Related: Iced Tea is Acidic in Utah Restaurant
"Utah restaurant had other chemical burns, attorney says" Associated Press August 22, 2014
SALT LAKE CITY — The attorney for a woman who nearly died after unknowingly drinking tea laced with a chemical cleaning compound at a Utah restaurant said Thursday that an employee at the eatery burned herself a month earlier on the same substance.
Family attorney Paxton Guymon’s comments came at a news conference that also was attended by the burned woman’s husband, who said she is recovering but suffering from nightmares as she relives the incident.
Guymon said he learned about the previous burn during his investigation into what led to the tea incident at Dickey’s Barbecue in a Salt Lake City suburb.
He said the Dickey’s employee burned her tongue July 5 after she stuck her finger in a sugar container to test if it had any of the chemical cleaner, and then licked her finger.
The worker’s tongue started bleeding and blisters formed, Guymon said, adding she still is not back to normal.
The employee quit her job at the restaurant Aug. 9, the day before 67-year-old Jan Harding of Sandy took a sip of the sweetened iced tea and suffered deep burns in her upper esophagus, Guymon said.
Dickey’s Barbecue Restaurants Inc. issued a statement last week that what happened to Harding was an isolated incident and nothing like it had happened in the 73 years the Dallas-based chain has operated. The company did not immediately comment on the new allegations.
Salt Lake County prosecutors are reviewing the findings of a police investigation and have not yet announced whether charges will be filed.
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NEXT DAY UPDATE:
"Newborn found in trash on ventilator; mom arrested" AP August 28, 2014
KEARNS, Utah — A newborn baby girl was in critical condition Wednesday after Utah police say her mother dumped her in a neighbor’s trash can.
The 2-day-old girl was on a ventilator in a hospital, Unified Police Detective Jared Richardson said.
The girl’s mother, 23-year-old Alicia Marie Englert, was arrested Tuesday night on suspicion of attempted murder.
Englert told authorities that she hid the pregnancy from her parents and hoped the newborn girl would die in the trash and solve her problems, according to a probable cause statement.
The mother told police the baby had been in the trash for about an hour before she was found. The baby had not received any medical care or food, police said.
A neighbor discovered the baby Tuesday morning when she mistook her cries for a kitten meowing in the trash bin, police said.
On Tuesday, Utah officials held a news conference to remind residents that the state allows mothers to drop off newborns at hospitals without consequences.
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