By Alex Clifton, Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
Saturday, January 17, 2004
First, it was hot coffee. Now, it's a baked potato.
A Boca Raton man, in a lawsuit filed this week in Palm Beach County Circuit Court, claims his esophagus was damaged by a scorching spud he ate in January 2003 at the Raindancer Steak House in West Palm Beach.
Thomas Gould is seeking unspecified damages, but at least $10,000 in medical bills for a two-day stay in an intensive-care unit, said Steven Falk, his Miami-based lawyer. Falk would not say which hospital provided the treatment.
"He couldn't even swallow," Falk said. "The potato basically melted his esophagus."
The rest at... http://www.palmbeachpost.com/busines...8f11500b3.html
Saturday, January 17, 2004
First, it was hot coffee. Now, it's a baked potato.
A Boca Raton man, in a lawsuit filed this week in Palm Beach County Circuit Court, claims his esophagus was damaged by a scorching spud he ate in January 2003 at the Raindancer Steak House in West Palm Beach.
Thomas Gould is seeking unspecified damages, but at least $10,000 in medical bills for a two-day stay in an intensive-care unit, said Steven Falk, his Miami-based lawyer. Falk would not say which hospital provided the treatment.
"He couldn't even swallow," Falk said. "The potato basically melted his esophagus."
The rest at... http://www.palmbeachpost.com/busines...8f11500b3.html


roceeds to rapidly engulfe said spud:



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