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Man dies after falling into vat of chocolate


The Camden County prosecutor's office identified the victim as 29-year-old Vincent Smith II. He was a temporary worker at the Cocoa Services Inc. plant.

The bizarre accident took place at 10.30am on Wednesday morning. Mr Smith was standing on a plank above the vat loading chocolate into a tank where it is melted and mixed before being shipped elsewhere to be made into chocolate bars.

Jason Laughlin, the Prosecutor's spokesman, said a co-worker tried to shut off the machine and two others tried to pull Mr Smith out of the 8-foot-deep vat.

However, they could not save him because he was hit and fatally injured by the agitator that mixes the chocolate.

Fox News reported he was in the vat of boiling chocolate for 10 minutes before rescue crews arrived on the scene. When the ambulance crew finally pulled him out he was dead.

The tank, reportedly filled with chocolate bound for Hershey bars, was heated at 120F.

In July 2002, a 19-year-old died in a similar incident when he fell into a vat for mixing and melting chocolate at a plant in Montgomery County.
It sure sounds like an archaic way of doing things at this food processing plant, what was this said "plank" a 2'' x 4'' in redwood or Douglas Fir ? :dunno::rolleyes:

Another peculiarity is that it says both "boiling chocolate" and 120º ƒarenheit ? :confused:

You know, the agitator was probably a blessing all things considered, provided that it knocked the victim unconscious.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...dies-after-falling-into-vat-of-chocolate.html
 
Man Dies In Vat of Chocolate

http://www.philly.com/philly/news/breaking/20090708_Worker_falls_into_chocolate_vat__dies.html

Posted on Wed, Jul. 8, 2009

Worker dies after fall into Hershey’s-bound chocolate

By Matthew Spolar

Inquirer Staff Writer

A temp worker at a Camden chocolate processing plant died this morning after he fell into an eight-foot vat that was mixing and melting chocolate to be used in Hershey's candy.

Vincent Smith II, 29, of Camden, was standing atop a platform and tossing blocks of solid, raw chocolate into the tank, Jason Laughlin, spokesman for the Camden County Prosecutor's Office, said.

The tank was heated at 120 degrees Fahrenheit, and paddles inside stirred the chocolate as it was thrown in.

When Smith fell around 10:30 a.m., one of his three coworkers on the platform immediately rushed to turn the machine off and the two others tried to pull him out.

But Smith had been struck by one of the paddles, suffering fatal injuries. He was pronounced dead at the scene, and Camden firefighters pulled his chocolate-covered body out of the tank.

Smith worked at a plant owned by Lyons & Sons, Inc., which is contracted by Moorestown, NJ-based Cocoa Services, Inc. to process chocolate. Laughlin said the plant, which was once a Campbell's Soup Co. location, had been processing chocolate for six or seven years.

Laughlin said early investigation results indicate the death was accidental. The mixing process was a daily task performed by the workers, he said, and yesterday's batch would have been used in making Hershey products.

The federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration said it was investigating the incident. Lyons & Sons does not have any prior OSHA violations.

In July 2002, a 19-year-old worker died in a similar fashion when he fell into a vat for mixing and melting chocolate at a plant in Hatfield Township, Montgomery County.

An autopsy determined the man died of asphyxiation.
 
Re: Man Dies In Vat of Chocolate

Brings a whole new meaning to phrase "Death By Chocolate."
 
Re: Man Dies In Vat of Chocolate

Now in today's crappy economy did the Hershey people do the right thing and dump the chocolate or did they go press out Hershey bars for the discount dollar store with it.
 
Re: Man Dies In Vat of Chocolate

is that why i found a tooth in my last candy bar

all jokes aside it is sad my thoughts are with his familly
 
Re: Man Dies In Vat of Chocolate

Now in today's crappy economy did the Hershey people do the right thing and dump the chocolate or did they go press out Hershey bars for the discount dollar store with it.

No, they just relabeled the bars with "may contain human remains."
 
I don't think I would want a job that has me above a huge vat of hot liquid chocolate. You think they would at least have a harness that could secure a person and keep them from falling in.
 
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