One of the Iowa farms blamed for the egg salmonella outbreak that has sickened more than 1,600 people was rated as a model of cleanliness by its outside auditor, USA Today reports.
The inspection company, AIB international of Manhattan, Kan., audited the Wright County Egg packing plant at least seven times over the past three years and gave it a “superior” rating every time. That revelation came to light Wednesday during a hearing by Congressional subcommittee looking into the salmonella outbreak.
One of those inspections, The New York Times reports, came in June, just as the company was sending out contaminated eggs causing the illnesses.
The same inspection company gave a “superior” rating to a Peanut Corporate of America plant in Georgia that later was tied to a salmonella outbreak leading to the largest food recall in American history, according to the Times.
At the hearing, the chief operating officer of Wright County Egg, Peter DeCoster, said the salmonella probably originated with chicken feed that the farm bought from an outside supplier. However, U.S. Food and Drug Administration officials haven’t come to the same conclusion.
“We’re not ruling anything out and we’re continuing to look,” Joshua Sharfstein, the agency’s principal deputy commissioner, told reporters at the hearing, according to Bloomberg.
Photos of the egg farm shown at the hearing revealed “barns bursting with manure, manure flowing under barn doors, and barns with dead rodents, chickens and flies,” according to the Times.
The Centers for Disease Control has determined that 1,608 illnesses reported since May 1 may be linked to the tainted eggs.



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