Food Roundup: Parmalat Founder Gets Prison, InBev OK with 'Bud' Loss, Jamba Juice Offers Oatmeal, and More
Parmalat founder gets 10 years -- An Italian court sentenced company founder and CEO Calisto Tanzi to ten years in prison for market-rigging, false accounting and obstructing market oversight. Seven others had been implicated but were acquitted. [Source: The Guardian]
InBev okay with 'Bud' trademark ruling -- Anheuser-Busch Inbev says a recent court ruling denying the company automatic trademark rights throughout the EU is "immaterial." The ruling means the rights to the "Bud" name in Europe will be determined country by country. [Source: FoodNavigatorUSA]
Jamba Juice offers oatmeal -- Jamba Juice has joined its competitors in selling oatmeal, but only at its Chicago stores. A national roll-out is scheduled for January. [Source: Nation's Restaurant News]
Mexico joins COOL complaint -- Mexico has joined Canada in filing a complaint with the World Trade Organization against U.S. country-of-origin labeling laws for beef and pork. The countries say the laws result in discrimination against their products. [Source: Meat&Poultry]