Whole Foods to stop selling products made by inmates

NEW YORK - Whole Foods (WFM) says it will stop selling products made by a prison labor program after a protest against the practice at one of its stores in Texas.

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The company said the products should be out of its stores by April 2016, if not sooner. Whole Foods said it has sold tilapia and goat cheese produced through a Colorado inmate program since at least 2011.

Michael Allen, a prison reform advocate, said Whole Foods informed him of its change in policy after he organized a protest at one of the company's stores in Houston this past weekend.

Michael Silverman, a Whole Foods spokesman, says the company initially sourced the products because it was a way to "help people get back on their feet and eventually become contributing members of society."

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