Friends of peanut executive laud him

Friends of peanut executive laud him

Associated Press

Stewart Parnell (left) president of Peanut Corporation of America, leaves an Energy and Commerce Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee hearing on the salmonella outbreak associated with peanut butter.

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LYNCHBURG -- David Charnock, a disabled cancer patient who lives on Tangier Island in the Chesapeake Bay, relies on free medical airlifts to make it to the hospital in Norfolk, and the pilot who volunteers to fly him there is Stewart Parnell.

If the name is familiar, it's because Parnell is the president of the Lynchburg-based peanut company at the heart of a nationwide salmonella outbreak that has sickened hundreds and possibly killed as many as nine.

But Charnock doesn't think of Parnell as the peanut executive who refused last week to answer questions from a congressional panel, or as the man whose beleaguered company is now the subject of a criminal investigation: Charnock said he thinks of Parnell as the kind fellow who flies a single-engine Ovation to help keep him healthy.

"He's just as nice as he could be. He'd do anything for you," Charnock said yesterday. "The only good thing about being sick is you meet nice people."

Friends of Parnell said the executive's character is most accurately defined by his kind nature, not by the nightly newscasts about his company, the Peanut Corp. of America, which they contend unfairly portray him as a cartoon villain.

Parnell has for years been a volunteer for Angel Flight Mid-Atlantic, an organization that pairs aircraft pilots and airplane owners with patients in need of free medical transportation. Parnell is also on standby for organ-transplant patients -- a status that could have him up in the dead of night to ferry a patient to a waiting operating table hundreds of miles away, said Catherin Wallen of Angel Flight.

"Everything I've read in the media has made him appear in a bad light, and it's ridiculous for people who know him," said Richard Stone, a longtime tennis partner of Parnell's who said Parnell has occasionally canceled tennis matches in order to pick up and deliver patients in his airplane.

"As for character, I've never known him to lie, cheat or steal -- ever," Stone said. "Most people are lax with the little things, but he's not."

Friends said the Parnell they know shows up at fundraising events for the Humane Society of the United States and attends Peakland United Methodist Church. He likes boating, the outdoors, sports, dogs and his family, they said.

The public view of Parnell is something altogether different. Last week, the congressional committee investigating the salmonella outbreak and the recall of Peanut Corp. products released e-mails written by Parnell in which he complained that salmonella tests are "costing us huge $$$$$."

More than a dozen lawsuits have been filed against the company, which last week declared bankruptcy.

Former neighbor Mark Borel said Parnell is "not this villain he's being made out to be."

"He's a great guy," Borel said. "He's very charitable, active in the community. He's just an all-around good guy, supportive. When I see him on TV, I just can't believe it."

Parnell, 54, is head of a company that his father, Hugh, founded in 1977, and the company has production plants in Suffolk; Plainview, Texas; and Blakely, Ga. The Blakely plant, according to investigators, was the source of salmonella-tainted products that sickened more than 600 people in 44 states. A recall of Peanut Corp. products forced Parnell to shut down all three plants.

Virginia peanut farmer Jeffrey Pope of Southampton County said he has never had any problems working with Parnell's Suffolk plant. "The dealings have always been great," he said. "They're outstanding, and they're a business we really need."

Stone said he hopes the American public will come to know the Parnell he knows.

"Just because he's not in the Chamber of Commerce doesn't mean he's not an outgoing and sociable person," Stone said. "He doesn't toot his own horn, but he's funny and self-deprecating. He'll crack you up.

"But he doesn't talk a lot. He doesn't seek the limelight."

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by vttova on February 19, 2009 at 11:50 am

“the neighbor boy was always so quiet, kept to himself mostly, never hurt me, bless his heart.
A murderer you say? such a nice boy”

Flag Comment Posted by fire law on February 18, 2009 at 6:08 pm

At least the people he murdered died eating what they loved. Good ole Central Virginia agricultural product. Yum yum. Rat feces and urine with my peanut butter.

Flag Comment Posted by free2 on February 18, 2009 at 9:25 am

let’s all pretend we’ve never heard the terms write off, written off
how often is actual sacrifice made to benefit another

Flag Comment Posted by lablover on February 17, 2009 at 8:56 pm

I’m sure the people who are dead now because of Mr. Parnell’s greed and the families who are left with nothing will be comforted to know this. 

It’s funny to see Borel all over the news saying what a “great, charitable” guy he is when there is little to nothing to exemplify this.  There is plenty however to demonstrate that he was neither.  Perhaps there is a business relationship between the two and the community leaders who commented in earlier articles in the N & A are just mistaken.  I doubt it.

No one claimed that Mr. Parnell didn’t buy peanuts from farmers or have a private plane to fly at his discretion or have builders build things for him.  What he is accused of is ignoring basic health and safety issues and foregoing any common sense for profit.  That has cost many their lives and untold others great pain and sacrifice. 

This story is a joke and the N & A should be ashamed of itself.  I guess this was their poor attempt to cover the lack of insight and reporting on their part over the past several weeks.  Go to the NYT or LA Times and read the articles which tell in much greater detail just what went on at these plants in Ga and Tx.

Flag Comment Posted by Alice on February 17, 2009 at 8:45 pm

There are many facets that make up the person…Parnell is a good person in many ways - as is Madoff - as are many others who have made bad choices for personal gain.  He now has a chance to come clean with offering the public, especially the families of the victims his unadorned testimony regarding how/why he made the choice to “turn them loose”.  People love to forgive….but you have to ask for it first.

Flag Comment Posted by DirtRat on February 17, 2009 at 7:36 pm

Very nice of him to volunteer to fly for others but who was paying for his flight time?  He was allowed to enjoy his pastime (flying) due to those who were unknowingly buying his deadly and toxic products that he KNOWINGLY and INTENTIONALLY shipped out! People got sick and DIED directly because of his intentional actions.  Anything more to add here?

Flag Comment Posted by In The Middle on February 17, 2009 at 4:28 pm

Flying someone to a medical appointment does does justify knowingly selling a contaminated product to avoid a temporary financial loss.  This man is innocent until proven guilty, but at this point it appears he should spend the rest of his life in prison.

Flag Comment Posted by CutiePie on February 17, 2009 at 1:58 pm

Just because he does good deeds doesn’t mean he’s an ethical business man. The two are completely separate. I’m glad he did a few good things, but that doesn’t mean that he wasn’t greedy enough to break the law where his business was concerned.

Flag Comment Posted by bigjimm on February 17, 2009 at 12:43 pm

I would think someone that upstanding would have stood and fought for his company if there was no wrongdoing. Instead he closed up and sought the protection of the bankruptcy court.
He has also been in hiding and is letting others speak for him. Not exactly a standup guy.
The smoke here is so thick that it’s hard to see but our friends and neighbors really don’t know that much about us if we are trying to conceal.
Where there is so much smoke there has to be a pretty big fire. The truth will come out, eventually.

Flag Comment Posted by I_have_an_opinion on February 17, 2009 at 11:41 am

This article points out how foolish all you sheep are out there, following the media lead into finding this guy guilty before the facts are collected and an informed decision made.

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