Human tooth found in Tesco sausages
Filed under: Shopping & Deals
Tim Ireland/PA Wire
So how could this happen, and what are your rights when something weird shows up in your food?
Know your rights
Supermarket Sweep - Tips & Advice
Trouble at Tesco
The tooth
Tony Hinds, 27, told the Daily Mail of his grisly find back in August last year. He said he bought a packet of Tesco Finest Pork and Chive sausages, and when he and his 21-year-old fiancee Lauren Gooch opened the packet, they discovered a human tooth - complete with filling.According to the Metro newspaper, Hinds claimed his fiancee had been very distressed. He said: "She was really angry about the whole thing and she didn't touch a sausage for about a month after that."
The supermarket sent the tooth off for analysis, and wrote to Hinds in September apologising for the 'piece of bone' found in the sausages. They also sent £15 in vouchers to compensate for the shock.
Hinds didn't feel this went far enough so he wrote back asking for confirmation it was a human tooth. The supermarket confirmed this, but said it couldn't clarify how the tooth had made its way into the sausages. It also sent another £10 voucher.
Tesco said in a statement that it was confident that the tooth was not in the sausage when it arrived in the store, as the supplier used metal detectors on everything leaving the factory - which would have been set off by the tooth.
Your rights
As we reported yesterday, there are plenty of instances when odd things show up in food. Mice seem to be the most common surprising find, but there have been instances where pieces of metal, nails, and in one case a live frog, have found their way into packets and tins.There are rare cases when someone gets serious compensation. In September 2010 Stephen Forse received £17,000 from Premier Foods after finding a dead mouse in a loaf of bread. They accepted that they had not maintained acceptable standards at their bakery, and he took them to court for the payout.
In most cases, especially ones where it's difficult to know where the blame lies, the compensation is somewhat less impressive. All the retailer has to do under the Sale of Goods Act is to offer a refund or replacement. In most cases they will offer a goodwill gesture too. The £25 offered to Hinds is not unusual.
Of course, if you can find a newspaper to pay you some money for a story then that's a useful bonus too.
10 of the biggest consumer rip-offs
- 1. Mobile data roaming charges<p> <span style="text-align: left; ">Using a mobile phone to make and receive calls, send texts and browse the web while abroad can be extremely costly – especially if you are travelling outside the European Union (EU), where calls can cost up to 10 times as much as at home.</span></p> <div> </div> <div> To avoid high charges, Carphone Warehouse suggests tourists ensure a data cap is in place, use applications to check data usage, turn off 'data roaming', avoid data-intensive applications such as Google Maps and YouTube and use wi-fi spots to update social networking sites.</div>

- 2. PPI<p> <span style="text-align: left; ">Payment Protection Insurance (PPI) is supposed to help people to continue meeting their loan, mortgage or credit card repayments if they fall ill or lose their jobs. However, policies are often over-priced, riddled with exclusions and sold to people who could not make a claim if they needed to.</span></p> <div> </div> <div> At one point, sale of this cover - which was often included automatically in loan repayments - was estimated to boost the banks' profits by up to £5 billion a year.</div> <div> </div> <div> Now, though, consumers who were mis-sold PPI can fight back by complaining to the bank or lender concerned and taking their case to the Financial Ombudsman Service (08000 234567) should the response prove unsatisfactory.</div>

- 3. The Lottery<p> It could be you, but let's face it, it probably won't be. In fact, buying a ticket for the Lotto only gives you a 1 in 13.9 million chance of winning the jackpot.</p> <div> </div> <div> With odds like that, you would almost certainly be better off hanging on to your cash and saving it in a high-interest account.</div>

- 4. Budget airlines<p> No-frills airlines such as EasyJet may promote rock-bottom prices on their websites. But the overall fare you pay can be surprisingly high once extras such as luggage and credit card payment fees have been added - a process known as drip pricing.</p> <div> </div> <div> Taking one piece of hold baggage on a return EasyJet flight, for example, adds close to £20 to the cost of your flight, while paying by credit card increases the price by a further £10.</div> <div> </div> <div> It may therefore be worth comparing the total cost with that of a flight with a standard airline such as British Airways.</div>

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- 6. Supermarket 'deals'<p> Supermarkets such as Tesco and Asda often run promotions under which you can, for example, get three products for the price of two.</p> <div> </div> <div> However, it is only worth taking advantage of these deals if you will actually use the products. Otherwise, you are simply buying for the sake of it, which is a waste of your hard-earned cash.</div> <div> </div> <div> To avoid paying over the odds, it is also worth checking the price per kilo to ensure that larger <a href="http://money.aol.co.uk/2012/05/24/supermarkets-slammed-for-multi-buy-rip-offs/">'economy' packs really are cheaper</a> than the smaller versions.</div>

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- 9. Overseas withdrawals/card payments<p> Overseas money transfers or travel money purchases attract the same high rate of interest as credit card cash withdrawals.</p> <div> </div> <div> Worse still, most credit cards – and debit cards – also charge you a foreign loading fee if you use them to make purchases while abroad.</div> <div> </div> <div> You can, however, <a href="http://money.aol.co.uk/2012/02/17/how-to-avoid-overseas-bank-fees/">avoid these charges</a> by using a Saga Platinum or Nationwide Building Society credit card.</div>

- 10. Premium rate phone lines<p> Numbers starting 0871 cost 10p or more from a landline, while those starting 09 can cost more than £1 a minute <a href="http://money.aol.co.uk/2012/03/21/call-0800-0808-and-0870-numbers-for-free-from-your-mobile/">from a mobile phone</a>.</p> <div> </div> <div> And the operators of these high-cost phone lines, some of which are banks, often get a cut of the call charges.</div> <div> </div> <div> Most 09 numbers are linked to scams and should therefore be avoided at all costs, while 0871 numbers can often be bypassed by searching for an alternative local rate numbers on the saynoto0870.com.</div>










