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Family of Colorado man who died after eating McDonald’s Quarter Pounders says he “put his trust in these restaurants”

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Family of man who died in McDonald’s E. coli outbreak says “it was very hard”


Family of man who died in McDonald’s E. coli outbreak says “it was very hard”

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There has been one death in the severe McDonald’s E. coli outbreak that affected more people in Colorado than any other state. That victim — JC Smith, 88 — lived in Grand Junction, and his family there says they are heartbroken.

“All he wanted to do was enjoy a hamburger with his wife. He put his trust in these restaurants, and all we really want is our dad back,” his daughter Debbie Bonnell said.

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JC Smith with his wife Doris  

Smith family


The outbreak has been linked to onions used on McDonald’s Quarter Pounder sandwiches. Investigators believe those onions came from the Taylor Farms distribution facility in Colorado Springs. Those onions were pulled from affected McDonald’s locations and Taylor Farms recalled yellow slivered onions sent to other food service operators.

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A quarter pounder with cheese

David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images


There have been 90 cases reported in 13 states, and Colorado had 26 people who reported the illness and had it traced back to this outbreak. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says most people recover from E. coli, but some people have seen severe complications. That was the case — at first — for Smith, whose full name was James Charles Smith.

Smith was a frequent McDonald’s customers

JC Smith and his wife Doris often went out for dinner in western Colorado and frequently visited the same McDonald’s, located not far from their home. They ordered the same meal every time: a Quarter Pounder.

After an early October visit he wound up very sick and in the hospital, according to Bonnell.

After four days there he was released. The doctors said lab tests showed it was a case of E. coli. He did an interview with the Mesa County Health Department before leaving.

“(The health department worker) asked ‘Where did my parents eat?’ because there was some type of outbreak,” Bonnell said. “But they were not going to say where yet.”

Sometime after that hospitalization, Smith went back to the McDonald’s and had another Quarter Pounder. This time, when he got symptoms again and went to the hospital, he wound up dying. His death was on Oct. 20.

Smith was likely one of the first people to be identified as having a positive E. coli case in the nationwide outbreak.

A strong, loving man

Bonnell says her dad was a Marine veteran and wasn’t slowing down in life.

“Before he got sick he just wanted to go and do things, even though the told me his feet can’t move as well,” she said.

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Smith family


He grew up in Mississippi and worked as a firefighter and later on a postal service employee. The couple moved to Colorado in the 1980s. In Colorado he was a small business owner and then a maintenance manager at Vail Run Resort. He returned to the south for a stint but then moved back again to Mesa County.

This year marked JC and Doris’s 70th year of marriage. They still took trips together and enjoyed playing with their great-grandchildren.

“All and all, my dad was a loving person. He was compassionate. If he needed to be stern, you didn’t want to be on that side,” Bonnell said.

He had the onions, she didn’t

While Smith and his wife always had Quarter Pounders at McDonald’s, Doris isn’t a fan of onions.

“I took mine off and gave mine to him,” Doris said. “I feel guilty now because I gave him some onions.”

Doris says on Oct. 3 she called her daughter to let her know the normally strong JC had suddenly become weak.

“Your daddy is very dizzy and he doesn’t want to get out of bed. He’s afraid he might fall,” she said, recalling the phone conversation.

Bonnell said she went over to her parents house right away.

“My mother had been up all night. He had been in the bathroom all night and he had the bloody diarrhea and he was so weak,” she said. “When I got here he was so weak he couldn’t walk.”

Following the four days at the hospital, the family wasn’t aware that there was any specific restaurant they should avoid.

“She didn’t tell me (for us) not to go out to eat anymore,” said Doris, referring to the doctor’s orders.

When JC got sick again after eating at McDonald’s, this time it was much worse.

“We watched my daddy have excruciating pain for many days — thrashing his arms and legs around. It was very hard,” Bonnell said. “I would hold his hand and pray and tell him to try and rest, ‘We are here with you’ and ‘We are getting help for you.'”

Two days after JC’s death health officials reported the outbreak to the public.

Sharing their story out of concern

Bonnell said she wasn’t planning on “my dad going this way.”

“We still had lots of plans,” she said.

Smith’s grandson Jim says his family is angry and they have questions about if more could have been done to save their beloved family member. But the reason they decided to speak publicly about what happened was because they are concerned for the health of others.

“If you are out there in that line of work … and you lose a level of concern or become complacent, accidents happen. Then you’re going to be held accountable. And when you talk about taking people’s loves ones and changing their lives permanently, others need to know,” he said.

The Smiths at this point have not filed a lawsuit against McDonald’s or anyone involved. Right now they say all they want is the man they loved back.



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Election 2024 live updates amid neck-and-neck polls as Harris and Trump make push in battleground states

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Supreme Court denies GOP request to block counting of certain provisional ballots in battleground Pennsylvania

The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday declined to freeze a decision from Pennsylvania’s highest court that required election officials to count provisional ballots cast by people whose mail ballots are invalid because they lacked mandatory secrecy envelopes.

The order from the justices means that election officials in the key battleground state must tally provisional ballots submitted on Election Day by voters who returned defective mail ballots, either because they didn’t include secrecy envelopes or failed to sign or date the outer envelope.


By Melissa Quinn

 

Trump holds final Wisconsin rally of campaign

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Former US President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump hits the microphone stand at a campaign rally at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, November 1, 2024.

KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI/AFP via Getty Images


Donald Trump held his final Wisconsin rally of the 2024 campaign Friday night, returning to Fiserv Forum, in Milwaukee, the site of the Republican convention, to deliver his closing message to the Badger State. In 2016, he narrowly won Wisconsin but he lost the state’s 10 electoral votes to Joe Biden in 2020.

The rally was plagued by microphone problems. People in the upper sections in the back of the arena couldn’t hear Trump, and he expressed frustration with the technical issues. 

“I’m seething. I’m working my ass off with a stupid mic,” Trump said. 

He then made crude gestures toward the mic stand, complaining it was too low. He held the microphone for the rest of the rally but complained about how heavy it was several times. He also threatened not to pay the contractor. 

“Do you want to see me knock the hell out of people backstage?” Trump asked. “I don’t ask for much. The only thing I ask for is a good mic. And this is the second time today that this happened.”

He loosely blamed campaign manager Susie Wiles for the microphone issue. 

By Olivia Rinaldi and Katrina Kaufman


 

Harris and Trump both rally in Milwaukee area Friday night

Kamala Harris Campaigns Across Wisconsin In Final Days Of Campaign
Democratic presidential nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris arrives at a campaign rally on Nov. 1, 2024 in West Allis, Wisconsin. 

Andrew Harnik / Getty Images


Both Donald Trump Trump and Kamala Harris campaigned in the Milwaukee area Friday night, going into the final weekend of the 2024 campaign. Harris didn’t deviate much from her standard stump speech in West Allis, Michigan, a Milwaukee suburb of Milwaukee. She urged people to vote who haven’t yet cast their ballots.

“No judgment, no judgment at all — but do get to it,” Harris said, before reviewing the list of her campaign promises and litany of grievances against Trump.

West Allis Wisconsin Rally With Cardi B and Kamala Harris
Belcalis Marlenis Cephus, known professionally as Cardi B, an American rapper and songwriter, says she will vote for Kamala Harris as she delivered remarks at a campaign rally in West Allis, Wisconsin, on Nov. 1, 2024.

Kyle Mazza/Anadolu via Getty Images


Cardi B, who spoke shortly before Harris, told the crowd she didn’t intend to vote this year, but “Kamala Harris changed my mind.” 

She called Trump a “bully” and said, “I can’t stand a bully, but just like Kamala, I stand up to one.” Cardi B repeatedly said she was nervous about speaking at the rally. Women, she said, have to work 10 times harder than men “and still, people question us.”


By Kristin Brown





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Illinois shooting survivor defies the odds after taking bullet to the brain

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Leslie Reeves and Chris Smith were shot during their first date. Only Smith survived. A look at how he defied the odds to make a remarkable recovery.

The scene of the crime

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The exterior of Chris Smith’s Farmersville, Illinois, home.

Illinois State Police


On the night before Thanksgiving 2021, Smith went on a first date with a woman named Leslie Reeves. The morning after, first responders found Smith in his Farmersville, Illinois, home with a bullet lodged in his brain. Reeves was dead.

Shooting victim in a coma

Chris Smith
Chris Smith was placed in a medically induced coma after brain surgery.

Chris Smith


EMTs rushed Smith to a hospital where he underwent brain surgery and was placed in a medically induced coma.

A bullet lodged in his brain

Chris Smith brain X-ray
An X-ray shows a bullet fragment in Chris Smith’s brain.

Chris Smith


Fragments of the bullet remained in Smith’s brain. His doctors say that to retrieve the bullet could risk causing further damage. 

Family support

Sharon Costanza and Chris Smith
Sharon Costanza with her son Chris Smith during his hospitalization.

Chris Smith


Smith’s mother, Sharon Costanza, and sister, Ashli Holcomb, sat by his side during his recovery. Doctors told them chances were very low that Smith would return to his previous level of functioning.

No memory

Chris Smith
Chris Smith shares his story with “48 Hours.”

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In January 2022,  Smith woke from his coma and asked where he was and what had happened. He remembered nothing from the night of the shooting. He had no memory of his date with Reeves, even though he’d been talking on the phone and messaging with her two weeks before the shooting. 

A poor prognosis

Dr. Victor Williams
Dr. Victor Williams, Chris Smith’s  neurosurgeon, talks with “48 Hours” correspondent Erin Moriarty.

CBS News


Due to Smith’s injuries, his neurosurgeon, Dr. Victor Williams, told Smith he likely would not be able to walk again.  Williams and his team were dedicated to doing everything they could to aid Chris’ recovery. 

A life forever changed

Chris Smith
Chris Smith

CBS News


Smith’s left leg is partially paralyzed from his hip to his knee. From his knee to his toes, he is completely paralyzed.After he left the hospital, he had to move back in with his mother. 

Regaining his strength

Chris Smith
After intense physical therapy, Chris Smith has made incredible strides. He’s much stronger than when he awoke from a coma, but he discovered there are gaps in his memory

CBS News


Most days, Smith goes to the gym and works on regaining his strength so that someday he’ll be able to walk without assistance.     

A survivor

Chris Smith and Michelle Albrecht
“She’s my angel,” Chris Smith says of Michelle Albrecht.

Chris Smith


Smith says he is determined to hold on tight to his new lease on life. He is back singing with his rock band. And he proposed to his fianceé, Michelle Albrecht. 

New aspirations

Chris Smith
Chris Smith is back as the lead singer with his rock band.

CBS News


‘Smith hopes to become a motivational speaker and has his own website.    

A miracle recovery

Sharon Costanza and Chris Smith
“I don’t know how he did make it. I don’t understand how he did. He’s a miracle,”  Sharon Costanza says of Chris Smith.

CBS News


Smith’s mother says his recovery is nothing short of a miracle.



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The Uplift: Trooper the dog

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The Uplift: Trooper the dog – CBS News


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An abandoned dog, left behind ahead of Hurricane Milton, is rescued by a trooper and given a second chance at life. Ukrainian ballet dancers use their strength and grace on and off the stage. Plus, a school custodian receives a big honor from the community.

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