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View Full Version : Wendy's chili update. Flap will ensue


a4l
4-22-05, 2:11 PM
Wendy?s chili woman charged with grand larceny

link (http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1114163174025&call_pageid=968332188492&col=968705899037&t=TS_Home)


ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAS VEGAS ? The woman who claimed she found a finger tip in her bowl of Wendy?s chili last month has been arrested, the latest twist in a bizarre case about how the four-centimetre digit ended up in a bowl of fast food.

Anna Ayala was taken into custody late yesterday at her Las Vegas home. She was arrested on a warrant alleging grand larceny and attempted grand larceny, Las Vegas police Sgt. Chris Jones said.

Authorities said would not provide further details until a news conference later today in San Jose, Calif. ? the city where Ayala claimed she bit down on the finger in a mouthful of her steamy stew.

Ayala?s 18-year-old son, Guadalupe Reyes, said he had gone to the store around 9 p.m. when he got a phone call from a friend who was back at the Las Vegas home.

?We rushed back and she was already gone,? Reyes said.

Reyes said he had no other details and was waiting to hear from his mother. A handwritten sign on the door of her home this morning instructed reporters not to knock, and telephone messages were not returned.

Ayala, 39, was held overnight at the Clark County jail in Las Vegas, where records showed she was being held without bail.

In Ohio, Wendy?s officials praised the police?s actions. ?We?re thrilled that an arrest has been made,? Tom Mueller, president and chief operating officer of Wendy?s North America, said in a statement.

Ayala initially drew sympathy with her claim that she found the fingertip, complete with a well-manicured nail, on March 22. But when police and health officials failed to find any missing digits among the workers involved in the restaurant?s supply chain, suspicion fell on Ayala.

Ayala hired a lawyer and filed a claim against the Wendy?s franchise owner, Fresno-based JEM Management. But after police searched her home in Las Vegas and continued to question her family, she dropped the lawsuit threat, saying the whole situation was just too stressful.

As it turns out, Ayala has a litigious history. She has filed claims against several corporations, including a former employer and General Motors, though it is unclear from court records whether she received any money.

She said she got $30,000 from El Pollo Loco after her 13-year-old daughter got sick at one of the chain?s Las Vegas-area restaurants. But El Pollo Loco spokeswoman Julie Weeks said last week that the company reviewed Ayala?s February 2004 claim and paid her nothing.

Earlier yesterday, Wendy?s International Inc. announced it had ended its internal investigation, saying it could find no credible link between the finger and the restaurant chain.

Sales have dropped at franchises in Northern California, forcing layoffs and reduced hours, the company said. Wendy?s also has hired private investigators, set up a hot line for tips and offered a $100,000 US reward for anyone who provides information leading to the person who lost the finger.

:conspire:

Sounds like a serieal suer.

leaferfan87
4-22-05, 3:12 PM
So it is safe to eat Wendy's chilli again?

a4l
4-22-05, 3:25 PM
It would appear so.... as long as you don't have an amputated finger in your pocket.

slapshot™
4-23-05, 12:22 PM
I love finger food.

TimmyTabasco
4-23-05, 12:23 PM
So it is safe to eat Wendy's chilli again?

I wouldn't think so

They have ruled out fingers in the chili, but god knows whatelse is in there :laughing:

bluemeanie
5-03-05, 10:31 AM
Finger found in frozen custard

WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) ? A man found part of a severed finger packed inside a pint of frozen custard he?d bought from a Kohl?s Frozen Custard shop, and officials said it belonged to a worker injured in a food-processing machine accident there.

The customer, Clarence Stowers, said he put the finger in his mouth, thinking it was a piece of candy when he opened the pint at home, a Wilmington television station reported.

?I thought it was candy because they put candy in your ice cream ... to make it a treat,? Stowers told WWAY. Stowers said he spit the object out, but still couldn?t identify it. He went to his kitchen, rinsed it off with water ? and ?just started screaming.?

Unlike a recent incident at a Wendy?s restaurant in California, no questions about Stowers? honesty have been raised.

Stowers did not immediately return calls Monday from The Associated Press.

The custard shop owner, Craig Thomas, told the TV station that the employee who lost the finger had dropped a bucket while working with a machine that dispenses the custard. He tried to catch the bucket when the accident occurred.

Thomas said that as several employees tried to help the injured worker, a drive-thru window attendant apparently scooped the custard into a pint before being told what had happened.

Joe Reardon of the state Agriculture Department?s food and drug division said state officials closed the shop while the food-processing equipment involved was cleaned and sanitized.

In March, a Las Vegas woman claimed she bit down on a 11/2 inch-long finger fragment while dining with her family at a Wendy?s restaurant in San Jose, Calif. Investigators have since called her claim a hoax and charged her last month with attempted grand theft related to millions in dollars of financial losses Wendy?s has suffered since news of her claim broke.



Boy... your odds of finding a body part in your food these days are like, better then winning the lottery. Probably better pay out too.

a4l
5-03-05, 11:05 AM
I am going to have to eat more fast food.

:eek: