Posted on 03/25/2005 7:19:58 PM PST by crushelits
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Sales have dropped sharply at Wendy's fast food restaurants in the area of northern California where a woman claimed she found part of a finger in a bowl of chili, but analysts say the company's long-term prognosis should not be affected. Peter Oakes, a restaurant analyst with Piper Jaffray & Co. in New York, said he doesn't expect Wendy's business to suffer long term from the discovery Tuesday night of a partial finger.
The hamburger chain serves about 6 million meals a day across the country and has a "national reputation for both quality and cleanliness," he said.
"To me the yard stick here is whether the single incident prompts the consumer to lose confidence in the brand. It's understandable to see some kind of knee-jerk reaction," Oakes said.
Franchise owners have informed the company's corporate headquarters in the Columbus suburb of Dublin that business is down, said Denny Lynch, spokesman for Wendy's International Inc. He said he could not release specific sales figures because Wendy's does not own those restaurants.
"It is an isolated incident. However, it is dramatically affecting sales in that market," Lynch said.
Authorities in San Jose, Calif., planned to search a fingerprint database on Friday to try to identify the finger's owner.
Capt. Bob Dixon of the Santa Clara County coroner's office said he did not know when their fingerprint expert might have a match. "Nobody's claimed it yet," he said.
U.S. financial markets were closed Friday for the holiday weekend. The day before, on Thursday, Wendy's shares rose 43 cents, or 1.1 percent, to close at $39.43 on the New York Stock Exchange (news - web sites) near the high end of their 52-week trading range of $31.74 to $42.12.
Wendy's said the finger did not come from the restaurant's employees. It is also confident company suppliers are not to blame because of product coding that allows the company to trace where a product comes from, the day it was produced, when it was shipped and when it arrived at the restaurant, Lynch said.
However, he acknowledged the process was "not absolutely 100 percent perfect."
Matt Baun, a spokesman for the U.S. Department of Agriculture (news - web sites)'s Food Safety and Inspection Service, said it was doubtful a person working at a federal beef producer would have lost the finger in an accident.
"The production line would have stopped, there would have been immediate need for medical attention and the meat products would be destroyed and not used for food," he said.
A Louisville, Ky., lawyer who has handled similar cases said he doesn't expect Wendy's image to take much of a hit.
Bo Bolus, who has represented plaintiffs over foreign objects found in McDonald's food and defended insurance companies against those claims, said consumers tend to realize that incidents like the one at Wendy's are accidents.
"I haven't found any big institutional problems in the fast-food chains," Bolus said. "I still go to McDonald's with my four boys." |
At least it wasn't a big toe with hair on it . Then I would of really been grossed out.
ok....ok.....I know........Wendy's gave someone the finger.
I think Wendy's is really going to knuckle down on quality control now.
On second thought it looks like molars were gnawing on some gristle.
Yummy.
Gross! At lunch today I noticed Wendy's and my first thought was of the finger.
I had Wendy's chilli for lunch on Monday. I hope it wasn't chilli con phalange. I'm not planning on eating there again.
It makes me seriously double think the supply chain for all of these fast food restaurants. They can't find who lost the finger.
This little piggy went to market, this little piggy went missing.......
But he turned up in palm springs.
You have a lack of imagination. It could have been a Mexican pee-pee!
You are now allowed to resume your diet:):)
Eeee-yoo! You might be right. This article said she chewed on the finger:
"The Associated Press
Mar. 24, 2005 - A woman bit into a partial finger served in a bowl of chili at a Wendy's restaurant, leading authorities to a fingerprint database Thursday to determine who lost the digit. The incident occurred Tuesday night at a San Jose Wendy's restaurant and left the customer ill and distraught, said Joy Alexiou, a spokeswoman for the Santa Clara County Health Department.
"She was so emotionally upset once she found out what it was," Alexiou said. "She was vomiting.
(snip)
Health officials said the fingertip was approximately 1 1/2 inches long. They believe it belongs to a woman because of the long, manicured nail."
You're ~ 3000 miles away from that restaurant.
I ate there today.
Either you're way too squemish, or I'm not squemish enough...
It just grosses me out. I just can't shake the idea of the finger.
I live near that Wendy's, and I don't think I could ever bring myself to eat something from there. I think I would think of the finger in the food.
I'll stick to Yiassoo which is just down the road. It's fast (and very good) Greek food. Locally run, and I don't think you'll ever find a finger in the food.
Fair enough.
I figured they would be REALLY careful about what they served today.
(And I didn't have the chili - I don't like chili woth bell pepper in it).
Yiassoo just isn't the same since George and Roula moved to Tahoe.
Are they the original owners?
I take it you've been to Yiassoo also.
I used to go there a lot when I was first married (we lived near there).
Then we moved and had babies, and we didn't go for years. When we went back it wasn't as good as it was when we first went there, but it is still so much better than other fast food restaurants.
Although Yiassoo IS still very good...
BWDIK?
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