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  • Report:  #587425

Complaint Review: HEb Rice Epicurean Krogers - Internet

Reported By:
Jona hates Journalism - new york, New York, USA
Submitted:
Updated:

HEb Rice Epicurean Krogers
Internet, United States of America
Phone:
713-621-5145
Web:
www.riceepicurean.com
Categories:
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If i opened a business where I sold something that was harmful I would be put in jail. Why aren't the business owners of supermarkets going to jail for allowing companies to put misleading labels on food?











DA pressured to combat rising 'food fraud'



















Washington Post Staff Writer 
Tuesday, March 30, 2010












The expensive "sheep's milk" cheese in a Manhattan market was really made from cow's milk. And a jar of "Sturgeon caviar" was, in fact, Mississippi paddlefish.












Some honey makers dilute their honey with sugar beets or corn syrup, their competitors say, but still market it as 100 percent pure at a premium price.



And last year, a Fairfax man was convicted of selling 10 million pounds of cheap, frozen catfish fillets from Vietnam as much more expensive grouper, red snapper and flounder. The fish was bought by national chain retailers, wholesalers and food service companies, and ended up on dinner plates across the country.



"Food fraud" has been documented in fruit juice, olive oil, spices, vinegar, wine, spirits and maple syrup, and appears to pose a significant problem in the seafood industry. Victims range from the shopper at the local supermarket to multimillion companies, including E&J Gallo and Heinz USA.



Such deception has been happening since Roman times, but it is getting new attention as more products are imported and a tight economy heightens competition. And the U.S. food industry says federal regulators are not doing enough to combat it.



"It's growing very rapidly, and there's more of it than you might think," said James Morehouse, a senior partner at A.T. Kearney Inc., which is studying the issue for the Grocery Manufacturers Association, which represents the food and beverage industry.





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John Spink, an expert on food and packaging fraud at Michigan State University, estimates that 5 to 7 percent of the U.S. food supply is affected but acknowledges the number could be greater. "We know what we seized at the border, but we have no idea what we didn't seize," he said.



The job of ensuring that food is accurately labeled largely rests with the Food and Drug Administration. But it has been overwhelmed in trying to prevent food contamination, and fraud has remained on a back burner. 



The recent development of high-tech tools -- including DNA testing -- has made it easier to detect fraud that might have gone unnoticed a decade ago. DNA can be extracted from cells of fish and meat and from other foods, such as rice and even coffee. Technicians then identify the species by comparing the DNA to a database of samples.



Another tool, isotope ratio analysis, can determine subtle differences between food -- whether a fish was farmed or wild, for example, or whether caviar came from Finland or a U.S. stream.



The techniques have become so accessible that two New York City high school students, working with scientists at the Rockefeller University and the American Museum of Natural History last year, discovered after analyzing DNA in 11 of 66 foods -- including the sheep's milk cheese and caviar -- bought randomly at markets in Manhattan were mislabeled.



"We put so much emphasis on food and purity of ingredients and where they come from," said Mark Stoeckle, a physician and DNA expert at Rockefeller University who advised the students. "But then there are things selling that are not what they say on the label. There's an important issue here in terms of economics and consumer safety."












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1 Updates & Rebuttals

Alex

United States of America
Write Your Congressman

#2Consumer Comment

Fri, March 18, 2011

This is probably something that you should direct to your member of Congress or the Senate, rather than ROR.

One quote from your article stood out for me:

"The job of ensuring that food is accurately labeled largely rests with the Food and Drug Administration. But it has been overwhelmed in trying to prevent food contamination, and fraud has remained on a back burner."

The FDA would be the party most likely to affect change here, and they probably won't do so without Congressional influence. It's not necessarily the supermarket companies' fault; they are going to follow FDA rules and regulations, and if certain products have not been deemed unsafe per the rules, the supermarkets have no reason to consider these products unsafe for their consumers.

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