The Sun (Malaysia)

Woman charged over strawberry sabotage

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SYDNEY: An Australian court yesterday ordered a farm supervisor charged in a strawberry needle contaminat­ion case that sparked a major food scare to stay in custody until she next appears in court.

The strawberry industry was rocked in September following nearly 200 complaints of sewing needles found in strawberri­es and other fruits.

Several major supermarke­ts withdrew the fruit as shoppers abandoned purchases, forcing some growers to dump fruit amid warnings of widespread bankruptci­es.

Police said they had charged the woman, identified as 50 year-old My Ut Trinh in court lists, with seven cases of contaminat­ion, the first charges laid in the case.

“This has probably been one of the most trying investigat­ions that I’ve been part of,” Jon Wacker, a police official in the largest strawberry producing region of Queensland where the crisis was first reported, said.

Police said the woman was a former supervisor at a berry farm of one of the brands affected, but did not say which one.

Prosecutor Cheryl Tesch opposed bail, citing concerns of witness interferen­ce and public retributio­n, broadcaste­r ABC said.

Trinh’s legal representa­tive withdrew a bail applicatio­n, the Brisbane magistrate­s’ court told Reuters.

She is to remain in custody ahead of her next appearance on Nov 22.

She faces jail for up to 10 years if found guilty after the government toughened sentencing in a bid to contain the crisis. Australia also criminalis­ed hoax claims. Wacker said police received 186 complaints of fruit contaminat­ion, 15 of which proved to be hoaxes. – Reuters

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