McDonald’s Sued by Consumers in Proposed Class Action Over E.coli Outbreak
Amanda McCray of Chicago and William Michael Kraft of Davie, Florida, said they experienced many symptoms associated with E.coli infection after buying Quarter Pounders this month.
Both said they would not have bought their burgers had McDonald’s disclosed the risk of contamination, and have suffered damages because of McDonald’s actions.
Related: McDonald’s Sued by Colorado Man Sickened in E. Coli Outbreak
The lawsuit filed in Chicago federal court seeks unspecified damages, but exceeding $5 million, for all people in the United States who bought Quarter Pounders contaminated with E.coli.
McDonald’s did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The chain also faces other lawsuits by individuals who said they were also sickened.
Last week, McDonald’s halted Quarter Pounder sales in one-fifth of its 14,000 U.S. restaurants after an outbreak that killed at least one person and sickened 75 people.
Related: McDonald’s Is Racing to Contain Fallout From E. Coli Outbreak
The Chicago-based company began restoringQuarter Pounders to its menus this week.
After McDonald’s reported quarterly results on Tuesday, Chief Executive Chris Kempczinski apologized to customers for the outbreak. He said on a conference call that the situation appeared contained, and that he was “confident in the safety of eating at McDonald’s.”
The case is McCray et al v McDonald’s USA LLC, U.S. District Court, Northern District of Illinois, No. 24-11102.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Chris Reese and Nick Zieminski)
- La Niña Could Soon Arrive. What That Means for Winter Weather
- Allianz: 14% Increase in Large Cyber Claims, Driven by Data Breaches and Privacy Violations
- Claims from Hurricane Milton Continue to Rise in Florida — 221K and Counting
- McDonald’s Is Racing to Contain Fallout From E. Coli Outbreak
- The Data Behind Rising Homeowners Premiums: by Peril and by State
- Former UPS Driver Wins $238 Million Verdict in Suit Over Firing
- AccuWeather Increases Total Damage and Economic Loss Estimate From Helene to Between $225B-$250B
- Court Orders Start to Expose ‘Startling’ Data on Litigation Funding Sources