Toronto Star

Quebec bottler pulls controvers­ial drink

Sweetened alcoholic beverage linked to death of 14-year-old Laval girl

- SIDHARTHA BANERJEE AND GIUSEPPE VALIANTE

MONTREAL— Geloso Group is ceasing production of a sweetened alcoholic beverage and pulling the product from store shelves, as calls for tougher regulation­s and controls surroundin­g the drinks ramped up over the weekend.

The Quebec beverage company said in a statement on Sunday that it has ordered employees to stop producing FCKD UP immediatel­y.

The decision comes after the death of 14-year-old Athena Gervais last week in Laval, Que.

Her body was pulled from a stream near her high school. Montreal’s La Presse reported that the teen had been drinking stolen cans of the sweetened alcoholic beverage prior to her death.

Laval police are still awaiting the results of an autopsy to determine the girl’s exact cause of death, which they called accidental.

The statement issued by the Geloso Group made no reference to the death, but co-president Aldo Geloso said the company was taking the necessary steps to stop selling the product.

Geloso said it was a mistake to sell the product, which was designed to counter Four Loko, a drink made by a U.S. competitor that arrived in the market with an alcohol content of 11.9 per cent — the most allowed for a malt product.

Geloso said his company reluctantl­y decided to introduce its own brand to compete with Four Loko, adding the company took care to encourage responsibl­e and legal consumptio­n, noting the target audience for the marketing of the product was the 18-25 age group.

“All this being said, with hindsight, I think it was a mistake to enter this category to compete with Four Loko,” Geloso said. “In fact, the Four Loko category should not even exist.”

In November, Quebec’s alcohol and gaming authority had forced Four Loko’s local bottler to stop manufactur­ing the product because it contained alcohol that did not come from a malt fermentati­on process, but rather from ethanol, mak- ing it ineligible for sale in the province.

Geloso said Four Loko is expected to return to shelves soon, but called on the local manufactur­er not to go ahead with that plan.

“The local manufactur­er — who is preparing to reintroduc­e Four Loko on the market — must, as we have, make the right decision and not go ahead with the production and distributi­on of this product,” Geloso said.

Geloso Group’s announceme­nt followed one by Quebecbase­d convenienc­e store chain Couche-Tard, which on Friday decided voluntaril­y to pull FCKD UP from its shelves due to what it called “recent events.”

Couche-Tard said in the statement that while selling the beverage is legal, the chain pulled it from the shelves out of a desire to act responsibl­y.

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Couche-Tard chose to stop selling the drink despite its legality.
GRAHAM HUGHES/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Couche-Tard chose to stop selling the drink despite its legality.

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