
Sunday, July 19, 2026
Last Saturday this column was called Four Outbreaks, No Source, and a System That Would Rather Not Know. This week one of those four finally got a source, a company name, and a recall — and within seventy-two hours the government demonstrated exactly how little that accomplishes when there are no lot codes behind it, no customer list, and no obligation to produce either. A parasite most people still can’t pronounce is now the largest foodborne outbreak in this country in years. Here’s what moved.
The lettuce got a name: Taylor Farms de Mexico. On Thursday the FDA and CDC linked a five-state Cyclosporaoutbreak to shredded iceberg lettuce served at Taco Bell in Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and West Virginia. On Friday FDA named Taylor Farms de Mexico outright, and the company announced it was pulling every iceberg lettuce it sources from central Mexico. Taco Bell, to its credit, had already moved on its own — pulling product in select states before any federal advisory required it, and completing a nationwide removal by Friday. The operator acted before the regulator named the supplier, while the National Restaurant Association said nothing at all.
Then the recall came out, and it went to twenty-seven states, not five. The recall notice covers product distributed June 29 through July 16 across AL, AR, CT, FL, GA, IA, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, MA, MD, MI, MO, MS, NC, NH, NJ, OH, OK, PA, SC, TN, TX, VA and WI — twenty-two states beyond the outbreak advisory. It includes Marketside-brand 12- and 24-ounce iceberg salad and 8- and 16-ounce shredded lettuce sold at Walmart, with best-if-used-by dates running to August 3. Which is difficult to square with the reassurance that grocery store lettuce wasn’t affected. I wrote about the recall Friday, and about FDA reprinting it word for word with no lot codes and no customer names on Saturday. FDA’s brand-name field literally reads “CV, JB, Mark and more.”
And then the part that should stop everyone cold. On Saturday FDA reported that a sample of shredded iceberg lettuce supplied by Taylor Farms de Mexico had tested positive for Cyclospora — collected at the border during targeted import surveillance, as a result of this very investigation. Taylor Farms confirmed the positive product is not part of its current recall. The lot is detained, and the company is still working out whether any of it reached commerce or people’s kitchens. Read that twice. The parasite turned up on product still being shipped into this country, outside a recall the company itself drew, after that same company told the public this traced to one independent farm and represented under one percent of the U.S. iceberg supply. Either the recall is scoped too narrowly or the contamination is broader than one farm. Credit where it’s due for finding it — now tell us where the rest of that lot went.
The counting problem got worse, not better. CDC’s confirmed outbreak number is 1,644 cases in five states with 94 hospitalizations and no deaths. Michigan alone has reported more than 5,000 cases and 102 hospitalizations. Cyclosporiasis has now been reported in thirty-four states this year — more than 6,700 confirmed-or-probable cases against roughly 2,700 in all of 2025. CDC now tells the public it can take as long as six weeks to determine whether a sick person belongs to a Cyclospora outbreak, up from “several weeks” a few days earlier. That isn’t a footnote. That is the whole reason the official number and the real number are living on different planets.
Four more Cyclospora investigations are sitting right next to it with nothing in the product column. The FDA’s outbreak table is now carrying fourteen active investigations, eight of them with no food identified — last week it was thirteen and eight. Four of the eight are separate Cyclospora clusters, with federal counts of 18, 8, 8 and 2 beside blank product columns. A Salmonella Oranienburg cluster climbed from 51 to 69 cases with no food named. A SalmonellaEnteritidis cluster climbed from 80 to 91, same story. An E. coli O157:H7 investigation still sits at fourteen. Here’s the tell: the row for the Taco Bell outbreak itself, reference number 1390, still reads “Not Yet Identified,” because the table hasn’t been updated since Wednesday — four days after FDA named Taylor Farms de Mexico on its own website. When the agency’s tracking document contradicts the agency’s advisory, the problem isn’t a missing rule. It’s that nobody is required to keep the ledger current.
Chilean blueberries, Maryland cheese, and four hospitalized babies. The E. coli O145:H28 outbreak tied to frozen blueberries sold at Publix moved this week — FDA has now initiated sampling. The Listeria monocytogenes outbreak in requesón and soft ricotta has a recall, an inspection and sampling all running, with a death in Maryland and a count that keeps climbing past what the table shows. Salmonella in moringa leaf powder is now the fourth separate moringa investigation in twelve months. And the infant botulism outbreak tied to Nara Organics whole-milk powdered infant formula is still open — four babies, all hospitalized, in California, Pennsylvania and Washington. I represent families in these cases. FDA sent the formula industry a letter on July 13 telling manufacturers to actually know where their ingredients come from. It should not take two botulism outbreaks in two years to get that letter written.
Recalls beyond the lettuce. Fayus Inc., doing business as Yusol International Foods, expanded its recall of OLA-OLA pounded yam over undeclared milk, across two-, four-, five- and ten-pound bags with expirations running to 2029. Canada pulled various brands of meat products over Listeria monocytogenes. PepsiCo recalled Doritos Chilli Heatwave in Ireland and the U.K. for undeclared milk. Phyllis Entis has the full international roundup, as she does every week, more reliably than the agencies whose notices she is reposting.
And the fix that Congress pushed to 2028. FDA had to run border surveillance to find this parasite on a bag of lettuce, and even then the company got to decide whether that bag fell inside or outside its own recall. The Food Traceability Ruleaddresses exactly this — lot-level records, key data elements at every critical tracking event, electronic production within twenty-four hours, leafy greens squarely on the Food Traceability List. It was finalized in November 2022. Compliance was to begin January 20, 2026. FDA moved it thirty months, and last November Congress made the delay binding through July 20, 2028. Walmart didn’t wait — it imposed its own supplier traceability requirements in August 2025 and has been assessing chargebacks since. So the technology exists and retailers can demand it. What’s missing is a legal obligation, and this week is what its absence looks like. I wrote back to Western Growers about that, and then read what everyone else in the industry had to say.
That’s the week — a parasite with a name at last, a recall that stops short of the product that tested positive, and a traceability rule that would answer the only question anyone is asking, sitting on a shelf until 2028. Naming the company was the easy part. Telling seven thousand sick Americans where the lettuce went is the part nobody is required to do. Check back next Saturday.
About Bill Marler
William “Bill” Marler has spent more than thirty years as a food safety lawyer and advocate—work that began with the 1993 Jack in the Box E. coli outbreak and has never really stopped since. In the years that followed, he has represented victims in nearly every major foodborne illness outbreak in the United States. That case, and the movement it launched, is the subject of the book “Poisoned” and the Emmy Award–winning Netflix documentary of the same name. Bill’s work has been profiled in The New Yorker (“A Bug in the System”), the Seattle Times (“30 years after the deadly E. coli outbreak, a Seattle attorney still fights for food safety”), the Washington Post (“He helped make burgers safer. Now he’s fighting food poisoning again”), and many others.
Dozens of times a year, Bill speaks to industry, regulators, and universities across the United States, Canada, Europe, Africa, China, and Australia about a simple idea: outbreaks are preventable. He has testified before Congress on the Food Safety Modernization Act and teaches food safety at institutions including the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. He writes regularly about food litigation and food safety at Marler Blog, and in 2009 he founded Food Safety News, which he continues to publish.










