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Pakistani Caught On Tape Sprinkling Fecal Matter On Pastries At Dallas Store

Man Sprinkles Fecal Matter On Food At Dallas Store

DALLAS - A Dallas cab driver was on trial Tuesday, accused of creating a public health danger.

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Brent P) No, it really should be about right of way, regardless of the count. Which is the real issue. Drivers who do this endanger everyone else by not following the accepted driving...

Behrouz Nahidmobarekeh, 49, is on trial for allegedly throwing fecal matter on pastries at a Fiesta grocery store.

Police said they found a pile of human feces by his bed. He would dry it, either by microwave or just letting it sit out and grate it up with a cheese grater and then sprinkle it at the store, officials said.

Neither attorneys in the case is clear about a motive or why the defendant would resort to something so repulsive.

Prosecutors will show a surveillance videotape of the defendant, which shows him sprinkling a substance on the food.

The FBI arrested Nahidmobarekeh but turned the case over to local prosecutors after they determined it was not a national security issue.

Sloth driver almost dies
I am driving North bound on one of the many two lane state roads in Illinois. A group of...

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Gripes of stench preceded pastry-tainting allegations Dallas: Cabdriver on trial is accused of sprinkling grated feces on grocery store goods By TIM WYATT The Dallas Morning News

Testimony began Tuesday in the trial of a cabdriver accused of dusting pastries with his dried, grated feces at a Dallas grocery store last summer.

Behrouz Nahidmobarekeh, 49, faces two felony charges of tampering with consumer products in separate incidents in July at the Fiesta Mart at Ross Avenue and Henderson Street.

In his opening statement Tuesday afternoon, prosecutor Taly Haffar told jurors that the store workers went through seven months of customer complaints that unpackaged, fresh-baked goods "smelled and tasted like manure" until the defendant was arrested in late July.

Mr. Nahidmobarekeh pleaded not guilty in state District Judge Vic Cunningham's court. His defense attorney, Clark Birdsall, did not give an opening statement.

While a Dallas County epidemiologist testified about the possible health risks to customers who may have eaten the contaminated cookies, pastries and bread, the state's main evidence so far consisted of two videotapes of incidents on July 13 and July 24.

In those tapes, a man with his back to the camera is shown scattering something over baked goods in the store while other shoppers pbutt by. No one reacts to the man on the first tape, but employees eventually detect a strong odor coming from a bread bin and begin to clear out the products and begin cleaning up.

A second tape is similar, except that the store's security manager runs down and detains the man later identified by police as Mr. Nahidmobarekeh. Shortly after the suspect is led away, a young boy reaches up and grabs a cookie from the nearby racks.

"It looked like cracked pepper at the time," Albert Bazan, a Fiesta employee, testified. "But it had a real strong odor ... a foul odor."

Dallas police reports state that a hazardous-material team collected samples of the contaminated goods and that authorities alerted the FBI's terrorism task force.

Testimony in the trial resumes today. If convicted, Mr. Nahidmobarekeh could face up to 20 years in prison.




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