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Meat of Infected Cow Found in More States
News-Journal ^ | 12/28/2003 | AP

Posted on 12/28/2003 9:03:31 AM PST by yonif

WASHINGTON (AP)--Investigators disclosed Sunday that they have found meat cut from a Holstein sick with mad cow disease was sent to four more states and one territory.

Dr. Kenneth Petersen, an Agriculture Department veterinarian, said investigators have now determined that some of the meat from the cow slaughtered Dec. 9 went to Alaska, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana and Guam. Earlier, officials had said most of the meat went to Washington and Oregon, with lesser amounts to California and Nevada, for distribution to consumers.

He stressed, though, that the parts most likely to carry the infection--the brain, spinal cord and lower intestine--were removed before the meat from the infected cow was cut and processed for human consumption.

``The recalled meat represents essentially zero risk to consumers,'' Petersen said.

Although federal officials maintain the food supply is safe, they have recalled as a precaution an estimated 10,000 pounds of meat from the infected cow and from 19 other cows all slaughtered Dec. 9 at Vern's Moses Lake Meat Co., in Moses Lake, Wash.

Petersen, of the department's Food Safety and Inspection Service, said the department still is recovering meat and won't know if all of it has been returned until later this week.

Officials say the slaughtered cow was deboned at Midway Meats in Centralia, Wash., and sent Dec. 12 to two other plants, Willamette Valley Meat and Interstate Meat, both near Portland, Ore.

Petersen has said that much of the meat is being held by those facilities.

Petersen said Willamette also received beef trimmings--parts used in meats such as hamburger. He said those trimmings were sold to some three dozen small, Asian and Mexican facilities in Washington, Oregon, California and Nevada.

In response, representatives from supermarket chains in the West _ Albertsons, Fred Meyer, Safeway and WinCo Foods have voluntarily removed ground beef products from the affected distributors. Safeway has said it will look for another supplier.

Mad cow disease, known as bovine spongiform encephalopathy, is a concern because humans who eat brain or spinal matter from an infected cow can develop variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. In Britain, 143 people died of it after an outbreak of mad cow in the 1980s.

Despite assurances that meat is safe, Japan, the top importer of American beef, and more than two dozen countries have blocked U.S. beef imports. Jordan joined the list on Sunday. U.S. beef industry officials estimated this week that they've lost 90 percent of their export market. Ranchers export 10 percent of the beef they produce.

U.S. agriculture officials arrived Sunday in Japan to discuss maintaining beef trade even as the United States investigates how the Holstein in Washington state got mad cow disease.

Dr. Ron DeHaven, the department's chief veterinarian, said on Saturday that investigators have tentatively traced the first U.S. cow with mad cow disease to Canada. This could help determine the scope of the outbreak and might even limit the economic damage to the American beef industry.

The tentative conclusion traced the diseased cow to the province of Alberta, where Canada had found another case of mad cow infection last May.

However, DeHaven re-emphasized Sunday that investigators aren't certain of that because U.S. records outlining the animal's history do not match ones in Canada. Canadian officials had complained it was premature to reach any firm conclusion.

DeHaven said Sunday that DNA tests were being arranged to help resolve the matter.

Canadian papers show the cow had two calves before it was exported to the United States, contrary to U.S. documents which classified the animal as a heifer when it arrived, meaning it had never born calves.

Also, according to Canadian documents, the diseased cow was 6 1/2-years-old--older than U.S. officials had thought. U.S. records say the cow was 4- or 4 1/2-years-old.

Officials are concerned about the cow's age because it may have been born before the United States and Canada in 1997 banned certain feed that is considered the most likely source of infection.

A cow gets infected by eating feed containing tissue from the spine or brain of an infected animal. Farmers used to feed their animals such meal to fatten them.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Culture/Society; Extended News
KEYWORDS: beef; cows; farms; health; infection; madcow; meat
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To: Battle Axe
At that point I would call her a cow because she would be fully grown at that point and look like a mature adult

And that's why there is something wrong with this whole Canada cow story.

Canadian papers show the cow had two calves before it was exported to the United States, contrary to U.S. documents which classified the animal as a heifer when it arrived , meaning it had never borne calves.

Anyone in the cattle business would recognize a , as you called her, "first calf heifer." Canadian papers show she had 2 calves and if she was a milking cow, especially a Holstein, no way could she be classified as a heifer. You'd have to be blind .

The American version says she was 4 1/2 years old. She could have had the three calves we know about but if she was a heifer in 2000, she was born in '99 . Or almost, two years after the ban went into effect.

If she was born in mid 97, the year the ban was put in place , she , like all other calves , could not digest solids till her paunch developed and as a dairy heifer she was likely put on milk replacer , not whole milk . With the ban in place in '97 the question is , are there animal by-products in milk replacer ? Animal fat , not milk fat. And how did she get it if it was banned? Milk replacer is a specialty feed, you just can't mix it up like other feeds. And even then is it the same animal , because no one would label her as a heifer after she had 2 calves.

I'd like to know how many cows were being milked on this farm. Years ago, between high school and college I worked on a farm that milked 80 cows year round . Plus fed the dry ones. The owner knew were every one came from , her health history , her blood tests, her blood lines. By sight and memory! Did this farm not have any record books of AI breeding ? Anything?

141 posted on 12/28/2003 6:23:39 PM PST by Snowyman
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To: sciencediet
re: the website you posted...The fifth recipe from the bottom does sound pretty "offal" :).

Actually though, when I was a kid, we ate what was put in front of us & I learned to relish boiled tongue sandwiches, cabeza tacos (headmeat), menudo (tripe), good ol' liver & onions, & fried or baked, stuffed heart. Never cared for kidneys or brains, but my husband liked those. Then there's "Rocky Mountain Oysters" (which are highly overpriced - taste like giant gizzards to me). Hubby & I used to joke about opening a restaurant called "Entrails" for offal-lovers like us.
142 posted on 12/28/2003 6:31:30 PM PST by ironmaidenPR2717 (Whenever I feel blue, I start breathing again.)
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To: pickemuphere
Yes; or, you might stick with grass-fed cattle. You know, grass, that stuff that cows are actually designed to eat? This problem started when "corporate" farms started feeding cows other cows, sheep offal, ground chicken, etc.
When I said organic, I was thinking along the lines of free-range. Thanks for the answer. ;-)
143 posted on 12/28/2003 6:34:28 PM PST by HungarianGypsy
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Comment #144 Removed by Moderator

To: ikka
Speaking as a beef eater it is my understanding the animal only has to walk onto the trailer taking it to the slaughterhouse it does not have to be able to walk off.

I imagine if we knew the half of it we'd all become vegetarians until we heard the story I did this weekend about the fellow recently witnessed picking blueberries for a commercial grower, and getting paid by the pint, who was so devoted he was picking with one hand and pissing with the other.

So if we knew all there was to know about fruit/vegetable harvests we'd all become meat eaters.

;-)
145 posted on 12/28/2003 7:10:42 PM PST by festus
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To: Battle Axe
There are over 7000 stories about Mad Cow disease on Google News links . I give up trying to find that story on the still births.

This cow had to be a good producer of milk for them to breed her with the data they have for review as you stated...

146 posted on 12/28/2003 7:12:30 PM PST by tubebender (Don't believe anything you hear and only half of what you see...)
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To: Battle Axe
I hadn't heard that there were 4000. Even so , as you indicate , records are kept . The largest I ever visited was 1500 and I was not impressed . Big is not always better.

btw , I beat you by a year (81). Paying 24-26% interest rates were not fun , not when you're were trying to make a profit . Except ,if you happen to be a banker. :)
147 posted on 12/28/2003 7:16:12 PM PST by Snowyman
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To: tubebender
If she was sick she would never have been allowed to calve...

I don't think they knew. It can take years to develop symptoms of mad cow, apparently. And the only way to diagnose it is through autopsy.

148 posted on 12/28/2003 7:39:40 PM PST by Yaelle
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To: pickemuphere
Yes; or, you might stick with grass-fed cattle.

I just purchased some online. I wonder how it will taste. I have been curious about grass-fed beef for a long time.

149 posted on 12/28/2003 7:41:08 PM PST by Yaelle
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To: yonif
It's strange that Canadian officials are now claiming that it is premature to claim that the cow came from Alberta because I first heard the claim on BBC, before the US announcement. The BBC newsreader stated that the cow came from Calgary and that the entire herd in question came from Calgary in 2001. Now, the Candians have changed their minds?
150 posted on 12/28/2003 7:49:05 PM PST by Eva
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To: Rodney King
"Look, there are 60 million people in England, and 20 have died from a disease that nobody has proven has any link to Mad-Cow over the last 20 years. To suggest that this is a big crisis is ridiculous. I ate a steak today, and I'll eat one tomorrow."

Maybe that's what's wrong with you ... mad cow disease is eating away at you.

As for me, I'll avoid beef for now as the recall gets larger and in more states.

151 posted on 12/28/2003 8:01:29 PM PST by nmh
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To: Battle Axe
This post refers to the male calf as being the latest one and was sold to another farm in Washington...http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1047641/posts
152 posted on 12/28/2003 8:29:59 PM PST by tubebender (Don't believe anything you hear and only half of what you see...)
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To: spectre
I'm not touching a hot dog, or potted meat, or spam..

Spam should be OK. It's made of pork, not beef.

153 posted on 12/28/2003 10:02:38 PM PST by Denver Ditdat
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To: yonif
Man o man, that cow got around didn't it.
154 posted on 12/28/2003 10:05:20 PM PST by MissAmericanPie
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To: Battle Axe
The farm in Canada that originaly owned the cow still has one of her calves. I believe that DNA testing is already being done.
If DNA testing proves that the cow came from the farm in Alberta the existing herd will be slaughtered and tested for the disease
155 posted on 12/28/2003 10:33:01 PM PST by Tokara
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To: yonif
`The recalled meat represents essentially zero risk to consumers,'' Petersen said.

Famous last words..They are counting on a long incubation period

Buy chicken futures

156 posted on 12/28/2003 10:43:18 PM PST by RnMomof7
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To: yonif
Investigators disclosed Sunday that they have found meat cut from a Holstein sick with mad cow disease was sent to four more states and one territory.


"Where's the beef?"

157 posted on 12/29/2003 2:54:23 AM PST by putupon (-; Hey ArbustoBustezas, those rose colored glasses ain't what's making Jorge look Pinko! ;-)
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To: Gelato
Free Trade = Nafta
158 posted on 12/29/2003 5:48:15 AM PST by fatso
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To: Dallas59
Exactly. That's a pretty cavalier statement.
159 posted on 12/29/2003 5:58:39 AM PST by sarasota
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To: Denver Ditdat
Wasn't it Spam they found in the whole with SH? Wonder if he knew it was made with pork!
160 posted on 12/29/2003 6:43:59 AM PST by hoosiermama (Prayers for all!)
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