San Diego Union-Tribune

$4.3M PAID OUT IN FAIR-RELATED E. COLI SUIT

Several children were sickened, one died in 2019 after Del Mar visit

- BY PAUL SISSON

Court records indicate that the state board that runs the Del Mar Fairground­s will pay at least $4 million to settle a lawsuit brought by families affected by the 2019 E. coli outbreak that killed one child and caused severe illness in several others.

In March, Superior Court Judge Keri Katz approved settlement­s with families whose young children became ill after visiting the San Diego County Fair, testing positive for shiga-toxin-producing E. coli infections.

A total of $1.3 million in settlement­s are listed in court documents, including $1 million to Cristiano Lopez — then a 2-yearold — who was diagnosed with a deadly condition called hemolytic uremic syndrome that put him in the hospital for 12 days while he underwent dialysis.

Lopez, and all the others listed in settlement documents, survived. However, Jedidiah Cabezuela, also two years old at the time of the outbreak, died after experienci­ng the same kidneywast­ing complicati­on that Lopez did.

Court documents list no specific settlement with the Cabezuela family, though his mother’s name is included in the lawsuit’s title.

John Gomez, whose firm jointly represente­d the families with another group in Texas, said in an email that the Cabezuelas received $3 million. The payment was not included in legal filings because settlement­s with adults do not require court approval.

Gomez said he had no additional comment on the settlement­s, which, according to court documents, will be paid out over several years, at least in cases where minors are involved.

Neither he nor representa­tives of the 22nd District Agricultur­al Associatio­n responded when asked whether these settlement­s,

which together total about $4.3 million, were all payments made in relation to E. coli lawsuits connected to the 2019 fair.

Bill Marler, a Seattle attorney with decades of experience in food safety law who has represente­d dozens of families with loved ones sickened by E. coli infections, said the settlement­s generally seemed reasonable based on an expected judgment of between $3 million and $5 million at trial for the Cabezuela case alone.

He said judgments can be much higher in situations where a person survives but becomes irreparabl­y injured. One recent case, he said, involved a young person who suffered a debilitati­ng stroke after infection who will forever struggle with severe impairment­s.

“He can no longer walk, talk or feed himself but will likely have a 40- to 50-year life expectancy where he’s going to need round-the-clock care,” Marler said.

The 2022 fair starts Wednesday, and it is the first time since 2019 that the event will operate at full capacity after a very limited engagement in 2021 and pandemic cancellati­on in 2020.

Animal-related events remain on the docket this year, including daily pig races, cow and goat milking demonstrat­ions, a horse show and the traditiona­l Junior Livestock Show & Auction. According to a 35page guide posted on the fair’s website, the auction runs from June 18 through June 26. Daily pen cleaning and immediate removal of sick animals are specifical­ly called out in the guide, though common infection control measures, such as regular hand-washing, are not.

No petting zoo or pony rides are listed in the fair’s online calendar this year, though it was not clear if the list was comprehens­ive. Those two locations were heavily scrutinize­d in 2019 after E. coli infections began to appear, though testing of animals in the fair’s petting zoo and pony rides came back negative. Testing of livestock was much less comprehens­ive because most animals had already left the event by the time it became clear that an outbreak was under way.

Walls and pens used by livestock were swabbed and tested, with none of 32 environmen­tal samples confirming the presence of the particular type of E. coli present in those who became ill.

Marler, the Seattle attorney specializi­ng in food safety, said that eliminatin­g petting zoos is common after lawyers with organizati­ons come to understand potential risks and the court settlement­s they may cause.

Cattle are the main known reservoir of the type of E. coli that caused the 2019 outbreak, according to an exhaustive analysis from the University of Wisconsin Madison. The virus generally appears in a cow’s droppings, which can easily end up mixed with dirt, mud and even dust that is part of or close to animal living quarters.

Marler said families would do well to keep this in mind when entering livestock barns where cattle and other types of animals are housed, making sure to keep all food consumptio­n separate. Given that it only takes a microscopi­c amount of bacteria to cause a deadly infection, and the fact that some outbreaks have been linked to bacteria carried in dust that can blow around in a breeze, it just does not make sense to be eating while passing through these spaces.

“Eat your cotton candy, eat your ice cream cone, your hamburger, everything, outside,” Marler said. “That way, you’re not mixing potential contaminat­ion with the main path that a pathogen takes to get into your body.”

Kids of all ages, but especially the young ones, he added, should be kept from touching animals and from putting their hands in their mouths while inside livestock barns and should have their hands washed after exiting. Parents should also, he added, remember that the ground they are pushing their strollers across could have trace amounts of bacteria-carrying material present, so they should put away items such as pacifiers and bottles when in these areas.

And some habits that generally cause zero consequenc­es should be set aside in places where animals live.

“When your kid drops his binky on the ground, the first one, you might sanitize it, but if it’s your third kid, you might just wipe it on your jeans and give it back to them,” Marler said. “There are reasonable precaution­s that parents should take in order to protect their kids.”

 ?? U-T FILE ?? County health officials Dr. Eric McDonald and Dr. Wilma Wooten talk at a news conference in June 2019 about the E. coli outbreak at the Del Mar fair.
U-T FILE County health officials Dr. Eric McDonald and Dr. Wilma Wooten talk at a news conference in June 2019 about the E. coli outbreak at the Del Mar fair.

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