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Peanut Plant Fined $14.6 Million For Salmonella

Plainview Peanut Corp. fined for unsanitary conditions, product contamination, and operating for almost four years without a food manufacturer's license.

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -- The shuttered Texas plant owned by a peanut company blamed in a national salmonella outbreak that sickened nearly 700 people was fined a record $14.6 million on Thursday.

The state fined Plainview Peanut Corp. LLC over violations that include unsanitary conditions, product contamination, illnesses linked to peanuts from the plant and operating for almost four years without a food manufacturer's license, the Texas Department of State Health Services said.

Spokesman Doug McBride said the fine was the largest ever levied by the department.

"We felt the assessment of the administrative fines needed to be done regardless of financial situations," he said, referring to bankruptcy filings by the plant's owner, Peanut Corp. of America. "If there is a violation, the penalties need to be assessed, period."

The agency said it sent a notice of violation to the Plainview plant on Wednesday.

The plant voluntarily closed Feb. 9 after a private lab sample showed likely salmonella contamination. Texas health officials later ordered a recall of products processed there.

Andy Goldstein, an attorney handling the bankruptcy case for Lynchburg, Virginia-based Peanut Corp., didn't immediately return a phone call seeking comment.

In January, federal investigators identified a Georgia peanut processing plant operated by Peanut Corp. as the source of the salmonella outbreak, believed to be the cause of at least nine deaths.

At the Texas plant, inspectors found that a ventilation system was pulling debris from an infested crawl space into production areas. The plant was ordered by the state to stop producing and distributing food products.

Thousands of possibly contaminated consumer products were recalled in one of the country's largest product recalls.