Imzadi
♥ Saved by an angel in a trench coat!
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- Oct 29, 2004
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Remember decades ago there was a coffee lawsuit against McDonalds when a woman bought a cup of McDonalds coffee, she spilled it on herself and got badly burned? She won her lawsuit and forever after, coffee cups now have to have a warning that the cup may contain hot liquid.
Now we have a second lawsuit against McDonalds: the too hot chicken McNugget. A woman bought a McNugget happy meal at a drive-in. She handed it back to her 4 year old autistic daughter. In a one in 500 billion chance (I'm estimating that's how many chicken McNuggets have been sold since the invention of chicken McNuggets,) the girl drops the chicken McNugget between her leg and the metal part of the seat belt. The heat of the McNugget against the metal and her leg caused second degree burns to the girl's leg. I guess she wasn't able to unhook the seatbelt.
She was screaming. Her mother pulled over to see what was wrong. She saw the burn on the girl’s leg and took photos on her iPhone, which included audio clips of the child’s screams.
The sound of the girl’s screams were played in court.
Hence the lawsuit. So, when you now receive lukewarm chicken McNuggets and a box with a warning that the contents are hot and to proceed with caution, even though the McNuggets are NOT hot, you now know why.
Fort Lauderdale, Florida court & jury:
Now we have a second lawsuit against McDonalds: the too hot chicken McNugget. A woman bought a McNugget happy meal at a drive-in. She handed it back to her 4 year old autistic daughter. In a one in 500 billion chance (I'm estimating that's how many chicken McNuggets have been sold since the invention of chicken McNuggets,) the girl drops the chicken McNugget between her leg and the metal part of the seat belt. The heat of the McNugget against the metal and her leg caused second degree burns to the girl's leg. I guess she wasn't able to unhook the seatbelt.
She was screaming. Her mother pulled over to see what was wrong. She saw the burn on the girl’s leg and took photos on her iPhone, which included audio clips of the child’s screams.
The sound of the girl’s screams were played in court.
Hence the lawsuit. So, when you now receive lukewarm chicken McNuggets and a box with a warning that the contents are hot and to proceed with caution, even though the McNuggets are NOT hot, you now know why.
Fort Lauderdale, Florida court & jury:
"FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — McDonald’s and a franchise holder are at fault after a hot Chicken McNugget from a Happy Meal fell on a little girl’s leg and caused second-degree burns, a jury in South Florida has found.
A second jury will determine how much McDonald’s USA and its franchise owner, Upchurch Foods, will pay the child and her mother, NBC Miami reported.
Thursday’s decision was split, with jurors finding the franchise holder liable for negligence and failure to warn customers about the risk of hot food, and McDonald’s USA liable for failing to provide instructions for safe handling of the food. McDonald’s USA was not found to be negligent, and the jury dismissed the argument that the product was defective.
“This was an unfortunate incident, but we respectfully disagree with the verdict,” McDonald’s USA said in a statement. “Our customers should continue to rely on McDonald’s to follow policies and procedures for serving Chicken McNuggets safely.”
The jury heard two days of testimony and arguments about the 2019 episode that left the 4-year-old girl with a burned upper thigh before finding McDonald’s to blame. [. . .]
"Lawyers for McDonald’s noted that the food had to be hot to avoid salmonella poisoning, and that the nuggets were not meant to be pressed between a seat belt and human flesh for more than two minutes.
The girl’s parents sued, saying that McDonald’s and the franchise owner failed to adequately train employees, failed to warn customers about the “dangerous” temperature of the food, and for cooking the food to a much higher temperature than necessary.
While both sides agreed the nugget caused the burns, the family’s lawyers argued the temperature was above 200 degrees, while the defense said it was no more than 160 degrees."