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from: cnn.com

 

Law

 

McDonald's to pay $8.5 million in trans fat lawsuit

 

California man had sued over company's delays in limiting them

 

Friday, February 11, 2005 Posted: 11:05 PM EST (0405 GMT)

 

SAN FRANCISCO, California (Reuters) -- McDonald's has agreed to pay $8.5

million to settle a lawsuit over artery-clogging trans fats in its cooking

oils, the company said Friday.

 

McDonald's said it will donate $7 million to the American Heart Association

and spend another $1.5 million to inform the public of its trans fat plans.

 

The settlement is the result of litigation from a San Francisco-area

activist who has been seeking to raise public awareness of the health

dangers from the trans fatty acids (TFAs) in hydrogenated or partially

hydrogenated oils.

 

Trans fats are used in thousands of processed food products, often giving

the crunch to French fries, cookies and cereals.

 

They are created in processing vegetable oils and have been found to be as

unhealthy as pure cholesterol. The latest official U.S. nutrition

recommendations suggest limiting their intake.

 

"McDonald's has reached an agreement to further notify our customers about

the status of our ongoing initiative to reduce TFAs in our cooking oil," the

company said in a statement.

 

Stephen Joseph, a lawyer who founded the Web site BanTransFats, sued

McDonald's over complaints the firm did not properly inform the public that

it had encountered delays in plans to lessen the trans fats in its cooking

oils.

 

Joseph said his site would receive $7,500, as would another plaintiff in the

case.

 

"McDonald's has been successful in reducing TFA levels in our Chicken

McNuggets, Crispy Chicken Sandwich and McChicken Sandwich," the fast food

firm said. "McDonald's continues to work hard on our initiative to reduce

TFAs in our cooking oil."

 

British-born Joseph first gained publicity for his cause by suing Kraft

Foods two years ago to highlight the trans fat content of much-beloved Oreo

cookies. The company has since moved to remove trans fats from its snack

foods.

 

"While there is a difference of opinion regarding whether McDonald's gave

effective notice to its customers that the oil was not changed, McDonald's

deserves recognition and credit for having achieved a reduction in the trans

fat levels in its chicken products and for working diligently over the last

two years to test additional cooking oils," Joseph said in a statement.

 

Dunkin' Donuts, a unit of Britain's Allied Domecq Plc, and other companies

have in recent months introduced new products free of trans fats.

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