The only two McDonald's restaurants in the United States that were
serving food prepared according to Islamic law have stopped several
weeks after a $700,000 settlement over a lawsuit that alleged the items
weren't consistently halal.
The fast-food giant said in a statement Monday that the
locations in the Detroit suburb of Dearborn, which has a large Muslim
population, are no longer offering a halal McChicken sandwich or Chicken
McNuggets in order "to focus on our national core menu."
The corporation added it takes into account "local and
dietary preferences," and supports its franchisees in Dearborn. Neither
the statement nor a spokeswoman said whether McDonald's decision was
related to the lawsuit.
The lawsuit, brought by customer Ahmed Ahmed in 2011,
technically covered anyone who bought the halal-advertised products
between September 2005 and January from the restaurant on Ford Road and
another one in Dearborn with a different owner. The second location
wasn't a defendant or a focus of the investigation.
A letter sent to McDonald's and restaurant franchisee
Finley's Management, by attorney Kassem Dakhlallah's firm Jaafar and
Mahdi Law Group, said Ahmed had "confirmed from a source familiar with
the inventory" that the restaurant had sold non-halal food "on many
occasions."
In the settlement notice, Finley's Management said it
"has a carefully designed system for preparing and serving halal such
that halal chicken products are labeled, stored, refrigerated, and
cooked in halal-only areas." The company added it trains its employees
on preparing halal food and "requires strict adherence to the process."
McDonald's attorney Thomas McNeill said during a
hearing earlier this year that the investigations and negotiations
proved that if a problem arose, "it was isolated and rare."
The
settlement is being shared by a customer named Ahmed Ahmed, a
Muslim-run Detroit health clinic, Dearborn's Arab American National
Museum and lawyers.
Dakhlallah said Monday that "there is no shortage of
halal options for consumers" in Dearborn, home to one of the largest
mosques in North America. Overall, the Detroit area is home to about
150,000 Muslims.
"If the result of the class-action lawsuit against
McDonald's and the Ford Road franchise was that companies who were
falsely advertising halal products stopped pretending to be halal
compliant, that's a good thing for consumers," he said. "I doubt that
truly halal compliant businesses would stop offering halal products."
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