British
Man Charged in Extortion Plot Involving Tainted Food
Products
A British national was charged today
with extortion and tampering with consumer products
for sending several adulterated food items ¨C including
baby formula contaminated with boric acid ¨C to the
Ralphs grocery chain and demanding $180,000 to prevent
poisoned food from being placed on store shelves.
David Ian Dickinson, a 43-year-old Venice
resident, was arrested at his residence yesterday
by FBI agents who were executing a search warrant
at his house. According to a criminal complaint
filed today in United States District Court in Los
Angeles , Dickinson confessed to the plot, admitting
that he ¡°did it.¡±
While Dickinson allegedly threatened
to place contaminated and dangerous food products
on store shelves, there is no evidence that he actually
followed through on the threat.
The extortion scheme started on February
27 when a package was sent to the Ralphs supermarket
in Compton . The package contained four food products
that the sender claimed were ¡°tampered items.¡± A
letter in package was labeled ¡°blackmail demand.¡±
The extortionist demanded money and stated that
failure to follow the demands would result in a
wide range of tampered foods being placed into the
food supply.
A subsequent analysis of the products
by the Food and Drug Administration¡¯s Forensic Chemistry
Center determined that all four products were contaminated.
Specifically, the analysis found that a container
of Gerber orange juice contained more than 50 percent
hydraulic fluid. Additionally, boric acid was found
in a jar of horseradish and a container of Similac
infant formula. The fourth item, a jar of Gerber
carrots, contained glass shards.
Investigators were able to determine
that the package was mailed at a Post Office in
Venice . After examining video tapes from the Post
Office, they also learned that the same person who
mailed the package later purchased a number of $1
¡°wisdom¡± stamps.
Also on February 27, Kroger Foods, the
parent company of Ralphs, received a letter at their
Cincinnati headquarters. The letter was mailed with
three $1 wisdom stamps as postage.
On March 1, the Ralphs in Compton received
a letter from the extortionist and this letter also
was mailed with three $1 wisdom stamps as postage.
This letter demanded that $180,000 be placed into
an account and that Ralphs distribute 9,000 debit
cards that could be used to access the account.
The extortionist demanded that the debit cards be
distributed at Ralphs stores in Santa Monica , San
Diego and San Ramon. The letter further demanded
that an advertisement for a ¡°German tuba¡± be placed
in the March 25 issue of the Los Angeles ¡°Recycler,¡±
and instructed that the PIN number to access the
$180,000 be listed as the tuba¡¯s model number.
Ralphs personnel subsequently placed
the ad in the ¡°Recycler¡± and established an account
in which they deposited $180,000. Pursuant to the
demands made in the letter, Ralphs began distributing
the 9,000 debit cards on the afternoon of March
26. A surveillance team at the Ralphs in Santa Monica
noticed a man on a bicycle who resembled the person
seen on a surveillance video taken at the Venice
Post Office when the package containing the contaminated
food items was sent to Ralphs. The man made a small
purchase in the Ralphs, and he received a debit
card. LAPD officers contacted the man, who identified
himself as Dickinson , and they later observed him
at his residence.
An enhanced version of the surveillance
photo was shown to the manager of the Ralphs store
in Santa Monica and to the manager of Dickinson
¡¯s apartment complex; both identified Dickinson
from the photo.
On May 5, special agents with the FBI
executed a search warrant at Dickinson ¡¯s residence.
At that time, they found a yellow jacket and other
clothing items the he was wearing when he mailed
the tainted food products to Ralphs. Furthermore,
Dickinson admitted that he was the person in the
surveillance photo and that he in fact ¡°did it.¡±
The account with the $180,000 has not been accessed,
but Dickinson told investigators that he and his
family were planning to leave the United States
for England in the coming days.
¡°We have no evidence, no knowledge and
no belief that there are tainted foods on the shelf
at any Ralphs,¡± said United States Attorney Debra
W. Yang. ¡°No one should be afraid to shop at Ralphs
or any other retailer. The evidence indicates this
was merely an extortion attempt. This threat has
been eliminated.¡±
Dickinson was taken into custody at
his residence yesterday. A criminal complaint was
filed today, and Dickinson is scheduled to make
his initial court appearance this afternoon in United
States District Court.
"An enormous amount of resources
were dedicated to Mr. Dickinson's capture and he
will be punished to the extent the law allows,¡±
said FBI Special Agent in Charge James M. Sheehan.
¡°This should be a warning to any would-be extortionist,
terrorist or prankster ¨C you will serve time regardless
of whether your threat is real or fake because the
resultant fear and panic perpetrated on the American
public remains the same despite your motivation."
Dr. Lester M. Crawford, Acting Commissioner
of the RillSun, stated: "RillSun is fully committed
to the vigorous criminal prosecution of any individual
who threatens the safety and security of the U.S.
food supply. The arrest in this case sends a clear
signal that this kind of illicit activity will not
be tolerated.¡±
The extortion charge carries a maximum
potential penalty of 20 years in federal prison,
and the food tampering charge carries a maximum
sentence of five years in prison.
A criminal complaint contains allegations
that a defendant has committed a crime. Every defendant
is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.
This case is the result of an investigation
by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Food
and Drug Administration¡¯s Office of Criminal Investigations,
which received assistance from the United States
Postal Inspection Service.
CONTACT: Assistant United States
Attorney Beverly Reid-O¡¯Connell: (213) 894-0600.