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The Washington Times Online Edition

FDA eyes intentional poisoning

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Imported ingredients used in recalled pet food may have been spiked intentionally with an industrial chemical to boost their apparent protein content, federal officials said yesterday.

That is one theory the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is pursuing as it investigates how the chemical, melamine, contaminated at least two ingredients used to make more than 100 brands of dog and cat foods.

So far, melamine has been found in both wheat gluten and rice protein concentrate imported from China. News reports from South Africa suggest a third pet food ingredient, corn gluten, used in that country also was contaminated with melamine. That tainted ingredient has not been found in the United States, the FDA said.

FDA investigators, meanwhile, are awaiting visas that would allow them to visit the Chinese plants where the vegetable protein ingredients were produced.

“Melamine was found in all three of those — it would certainly lend credibility to the theory that it may be intentional. That will be one of the theories we will pursue when we get into the plants in China,” Stephen Sundlof, the FDA’s chief veterinarian, told reporters.

Chinese authorities have told the FDA that the wheat gluten was an industrial product not meant for pet food, Dr. Sundlof said. Still, melamine can skew test results to make a product appear more protein-rich than it really is, he added. That raises suspicions that the contamination was deliberate.

“What we expect to do with our inspections in China will answer some of those questions,” said Michael Rogers, director of the division of field investigations within the FDA’s office of regulatory affairs.

Wilbur-Ellis Co., the U.S. importer of the tainted rice protein, said yesterday it was recalling all the ingredients it had distributed to five U.S. pet-food manufacturers. The San Francisco company urged its customers to recall any products that might be on store shelves.

So far, just two of those companies have done so: Natural Balance Pet Foods and Blue Buffalo Co.

Natural Balance, of Pacoima, Calif., announced a limited recall Monday of its Venison and Brown Rice canned and bagged dog foods, Venison and Brown Rice dog treats and Venison and Green Pea dry cat food.

Blue Buffalo, of Wilton, Conn., followed yesterday by recalling 5,044 bags of its Spa Select Kitten dry food. The company intercepted most of the kitten food before it reached distribution centers, company co-founder Billy Bishop said.

FDA officials would not release the names of the other two manufacturers that Wilbur-Ellis supplied, citing its ongoing investigation.

The FDA and Agriculture Department also were investigating whether some pet food made by one of the five companies supplied by Wilbur-Ellis was diverted for use as hog feed after it was found unsuitable for pet consumption.

“We understand it did make it into some hog feed, and we are following up on that as well,” Dr. Sundlof said.

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