Attorneys for more than 80 people who claim they were sickened by tomatoes served at Sheetz convenience stores in Virginia and other states last year want a bankruptcy judge to O-K a plan to mediate pending lawsuits.
Seattle food-illness attorney Bill Marler asked a federal judge in West Virginia to allow plaintiffs’ attorneys to bargain with those representing Sheetz and Coronet Foods. Coronet is the now-bankrupt company from Wheeling that sold the salmonella-tained tomatoes to Sheetz.
Any settlements of less than 50-thousand dollars would be paid outright; larger settlements would need court approval.
More than 400 people were sickened in nine states — including Virginia — in the outbreak at the Pennsylvania-based chain of convenience stores.
The Centers for Disease Control traced the tainted tomatoes to a Florida packing house which it has not identified.