant out — because a child cannot. Ground beef has been tamed. It has not been conquered. The Kebab Shop outbreak is this year’s reminder that the work is not finished, and that vigilance lapses still land children in intensive care.

    A child should not eat a kebab and end up in the ICU on dialysis with seizures. That should never happen in 2026. We have known how to prevent these illnesses for thirty years, and when companies do the work, they do not happen.

    If You or Your Family Ate Beef Kofta at The Kebab Shop

    If you ate beef kofta at any The Kebab Shop location between March 27 and April 30, 2026, and then developed symptoms within about ten days — severe stomach cramps, vomiting, or diarrhea that is often bloody — contact your health care provider right away and tell them where you ate. Symptoms of an E. coli O157:H7 infection usually begin three to four days after exposure. Watch children especially closely: HUS can develop after the diarrhea seems to be improving, and warning signs include decreased urination, unusual paleness, easy bruising, and extreme fatigue. If you see those, seek emergency care immediately. Discard any leftover beef kofta from the restaurant.