Lindsey Jennings (middle), our client, was a "perfectly healthy" twenty-one year old girl.  Actually, better than that, Lindsey was an avid athlete, in training for a marathon, running over 40 miles a week, all while completing her pre-med courses during her senior year at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, when she was unfortunate enough to eat contaminated lettuce. 

In fall 2008, Lindsey suffered an E. coli O157:H7 infection and illness the likes of which we don’t often see . . . at least not in somebody so undeniably healthy and vibrant.  Lindsey was hospitalized for 12 days with a gastrointestinal illness so severe that she required replacement nutrition (total parenteral nutrition) because her gastrointestinal tract was too injured to process food or fluid.  She did not eat solid food for over a month, and actually had to continue to receive this nutrition through a tube (peripherally inserted central catheter–PICC) even after she was discharged from the hospital. 

Lindsey has continued to recover from her illness in 2009, but she has chosen not to forget about the experience of being so ill.  Along with several other Marler Clark clients, Lindsey recently spoke to members of Congress about food safety issues and the need for more vigorous legislation and regulation of the food supply.  Afterward, in an interview with Elizabeth Rackover of The Oakland Press, Lindsey stated, “It’s made me much more interested in the political side of things.”  “No one should have to go through what we’ve gone through. There are approximately 5,000 people who die every year from foodborne illnesses and almost all of it is preventable.”

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Photo of Denis Stearns Denis Stearns

Denis Stearns, is of-counsel at Marler Clark, earned a BA in philosophy from Seattle University, and his law degree from the University of Wisconsin at Madison. He graduated from both schools with high honors, and won numerous awards for service and academic excellence.

Denis Stearns, is of-counsel at Marler Clark, earned a BA in philosophy from Seattle University, and his law degree from the University of Wisconsin at Madison. He graduated from both schools with high honors, and won numerous awards for service and academic excellence. Prior to being a partner at Marler Clark, Denis worked as one of the lead attorneys on the defense team that represented Jack in the Box against the hundreds of claims and lawsuits arising from the historic 1993 E. coli O157:H7 outbreak. In this role, he obtained extensive knowledge of the meat and foodservice industry, health and safety regulations, HACCP and other food safety systems, epidemiology, and foodborne illness. He is a frequent speaker and writer on issues related to food safety law, administrative regulation, and public health policy.