USA TODAY US Edition

Pam cans exploded, lawsuits say

Several people hurt in cooking spray accidents.

- Zlati Meyer

Eight people are suing Conagra, the maker of Pam and other cooking sprays, because they say the cans exploded and severely burned and disfigured them.

The half a dozen lawsuits, filed in Cook County Circuit Court in Chicago on Tuesday morning, allege that Conagra designed and produced cooking-spray cans that were defective, especially when close to kitchen heat sources such as stoves and grills where this food product tends to be used.

Conagra failed to warn consumers of the danger, the court filings charge.

“When Pam is used correctly, as instructed, it is a 100% safe and effective product,” the Chicago-based company said in a statement.

Conagra added that the can design in question is no longer in production. The plaintiffs are:

❚ Maria Mariano, whose canister of Wellsley Farms Cooking Spray on a counter near the stove in her Staten Island, New York, home, exploded as she

was boiling water on April 5.

❚ Raveen Suganthara­j, who was burned by an exploding can of Pam Cooking Spray in his Indianapol­is home on March 6.

❚ Paytene Pivonka and Jacob Dalton, whose Pam Cooking Spray on a wall shelf above the stove where they were cooking in their Provo, Utah, home exploded and burned them on Nov. 6.

❚ Andrea Bearden and Brandon Banks, who were burned in their Mount Carmel, Illinois, home, on May 19 when the can of Pam on a counter beside their stove exploded.

❚ Reveriano Duran, a cook at of the Berryhill Baja Grill in Houston, who on July 16, 2017, moved a canister of Sysco Cooking Spray from the left side of a shelf near the grill top to the right side and then was burned when it exploded.

❚ Y’Tesia Taylor, who was burned and blinded in one eye on July 15, 2017, when a canister of Pam Cooking Spray, with which she’d just used to spray a baking dish and placed on a rolling wooden utility cart next to the stove where she was cooking, exploded as she finished putting the dish in the oven in her Greenville, Texas, home.

Conagra said that all Pam Cooking Sprays include clear instructio­ns on both the front and back of the packaging that it should be used responsibl­y due to its flammabili­ty and that it shouldn’t be left on a stove or near a heat source, sprayed near an open flame or stored above 120°F.”

 ?? AMY SANCETTA/AP ??
AMY SANCETTA/AP
 ?? AMY SANCETTA/AP ?? Conagra says Pam spray shouldn’t be left on a stove or near a heat source, sprayed near an open flame or stored above 120°F.
AMY SANCETTA/AP Conagra says Pam spray shouldn’t be left on a stove or near a heat source, sprayed near an open flame or stored above 120°F.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States