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Fat isn't McDonald's fault, suit
tossed out
New York - Saying
the law is not intended to protect people from their own excesses, a
federal judge threw out a class-action lawsuit Wednesday that blamed
McDonald's food for obesity, diabetes and other health problems in
children.
U.S. District Judge Robert Sweet said
the plaintiffs failed to show that the fast-food chain's products
''involve a danger that is not within the common knowledge of
consumers.''
The lawsuit was filed against Oak
Brook-based McDonald's last summer and sought unspecified damages.
''If a person knows or should know
that eating copious orders of supersized McDonald's products is
unhealthy and may result in weight gain ... it is not the place of the
law to protect them from their own excesses,'' the judge said.
''Nobody is forced to eat at McDonald's.''
Plaintiffs' attorney Samuel Hirsch
filed other, similar lawsuits last year. In one, a 270-pound city
maintenance worker alleged that eating McDonald's, Wendy's, Burger
King and KFC had caused him health problems. Those suits had been
dropped or put on hold while Sweet considered the lawsuit against
McDonald's.
The lawsuits became a lightning rod
for pundits and editorial writers who jeered that they were the latest
example of a litigious society in which people abdicate personal
responsibility.
''Common sense has prevailed,''
McDonald's spokesman Walt Riker said. ''We said from the beginning
that this was a frivolous lawsuit. Today's ruling confirms that
fact.''
On Wall Street, McDonald's stock rose
2 cents to close at $15.36 Wednesday.
Hirsch said the lawsuit will be
amended and refiled within a month.
Hirsch had argued that the high fat,
sugar and cholesterol content of McDonald's food is a ''toxic kind of
thing'' when eaten regularly by children.
He said that consumers may generally
understand that fast-food burgers and fries are not health food, but
do not realize just how bad such fare can be.
He cited the case of a 13-year-old
New York boy who said he ate at McDonald's three or four times a week
and is now 5-foot-4 and 278 pounds. Other affidavits filed by the
parents of obese children claim they never saw posters or pamphlets
inside McDonald's restaurants describing the nutritional content of
the food.
''They have targeted children,''
Hirsch contended. -- Chicago Sun Times
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