Would You like a feature Interview?
All Interviews are 100% FREE of Charge
Police are investigating after a local retailer claims employees at a Kentucky Dairy Queen were fed ice cream contaminated with cleaning fluid. WKYT report.
Angela Patton told the outlet that her 17-year-old daughter was among the employees involved in the incident at the Dairy Queen in Campton, Kentucky.
“They were told by the manager that whether they like chocolate ice cream or not, they should taste it today,” Patton told WKYT.
Patton told the show that the approximately eight employees involved, many of whom were minors, were served contaminated ice cream as punishment after managers failed to properly clean the ice cream machine. He said he told the group.
She said some of them felt a burning sensation while eating ice cream and sought medical treatment, but Business Insider could not confirm her claims.
Representatives from Dairy Queen and the Wolfe County Sheriff’s Office, the local authority investigating the case, did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Business Insider outside of normal business hours. .
Wolfe County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Elijah Banks told WKYT that he could not share much about the ongoing investigation because of the involvement of juveniles. But he said Wolf County officials are in contact with the county attorney to determine next steps.
No charges have been filed yet.
Contaminated sweets and sushi terrorism
In New York, a woman was recently denied a retrial after being sentenced to 23 years in prison. poisoning and murder Her boss had gout medicine.
Incidents of product tampering can also lead to serious charges. In a 2019 case, a mother who forced her young daughter to lick a tongue depressor had her tongue depressor replaced at her clinic, resulting in a felony charge that was later reduced to her sentence. Misdemeanor. The woman was inspired to record a video of the incident because of the online trend of licking consumer products and putting them back together for unsuspecting buyers to take home.
This trend has continued for nearly 10 years. Ariana Grande became famous in 2015 when she was caught on camera licking a donut, which was then sold to an unsuspecting customer, for which she faced intense backlash. Since then, its popularity has grown rapidly.
However, this filthy habit has continued in recent years, with videos of pranksters licking cooking utensils and soy sauce bottles, and smearing saliva on conveyor belts going viral in Japan, resulting in so-called “sushi terrorism” and numerous incidents. There were people arrested.