• Former Hereford House gay worker allegedly urinated in food, rubbed it

    From useapen@21:1/5 to All on Wed May 22 05:37:19 2024
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, kc.general, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics

    A former worker at the Hereford House in Leawood allegedly posted videos
    online of himself urinating in food and rubbing food items on his
    genitals, according to court documents released Wednesday afternoon.

    The Johnson County district attorney charged 21-year-old Jace Christian
    Hanson, of Kansas City, last week with one felony count of unlawfully adulterating or contaminating food at the restaurant at 5001 Town Center
    Drive in Leawood’s Town Center Plaza.

    The court documents reveal some answers that customers have sought after
    the food contamination first was announced, including what type of bodily fluids were involved and how Hanson had allegedly contaminated the food.

    According to the affidavit, videos posted on a website under the username
    of “Vandalizer” showed a man urinating in restaurant-style food bins,
    pressing his penis and buttocks against food and using his feet to touch
    food items.

    The titles of the videos made reference to the specific acts shown in each
    one, including, “Spitting on everything in restaurant part 2.”

    FBI RECEIVES TIP ABOUT CONTAMINATED FOOD

    The FBI contacted Leawood police, notifying investigators about a tip on a restaurant employee contaminating food by urinating in food or rubbing
    food items on his genitals and posting videos online.

    The FBI provided thumbnail photographs of the videos to police. A special
    agent with the FBI checked Internet Protocol addresses, the numeric
    addresses given to a computer connected to the internet, and located an associated phone number belonging to Hanson.

    Due to public health concerns, the FBI pinged the phone’s location, which revealed it was near Town Center Drive and Roe Avenue. A detective later checked the parking lot of the Hereford House and found a vehicle
    registered to Hanson.

    Three Leawood detectives contacted the restaurant’s manager, who called
    the head chef to the front. Police showed the chef images from the videos,
    and the chef quickly recognized one of the thumbnails to be the Au Jus
    sauce for the restaurant, according to the affidavit.

    Hanson, who was at the restaurant working, was asked to step out of the kitchen. One of the detectives observed the shoes he was wearing allegedly
    were “consistent with the shoes observed in at least three video
    thumbnails.”

    According to the affidavit, Hanson was then asked if he was aware of any
    food contamination. ”I’ll just be straight up, yeah,” Hanson said,
    according to the affidavit. He added that he’d “just been doing stupid s--
    t.”

    REQUESTED TO MAKE VIDEOS

    Hanson allegedly said he had been in contact with men online who he communicated with using dating apps and who had made requests for him to
    make videos.

    The acts, which he described to law enforcement, were to be filmed and
    posted online, he said, according to court documents. Hanson said he met
    the men through the dating apps.

    They also communicated through Snapchat, Hanson said. When asked to
    clarify what he was doing, Hanson allegedly told police that he had been urinating in food, rubbing food on his penis and shoving food items down
    his pants.

    Hanson estimated he had contaminated food in more than 20 incidents.

    Hanson told police he worked at the restaurant for about a month and the
    first time he allegedly contaminated food was about a week and half after
    he started because he did not enjoy the job at first.

    Although he told police he started to enjoy the job slightly more, the
    acts continued, according to the affidavit.

    The last known act Hanson admitted to occurred on April 23. He told police
    he put lettuce down his pants against his penis before returning it to the storage tray to be served later.

    ”Hanson acknowledged that while he was not sure how much contaminated food
    was served to customers, he is sure that food products that he
    contaminated in various ways were served and consumed by unsuspecting customers,” a Leawood police detective wrote in the affidavit.

    Hanson was arrested at 2 p.m. April 25 and was booked into Johnson County
    jail, where he is being held on $100,000 bond.

    Prosecutors charged Hanson the next day. When prosecutors announced the following Tuesday that Hanson had been charged, they asked customers who
    fell ill after eating at the restaurant between March 26 and April 25 to contact Leawood police at tips@leawood.org or 913-266-0696.

    As of Friday, nearly 140 people had contacted police regarding the investigation, said Capt. Brad Robbins with the Leawood Police Department.

    Not all of the callers had gotten ill, some were seeking additional information. Once it learned of the tampering, the restaurant destroyed
    all the food and thoroughly cleaned and sanitized the kitchen and adjacent areas, Hereford House said in a statement.

    An attorney representing Hanson did not immediately respond to a request
    from The Star for comment Wednesday afternoon.

    https://www.kansascity.com/news/local/crime/article288422681.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)