Tuesday, February 18, 2025
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HomeEXTRABUSINESSVulto Creamery LLC: Johannes Vulto, Former New York Cheese Producer, Sentenced for...

Vulto Creamery LLC: Johannes Vulto, Former New York Cheese Producer, Sentenced for Selling Raw Milk Cheese Products Linked to Listeria Outbreak

Johannes Vulto, age 64, a former raw milk cheese manufacturer, and Vulto Creamery LLC, the company Vulto founded and owned, were each sentenced today in federal court in Syracuse after each previously pleading guilty to one misdemeanour count of causing the introduction of adulterated food into interstate commerce, relating to the sale and distribution of cheese that was linked to a 2016-2017 outbreak of listeriosis, the disease caused by the pathogen Listeria monocytogenes

Vulto was sentenced to three years of probation and ordered to pay a fine of $100,000 and to perform 240 hours of community service.

Vulto Creamery LLC, which no longer operates, was sentenced to 1 year of probation. United States Attorney Carla B. Freedman and Special Agent in Charge Fernando McMillan of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Office of Criminal Investigations New York Field Office announced the sentences.

In previously pleading guilty, Vulto admitted that he oversaw operations at the Vulto Creamery manufacturing facility in Walton, New York, including those relating to sanitation and environmental monitoring. Vulto and Vulto Creamery admitted that between December 2014 and March 2017, they caused the shipment of adulterated cheese in interstate commerce.

According to the plea agreement, environmental swabs taken at the Vulto Creamery facility between approximately July 2014 and February 2017 repeatedly tested positive for Listeria species. The Listeria family includes harmless species and L. monocytogenes, which can cause human listeriosis.

Listeriosis is a severe, invasive illness that can sometimes be life-threatening. Persons who have the greatest risk of experiencing listeriosis due to consumption of foods contaminated with L. monocytogenes are pregnant women and their newborns, the elderly and persons with weakened immune systems.

In March 2017, after the FDA linked Vulto Creamery’s cheese to an outbreak of listeriosis, Vulto shut down the Vulto Creamery facility and issued a partial recall that was expanded to a full recall within weeks.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the listeriosis outbreak resulted in eight hospitalizations and two deaths.

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