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Pilgrim's Pride CEO Dies

Poultry producer's chief executive O.B. Goolsby Jr. died Monday after suffering an apparent stroke; no timetable has been set for naming a replacement.

DALLAS (AP) — The chief executive of poultry producer Pilgrim's Pride Corp. died Monday, two days after suffering a massive stroke.
 
The company said O.B. Goolsby Jr., 60, was stricken Saturday while on a hunting trip with customers in South Texas. He was airlifted to a San Antonio hospital.
 
Pilgrim's Pride, the nation's largest chicken producer, said a special committee of its board would begin the selection process for a new president and CEO. It said no timetable has been set for naming a replacement.
 
A spokesman for the Pittsburg, Texas-based company said before Goolsby's death that senior executives had taken steps to ensure the business continues without interruption. No interim CEO had been appointed.
 
''Our company has lost a gracious, talented leader who served as an inspiration to everyone around him, and we are deeply saddened by his death,'' company co-founder and Senior Chairman Lonnie ''Bo'' Pilgrim said in a statement.
 
Pilgrim said Goolsby had guided Pilgrim's Pride through a period of growth with honesty and humor.
 
Last year, Pilgrim's Pride launched a hostile $1.1 billion takeover of rival Gold Kist Inc. The move succeeded after Pilgrim's Pride sweetened its initial offer, and the deal vaulted the Texas company to the top of the chicken-producing industry. Pilgrim's Pride said the acquisition helped it compete better in the United States and overseas.
 
Goolsby had served as president and CEO since September 2004. He joined the company in 1969 at its distribution center in Mount Pleasant and moved into plant sales after a year. He held a succession of management jobs, including two years as president and chief operating officer before being named CEO.
 
Goolsby is survived by his wife, Barbara, three children and 11 grandchildren.
 
Pilgrim's Pride has about 55,000 employees and operates 38 poultry processing and 12 prepared-foods facilities mostly across the South and in Mexico and Puerto Rico. The company sells chicken to retailers, foodservice distributors and restaurants.
 
Shares fell 56 cents, or 2 percent, to $27.02 in afternoon trading.