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-Lurid Crime Tales- |
State Employees Search Amos Miller Farm, Seize Property |
2024-01-06 |
![]() Attempts were made by The Lancaster Patriot to enter the facility during the search, but a Pennsylvania State Trooper said, "we’re conducting a search warrant inside this building right now," and told the reporter to leave the building until the search was completed. The search was conducted by employees of the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, with Pennsylvania State Police offering assistance as needed. A search warrant was issued on Jan. 3, 2024, by Magisterial District Judge B. Denise Commins and included an affidavit of probable cause completed by Sheri Morris, Acting Bureau Director of Food Safety with the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. The affidavit referenced incidents involving Miller’s products dating back to 2016, with the latest including the claim that on Dec. 19, 2023, Morris was informed "by the NY state Department of Health of a confirmed positive case of a foodborne pathogen (STEC — Shiga toxin producing E. Coli) in an underage individual" who had allegedly consumed products from Miller’s private buying club. On Dec. 28, 2023, Morris was allegedly notified about a similar incident in Michigan. In the affidavit, Morris contends that Miller has not filed for applications from the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture "for registration, licensing, or permitting under the pertinent Retail Food Facility Safety Act, Food Safety Act, or Milk Sanitation Laws." A report of seized property provided to Miller after the search was conducted listed 37 items, including sour cream, chocolate milk, ice cream, and eggnog. A notice affixed to a walk-in cooler door stated that the food in the cooler "has been detained by the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture pursuant to Section 5726(a) of the Food Safety Act." The notice states that the food "may be adulterated or misbranded and shall be detained." The notice states that it is "unlawful to remove the food from the premises or to dispose of it without approval of the Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture." Removal or disposal of "a detained or embargoed food article" is a criminal and civil offense. The cooler contains hundreds of items and represents a large portion of Miller’s products. |
Posted by:Besoeker |
#7 I always think...They're from the government, they're here to help...But they never say WHO are they helping. |
Posted by: AlanC 2024-01-06 20:34 |
#6 I am struck by the consequences of the past ten years and the overwhelming and widespread proof of government corruption, malfeasance and selective justice across the nation. I wonder how many of us now presume after an initial look that this is about suppressing the business success of Amish Farmers in Pennsylvania against corporate demokrat donors and patrons rather than government actually doing its job impartially? Whatever the truth is, that was certainly my first inclination. Once trust is destroyed, it is hard to return to it! |
Posted by: NoMoreBS 2024-01-06 14:06 |
#5 The big bad GIVERnment power making an example of a small farmer. These same busy body GIVERnment food agencies allow massive pig, chicken and cow farms to have up to 10% of production infected with germs and stuffed full of antibiotics. This is about power and nothing to do about safety |
Posted by: Airandee 2024-01-06 13:30 |
#4 Trafficking horse dewormer. |
Posted by: M. Murcek 2024-01-06 11:02 |
#3 Unpasteurized Milk? |
Posted by: swksvolFF 2024-01-06 10:48 |
#2 Lucky the EffBeeEye wasn't involved. There might be 30 dead |
Posted by: Frank G 2024-01-06 07:27 |
#1 Slow day for the Department of Agriculture. |
Posted by: Besoeker 2024-01-06 06:22 |