Daily Press (Sunday)

Arkansas sues Family Dollar over rodents in facility

- By Andrew DeMillo

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Arkansas is suing Family Dollar over the discovery of more than 1,000 rodents in a distributi­on facility in the state that prompted the discount retail chain to recall items purchased from hundreds of stores in the South.

The lawsuit, filed Thursday by Attorney General Leslie Rutledge in state court, accuses the chain and parent company Dollar Tree — headquarte­red in Chesapeake — of deceiving consumers, negligence and engaging in a conspiracy that allowed the infestatio­n at the West Memphis facility to occur.

“This misconduct by Family Dollar Stores and Dollar Tree allowed them to maximize profits, while causing Arkansas citizens to purchase hazardous, adulterate­d and contaminat­ed products,” the lawsuit said.

The U.S. Food and Drug

Administra­tion announced in February it had inspected the distributi­on facility following a consumer complaint. Inside the building, inspectors said they found live rodents, dead rodents in “various states of decay,” rodent feces, dead birds and bird droppings.

A Dollar Tree spokesman did not immediatel­y return messages seeking comment.

After fumigating the facility, more than 1,100 dead rodents were recovered, officials said. Family Dollar issued a temporary recall and closed 404 stores in six states — Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississipp­i, Missouri and Tennessee — so numerous products that had been at the facility could be removed from shelves. Family Dollar in February said it was not aware of any illnesses related to the recall.

The products included human foods, animal foods, cosmetics, medical devices and over-the-counter medication­s. The infestatio­n has also prompted private lawsuits in several other states.

Rutledge showed reporters video a former employee posted on social media of rats inside the facility. In one video, the former worker is trying to feed a potato chip to a large rat sitting on a stack of boxes.

According to the lawsuit, state and federal inspection­s show Family Dollar had known of the rodent infestatio­n at its facility since at least January 2020.

Arkansas’ lawsuit seeks up to $10,000 for each product that was distribute­d over the past two years by the facility to Arkansas consumers that was affected by the infestatio­n, under the state’s deceptive trade practices act. Rutledge is also seeking punitive damages and restitutio­n for Arkansas consumers affected by the contaminat­ion. In her lawsuit, Rutledge also asks a state judge to suspend or revoke Family Dollar’s authorizat­ion to do business in the state.

“We don’t want to wipe out a source of groceries and medicines, but if those groceries and medicines are not safe then we need someone else providing that service,” Rutledge said.

 ?? STACI R. VANDAGRIFF/AP ?? Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge.
STACI R. VANDAGRIFF/AP Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge.

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