Gilbert campaign

Agriculture Commissioner Todd Staples has “blood on his hands,” according to a stand-in for his Democratic challenger, Hank Gilbert.

Gilbert wasnโ€™t able to make it to the Texas Democratic Party’s convention this weekend (unfortunately, his mother passed away just before the event), but Houston state Rep. Senfronia Thompson delivered prepared remarks on his behalf. In them, the deaths of multiple people were laid directly as Staples’ feet.

โ€œโ€จAt least nine people died because Todd Staples didn’t do his job,โ€ said the remarks as prepared.ย โ€œโ€จNine people across this nation lost their lives because he was too busy worrying about his political future to pay attention to what was going on in his own department.โ€จโ€

Thatโ€™s a reference to the nine people around the country whose deaths in 2008 and 2009 were attributed to a nationwide salmonella outbreak that caused more than 600 people to fall ill. The outbreak was tied to the Peanut Corporation of America, which also owned a processing plant in Plainview. That Plainview plant has been closed since 2009, when inspectors found that its products had been contaminated with salmonella during that same outbreak; they also found dead rodents and animal feces scattered around the plant. The findings at the plants prompted a product recall of historic proportions and an investigation by the Obama administration.

Gilbert believes Staplesโ€™ inspectors should have been more thorough and that his agency bears the blame for the deadly infections. The Plainview plant had registered with the Texas Department of Agriculture through its organic certification program and had not been inspected for four years prior to the salmonella outbreak.

โ€œAbsolutely those deaths are at the door of the Texas Department of Agriculture,โ€ Gilbert spokesman Vince Leibowitz charges. โ€œThey should have noticed those problems and they should have done something about it. Clearly they didnโ€™t and Todd Staples is the one who needs to be held accountable for it.โ€

There’s a hitch, though. The outbreak strain of salmonella was found in more than one location โ€” first at a Peanut Corporation of America plant in Blakely, Ga., and later in the Texas location. The Georgia plant, widely cited at the time as the source of the outbreak โ€” was obviously outside the Texas Department of Agriculture’s jurisdiction.

Even so, Leibowitz insists that โ€œthe final processing steps before the consumers ate most of the food happened in Plainview.โ€

The Staples campaign responds to Gilbertโ€™s allegations by noting that he has had his own run-ins with the law, specifically a theft conviction in 2000. โ€œHis failure to tell the truth is well documented,โ€ says Staples spokesman Cody McGregor. โ€œGuilty Gilbertโ€™s most current comment is false and pathetic.โ€

Update (3:34 p.m.):
The Gilbert campaign asked for clarification that the theft charge cited by the Staples camp was merely “a Class C misdemeanor for a hot check.” It stemmed from accounting errors that occurred when Gilbert moved his cleaning business from Pittsburg to Whitehouse.

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Reeve Hamilton worked at the Tribune from 2009 to 2015, covering higher education and politics and hosting the Tribune's weekly podcast. His writing has also appeared in Texas Monthly and The Texas Observer....