Disgusting News Item- "The Finger's Owner is Found!" Update on Pg 2

Xevious

CAGiversary!
Wendy's diner finds human finger in her chili
- Maria Alicia Gaura, Dave Murphy, Chronicle Staff Writers
Thursday, March 24, 2005




An unlucky diner bit into a segment of a human finger while digging into a bowl of chili at a Wendy's restaurant in San Jose, Santa Clara County health officials confirmed Wednesday.

The diner, who visited the restaurant Tuesday night, spit out the well- cooked digit, notified restaurant workers and became sick to her stomach, health officials said.

The origin of the finger remains a mystery.

Santa Clara County Health Officer Dr. Martin Fenstersheib said he was called at home by San Jose police who went to Wendy's and immediately dispatched health inspectors to the restaurant. He said he ordered officers to transport the body part, wrapped in damp gauze, to the medical examiner's office.

The restaurant, at 1405 Monterey Road, was shut for a couple of hours while the batch of chili and stocks of chili ingredients were impounded. The restaurant was allowed to reopen and to cook another batch of chili using newly purchased ingredients.

Wendy's officials said they are eager to find out how their food became contaminated.

"The entire investigation is with the county health department,'' said Steve Jay, Wendy's marketing director for Santa Clara County. "We're fully cooperating.''

Jay said the chili came from a master distributor but declined to name the firm. He added that Wendy's has been doing business in the area for more than 25 years and never had a serious problem before.

Fenstersheib said he spoke to the anxious woman several times by phone and had the queasy experience of confirming to her that the object was indisputably human. The woman asked officials not to name or even describe her.

"I had to confirm it to her that she had indeed put a piece of a human finger in her mouth," Fenstersheib said. "She kind of lost it."

The woman was "emotionally distraught ... due to the unpleasant sensation of having this (object) in her mouth," Fenstersheib said

He said the finger had been cooked at a high enough temperature to kill any viruses, including hepatitis or HIV, and that it was very unlikely that she will suffer any health effects from her experience, aside from psychological trauma.

"The potential for health impacts are extremely low for her or anyone else who ate that chili," Fenstersheib said. He said, however, that he will recommend baseline viral testing for the woman, to allow for comparison should any food-borne illness emerge in the coming months.

A similar strategy might be wise for others who ate the contaminated food, he said. "The risk is low, but nothing in medicine is 100 percent," Fenstersheib said.

County officials say they have no idea how many other people consumed the contaminated chili, which was cooked at about 2 p.m. Tuesday and was served to customers until the finger turned up at 7:20 p.m. Anyone who may have eaten the contaminated batch is encouraged to call county health officials at (408) 918-3400.

The finger was described by county Medical Examiner Dr. Joseph O'Hara as cooked but not decomposed. The digit was found in two pieces, a 1-inch fingertip complete with the skin whorls used in fingerprinting and a half-inch piece of fingernail. The digit appeared to have been torn off, possibly by manufacturing machinery, rather than cleanly cut.

Considering the nail's slightly longer length and neat grooming, O'Hara speculated that it may have belonged to a woman, though "it's hard to tell."

Since all of the workers at the restaurant were found to be in possession "of all 10 of their fingers," health inspectors assume the finger likely entered the food chain as a result of the manufacturing process, according to county Environmental Resources Director Ben Gale.

Health inspectors said the restaurant appeared to be generally clean and well-maintained, with only one minor violation having to do with a leaky vent.

Gale said it could take weeks to track each of the numerous ingredients to their places of manufacture, which will be in different states or possibly even different countries. Since the law requires that industrial accidents result in a stoppage of the assembly line and be reported to authorities, it may be possible to pinpoint the site of the original accident.

In addition, authorities may be able to obtain a fingerprint and DNA from the finger to identify the person.

The restaurant was open Wednesday, and business was brisk despite the finger incident.

Elizabeth Adcock, who visits that Wendy's frequently and was having a bowl of chili Wednesday at around 3 p.m., said she had heard television reports about the finger, but thought it might be an urban legend.

Another woman who was eating chili at the restaurant, San Jose State student Andria Mendoza, said she had overheard workers discussing a finger in Spanish, so she proceeded carefully.

"I actually did check -- with my spoon,'' she said.

Customer Gary Grant of San Jose expressed disappointment that it was business-as-usual at the restaurant.

"We come here all the time,'' Grant said. "We just ate here today, and nobody said a thing. There were no signs up.

"How can you trust somebody like that? You're still serving food. Which basically means you don't care.''

Customer Fernando Anaya was in a lighter mood.

"Where's the finger at?" he joked as he ordered a salad.

Anaya said he worked at a cannery many years ago, so the incident with the finger doesn't shock him. He said he plans to keep eating at his local Wendy's.

"I don't eat chili anymore,'' he said. "I used to, but the cholesterol is too high."

E-mail the writers at [email protected] and [email protected].

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----------------------------------------
Xevious Note: They showed the finger in last nights local news program. Only one digit was left with part of the fingernail intact. Pretty sick stuff!

EDIT: Here is the News video at this link
http://www.kron.com/Global/story.asp?S=3121640

See updates on page 2

__________________________________
Update: The local news reported that a search warrant was issued in Vegas in regards to the "Finger". Read UPDATE on page 2 of this thread!
 
AHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

How fucking traumatizing, even just reading about it!!!!

The woman was "emotionally distraught ... due to the unpleasant sensation of having this (object) in her mouth," Fenstersheib said

I'm sure some idiotic immature teenager will turn that into a perverted statement.. but gee, you think? No one's going to be okay after accidentally biting a severed finger!

The digit was found in two pieces, a 1-inch fingertip complete with the skin whorls used in fingerprinting and a half-inch piece of fingernail. The digit appeared to have been torn off, possibly by manufacturing machinery, rather than cleanly cut.

:puke:
 
I was shocked when they showed it on last night TV - the severed digit. I would be tramatized too.
 
....Damn... I hope they just don't find the rest of the body... *ahem*

Not that I really need another reason to eat at Wendy's... but there ya go...
 
finger lickin good...wait that's KFC.
All joking aside, that is pretty gross

[quote name='Kaijufan']Thats pretty crazy. I tend not to look at my food when i eat, so I hope that never happens to me.[/quote]

I'm the same way.
 
[quote name='moiety']Nooo, not Wendy's! I love Wendy's! :cry:

Ughhh so gross. ::shudder::[/quote]

Apparently business is still good at that Wendy's in San Jose. Talk about morbid!
 
Thats nasty... but I once read that some just bought a big mac with pieces of glass in it... and that the insides of his throat were cut... that sucks.
 
[quote name='help1']Thats nasty... but I once read that some just bought a big mac with pieces of glass in it... and that the insides of his throat were cut... that sucks.[/quote]

Do you mean that cop? I think he was just retarded. He received "severe cuts to the mouth an throat"... if it cut his mouth what the hell is he doing swallowing it? Did he think the hamburger was supposed to be crunchy?
 
Holy crap, that place is near my house. About a 20 min drive.

I remember my dad telling me this yesterday while we were eating dinner. Funny thing is that there's a hospital right across the street.
 
Can you say "settled out of court for an undisclosed amount of money"? I know you can.....

I'd bite a finger and puke afterwards in exchange for the moolah that woman is about to come into.

Hell, she'll probably get lifetime pass for free food at any Wendy's, too.....not that she'll want to use it after this unpleasantness.
 
that would be so cool if she actually got a free food pass for life. she could sell it on ebay and make a bunch of money.
 
[quote name='defender']lol..now we know where Jimmy Hoffa went.[/quote]

They think its a woman's finger. My guess that its the work of the Yakuza! Those guys are known for cutting off peoples fingers. Maybe some woman pissed off a Yakuza Mob boss.....
 
Here is an update:

SANTA CLARA COUNTY
Was finger cooked along with chili?
Officials say it may have been added later in the process
- Dave Murphy, Chronicle Staff Writer
Saturday, March 26, 2005


The human finger found in a bowl of chili at a San Jose Wendy's might not have been cooked with the chili and could have been snuck in later in the preparation process, Santa Clara County officials said Friday.

"We're still going to have to sit down with our crime lab experts and see if there's a test that can determine that," said Bob Dixon, a sheriff's office captain who is assigned to the coroner's office.

Working with ingredients shipped to the San Jose Wendy's, employees normally assemble ground hamburger meat with canned sauce, seasoning and beans, plus chopped frozen celery, onions and green peppers, then cook the whole mix for four to six hours.

"The possibilities are still all out there on where and when it came into the chili," said Dr. Martin Fenstersheib, Santa Clara County's health officer.

"That's a very important piece of information," said Wendy's spokesman Denny Lynch, who has said he is confident the severed finger was not part of the supply chain. "Hopefully they will be able to determine that."

Dixon said his office won't be able to do any tests until next week. He also said that examiners are trying to lift a fingerprint but won't know until next week whether it matches anyone in various databases around the country.

It had been widely reported after a news conference Wednesday that the finger had been cooked with the chili, but officials acknowledged Friday -- after questions were raised by Wendy's -- that no conclusive evidence had been found.

Lynch said the Wendy's, located at 1405 Monterey Road, has no security cameras, which conceivably could have shown if someone tampered with the chili that was served to a 39-year-old Las Vegas woman, Anna Ayala.

County Environmental Health Director Ben Gale said even if the finger is found to be uncooked, it will not change his department's investigation. Working with the state Department of Health Services and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the agency will be tracking down where the ingredients came from and whether any industrial accidents could have occurred in the food chain.

Fenstersheib said that even if the severed, 13/8-inch finger segment had been slipped in after cooking, the risk to Ayala -- or any other customers - - would be almost zero. Still, he plans to suggest to her doctor that she have a series of baseline tests soon, then get monitored over several months to ensure that nothing has changed.

At least two dozen people have called the county with questions about Wendy's and the chili.

"My health sense is that the risk is extremely low," Fenstersheib said. "Most viruses you could not obtain through consumption."

The woman involved has returned to Las Vegas and is trying to avoid the spotlight.

"I don't want to talk about it," said Ayala, who had been visiting relatives in San Jose when she stopped at the Wendy's on Tuesday night. "I'm trying to put it behind me."

When asked whether she planned to sue Wendy's, Ayala said Friday, "At this time, I don't know. At this time, I want to be left alone."

E-mail Dave Murphy at [email protected].

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Update: The local news reported that a search warrant was issued in Vegas in regards to the "Finger". The woman who reported the finger in her chili lives in Vegas. Coincidence? Hmmmmmm.....


I will post a link as soon as its available.
 
I just saw on the news that they think the finger might belong to the woman's deceased aunt, but I can't find anything online about it...
 
Police search home of woman who found finger
- Alan Gathright, Dave Murphy, Maria Alicia Gaura, Chronicle Staff Writers
Friday, April 8, 2005


The mystery of the finger found in a bowl of chili at a San Jose Wendy's last month deepened Thursday with revelations that police have searched the Las Vegas home of the woman who made the revolting find.

A tearful Anna Ayala, 39, angrily denied planting the finger in a telephone interview with The Chronicle. She accused San Jose and Las Vegas officers of bursting into her home with guns drawn on her and her family Wednesday afternoon.

"They put guns to us and handcuffed us and threw us to the ground in front of all my neighbors,'' Ayala said Thursday. She accused police of terrorizing her family, ransacking her home and injuring the arm of her 13- year-old daughter.

"They treated us like trash, like terrorists. It's the worst nightmare,'' she said.

San Jose police said they and local officers executed a search warrant regarding the wayward finger in Las Vegas, but refused to say whose property had been searched and whether anything was found.

Police would not respond to Ayala's claims of rough treatment or even acknowledge searching her home.

"We're not going to release any information that is going to jeopardize our investigation,'' said San Jose police spokeswoman Officer Gina Tepoorten.

She dismissed press rumors that authorities are investigating whether the finger belonged to Ayala's dead aunt.

"It's just rumor -- we have no information that it belongs to an aunt, '' Tepoorten said.

She added that investigators are interviewing anyone who might explain Ayala's grisly discovery March 22, when she reportedly bit into the finger while eating chili with relatives she was visiting in San Jose. Police are questioning Wendy's employees, its food suppliers, diners present that day and "anyone who knows the finder of the finger," Tepoorten said.

"We want to find out who the finger belongs to, from a criminal aspect. We don't know if this was an industrial accident or something more serious like an unreported homicide,'' she added.

The search was just the latest twist in the tale that has caused Wendy's San Jose sales to plummet and turned the chain's name into a punch line for late-night TV comedians. Ayala even recounted her disgust on "Good Morning America."

Santa Clara County investigators lifted a print from the 1 1/2-inch fingertip, but database searches have not revealed a match. DNA testing is under way, as well as chemical analysis to determine if the finger was preserved or cooked.

Meanwhile, Ayala denies even having a dead aunt. She said her family has become the subject of a bizarre witch hunt.

"Right here, I just heard on the TV news that my son cut off my daughter's finger and I put it in the (chili),'' the woman fumed. "It's just ridiculous.

"They're lying, and they're very, very wrong. They're doing all this damage to me, and they're going to pay for it," said Ayala, who has hired a civil attorney to investigate a possible lawsuit against Wendy's.

Ayala refused to say what police questioned her about and what they were searching for. "They went through everything, my clothes, my drawers. My garage looks like a tornado hit it," she said.

Ayala's attorney, Jeffrey Janoff, did not want to discuss the specifics of the case late Thursday. "It's apparently under police investigation, and we await the results of that investigation."

In what a Wendy's official insisted is a coincidence, the restaurant chain announced Thursday that it is offering a $50,000 reward to the first person who provides "verifiable information" that reveals how the finger got in the chili.

"We believe someone knows exactly what happened," Tom Mueller, Wendy's president and chief operating officer, said in a written statement, "and hopefully the reward will encourage this person to come forward."

But Ayala said a San Jose officer told a 23-year-old man who lives in her home "the Wendy's corporation will pay him so much money'' if he provides information about the finger case.

In a telephone interview Thursday night, Wendy's spokesman Bob Bertini said he was unaware that Ayala's home had been searched. "We've had no information on that so far," he said.

Bertini acknowledged that the chain's business had suffered since the finger was found, with sales being "significantly impacted" in the Bay Area.

He said it is premature to discuss what action, if any, Wendy's will take if it turns out that the finger was a hoax.

Wendy's officials have said in earlier statements that they have checked with employees and suppliers and are convinced that the supply chain is clean. Wendy's asks anyone with information to call (800) 821-3348.

E-mail the writers at [email protected], [email protected] and [email protected].
 
http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/04/22/Wendys.hoax/index.html

Police: Woman arrested in finger hoax

Police say she lied about finding a digit in her Wendy's chili




SAN JOSE, California (CNN) -- Police said Friday that a woman lied about finding a human finger in a bowl of chili last month at a Wendy's restaurant here.

They said Anna Ayala, 39, was arrested Thursday night at her home in Las Vegas, Nevada, on a charge of attempted grand theft in connection with the episode.

Ayala was also charged with grand theft in connection with an unrelated incident uncovered during the course of the Wendy's investigation. She is accused of bilking a woman out of $11,000 in a real estate transaction.

San Jose Police Chief Rob Davis said Ayala will be extradited to California.

Ayala filed a claim against Wendy's after she reported the finger in her chili, but she dropped it after police investigators obtained a search warrant for her home.

Police offered few details about what they called the hoax, however, saying the investigation was still in progress.

One question that remains: Where did the finger come from?

Police said Friday they are still trying to determine the answer, and investigators have concluded that Wendy's was not to blame.

"Thus far, our evidence suggests that the truest victims in this case are indeed the Wendy's owner, operators and employees here in San Jose, who have suffered financially throughout this investigation," Davis said.

Police said the attempted grand theft charge relates to the money that Wendy's lost when business dropped after the episode. The owner of the franchise where the finger was found, Joseph Desmond, called the incident a "nightmare."

"It's been really tough. When I heard of it, I just didn't believe that it could happen, because we have many, many guards against anything like this happening in our business," he said.

Desmond said some of the San Jose employees have had their hours cut back because business has been "down badly" since Ayala reported finding the finger March 22.

He pleaded, "Please come back to Wendy's."

After Ayala reported finding the finger, Wendy's launched an internal investigation, even checking its workers and employees of suppliers to see if anyone had lost a digit. But the company said it found nothing to explain how the finger got in the chili.

The company also offered a $50,000 reward, then doubled it to $100,000. Davis noted that the reward is still in place and urged anyone with information about the incident to contact police.

CNN's Rusty Dornin contributed to this report.
 
what a fucken bitch. i heard the finger was from her dead aunt that's being stored in the accusers house.
 
[quote name='phatbunbao']I dont get it. How did they find out she planted the finger? And what the hell is grand theft in connection?[/QUOTE]

It's grand theft because she was trying to sue Wendy's for millions of dollars. They are comparing this act to stealing millions of dollars. I think it is the right course of action.

I hope this bitch rots in jail. :)
 
[quote name='phatbunbao']I dont get it. How did they find out she planted the finger? And what the hell is grand theft in connection?[/QUOTE]

. . .
Police said the attempted grand theft charge relates to the money that Wendy's lost when business dropped after the episode. The owner of the franchise where the finger was found, Joseph Desmond, called the incident a "nightmare."
 
There is still more to this story that hasnt been reported. I assume all of that will come out in due time.
 
http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/05/13/wendys.finger.ap/index.html

Police: Wendy's chili finger identified


SAN JOSE, California (AP) -- Police say the finger that a woman found in a bowl of chili came from an associate of her husband's who lost the digit in an industrial accident.

"The jig is up. The puzzle pieces are beginning to fall into place," Police Chief Rob Davis said.

He said authorities "positively confirmed that this subject was in fact the source of the fingertip."

The man is from Nevada and lost a part of his finger in an accident last December, Davis said. His identity was traced through a lead made to a Wendy's hot line, he said.

Davis said authorities "positively confirmed that this subject was in fact the source of the fingertip."

Anna Ayala, the 39-year-old woman who said she found the finger, was arrested last month at her suburban Las Vegas home.

Ayala maintains she bit down on a 1 1/2 inch-long finger fragment while dining March 22 with her family at a Wendy's in San Jose. She has denied placing the digit in her bowl.

She hired a lawyer and filed a claim against the franchise owner, but dropped the legal fight shortly after police searched her home.

Ayala, who has maintained her innocence, faces a maximum seven-year sentence if convicted of larceny charges, and at least another 16 months if convicted of unrelated charges that she allegedly bilked a woman $11,000 over a soured real estate deal two years ago.

Ayala has been involved in nearly a dozen legal battles, including a sexual harassment suit against an employer, an auto dealer over a car and even another fast-food chain for food poisoning.
 
If I was going to go through all that trouble, I'd kill someone who happened to be named Dave Thomas, and take his finger. You know, for comedic effect.
 
[quote name='Xevious'][Ayala has been involved in nearly a dozen legal battles, including a sexual harassment suit against an employer, an auto dealer over a car and even another fast-food chain for food poisoning.[/QUOTE]

Oh yeah, a finger in your chilli surely wouldnt make the national news. And a background check into your past? No, never. They actually keep the 10mil dollar settlement checks right behind the counter. Show them the finger and away you go with check in hand.

Some people are so stupid. Shes WAY below stupid.
 
story.ayala.jpg

"I'm innocent"
 
bread's done
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