A Mountain View town council member accused of shooting a 17-year-old boy in the face could lose his seat this spring.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has posted an update on a granola bar recall initiated last year, labeling it as “Class ...
Coca-Cola has recalled some of its soft drinks in Europe after higher-than-normal levels of a chemical called chlorate were detected in bottles and cans at a production plant in Belgium.
Coca-Cola Beverages South Africa (CCBSA) has moved swiftly to alleviate concerns among South African consumers following the company’s recall of certain soft drink products in Europe.
Coca-Cola has recalled a variety of soft drinks from 10 countries because of chemical contamination. Coca‑Cola Europacific Partners said the recall was due to high levels of chlorate.
Coca-Cola Europacific Partners Belux has launched a major recall of multiple products across Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and the UK due to the detection of elevated levels of chlorate.
Coca-Cola's bottling partner wrote it was recalling ... Move follows similar recall in European countries earlier this week The recall follows a similar move by the company earlier in the week ...
Coca-Cola Europacific Partners previously apologised for the recall in some European countries, which it said was brought to discovered thanks to a routine check at its production site in Ghent.
The European bottling unit of Coca-Cola said Monday that it had ordered a major recall of Coke, Sprite and other beverages after detecting high levels of chlorate, which poses potential health risks.
Coca-Cola has recalled "all variants" of multiple beverages ... with drinking water being by far the main contributor," the European Commission says on its website. Consuming high levels of ...
Coca-Cola recalls its drinks in some countries across Europe after detecting ''higher levels'' of the chemical chlorate. Soda packaging is seen in a grocery store in Las Vegas on Nov. 17 ...
BRUSSELS — Coca-Cola has recalled some of its soft drinks in Europe after higher-than-normal levels of a chemical called chlorate were detected in bottles and cans at a production plant in Belgium.
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