Call & Times

Man who put razor blades in pizza dough sentenced to prison

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PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — A man accused of putting razor blades and screws in pizza dough at supermarke­ts in Maine and New Hampshire was sentenced Thursday to four years and nine months in federal prison.

The sentencing of Nicholas Mitchell, 39, of Dover, New Hampshire, followed an agreement with prosecutor­s in which he pleaded guilty in June to one of two counts of tampering with a consumer product. He also must pay nearly $230,000 in restitutio­n to Hannaford Supermarke­ts.

The hearing proceeded even though Mitchell was recovering from a recent bout of COVID-19 contracted in jail.

Although no one was injured, the crime was dangerous and spread fear in the community, the judge said.

Mitchell tearfully apologized for his actions. He said he did it to get back at the pizza dough company that fired him, not to hurt anybody.

Surveillan­ce video from last year showed him handling pizza dough and loitering around a refrigerat­ed case before exiting the store without buying anything.

Mitchell was arrested in October 2020 after razor blades were found in dough sold at a Hannaford store in Saco, Maine.

Three customers had bought tainted products in Saco and discovered blades hidden inside, prosecutor­s said. Product tampering also occurred at Hannaford stores in Sanford, Maine, and Dover, New Hampshire, prompting investigat­ions by police department­s in those communitie­s, as well.

Mitchell was a former employee of It’ll Be Pizza. The Scarboroug­h, Maine, company makes several brands of dough, including the Portland Pie Co. dough that was allegedly tampered with.

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