
Family owners of former Michelin-starred restaurant in Japan arrested after nearly 80 cases of food poisoning
Hirokazu Kitano, 69, his wife Noriko, 68, and son Hirotoshi, 41, who all run the Kiichi restaurant in Japan's Osaka Prefecture were arrested on Monday. Authorities suspect that they violated the Food Sanitation Act, which requires food industries to implement basic hygiene and safety standards.
In early February, Kiichi was ordered to suspend its services after a staggering 33 customers reported symptoms aligning with food poisoning and norovirus, including diarrhea, stomach pain and vomiting, Kyodo News reported.
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The owners of the Kiichi restaurant in Japan were arrested after nearly 80 diners reported cases of food poisoning and norovirus.
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Unperturbed by the mass illness tied to their restaurant, the Kitano family allegedly continued to operate behind closed doors and sold 11 traditional Japanese lunch box meals on Feb. 16 that investigators believe were contaminated with pathogenic microorganisms.
Even more people became sick in the following days. Norovirus was detected in the restaurant's food for a second time, as another 23 diners reported food poisoning, all before the end of February.
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The restaurant's suspension was extended through March as police began to suspect that the food poisoning and norovirus cases were a result of poor management behind the scenes.
Eventually, Kiichi admitted to not enforcing strong hygiene practices among its staff.
The Kiichi restaurant held one coveted Michelin star during the 2010s.
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'We take this series of incidents seriously and deeply regret it. We will work to ensure food safety by strengthening and thoroughly implementing our hygiene management system to prevent a recurrence,' the restaurant wrote on its website in late March.
Kiichi boasted a coveted one-star rating in the Michelin Guide for the Kansai region during the 2010s before eventually being booted off the acclaimed list.
On the other side of the world, a Brazilian family was poisoned by a relative after she purposefully dumped expired products and a mysterious white liquid into a cake she baked. The gruesome triple homicide took place mere months after the deviant baker's husband died from food poisoning.
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A video shared with The Times shows at least eight Border Patrol agents as they passed the van, its side door wide-open. They did not stop. Then, one appeared to double back and peek inside. Minguela said he feels he was targeted based on his physical appearance. When the agent began asking him questions, Minguela said he pulled a red 'know your rights' card out of his wallet and handed it to the agent. 'This is of no use to me,' he said the agent told him. Another agent soon joined them. Minguela told them he didn't have to talk. But they kept asking questions, he said. What was his nationality? What was his name? Did he have papers? 'They demanded I show them some kind of identification,' he said. 'Insisting, insisting.' The agents were armed, and Minguela said he grew scared. Believing he had no choice, Minguela said, he gave one of the agents his California driver's license. Minguela tried to call his partner twice, but she was at a doctor's appointment and couldn't answer. 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Just days before his arrest, Minguela's family had celebrated his 48th birthday. His partner made him his favorite dish, shrimp ceviche. Her birthday was Tuesday. The family had planned to go on a rare outing for a dinner of enchiladas de mole. But they spent the day without him. There was no celebration. The children asked their mother, as they have every day for nearly a week: When is papá coming home? Times staff writer Richard Winton contributed to this report.