Resident sues pizza parlor for alleged poisoning
- Share via
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- A Surf City man is seeking legal damages from a
local pizza restaurant after drinking what he alleges was a beer laced
with a poisonous chemical.
Steven Dominguez, 37, has filed a suit against Lamppost Pizza, owned
by Greg and Garry Gardner, at 7071 Warner Ave., as well as the Santa
Ana-based Draft Beer Maintenance Co., for lost wages and medical costs
incurred from drinking beer that apparently contained a few ounces of the
chemical potassium hydroxide.
“In a sense it’s like Drano,” said Bill Marler, a Seattle-based
attorney representing Dominguez. “It’s a caustic substance commonly used
to flush out and clean the pipelines between the keg and tap in a
restaurant.”
Lamppost owners have said the incident was a horrible occurrence, but
were unable to comment on the particulars of the lawsuit.
Insurance officials for Draft Beer Maintenance, however, have said
they have been in contact with Marler regarding Dominguez’s claim.
“We have been attempting to negotiate a resolution with the attorney
in this matter,” said Debra Guillory, claim handler for the insurance
company Golden Eagle, adding that she is waiting to hear from Dominguez’s
lawyer.
Dominguez, a painting contractor by trade, dined at Lamppost with his
wife, Venus, 9-year-old son, Drake, and a family friend Dec. 8 after
watching a soccer game earlier that day, Marler added.
According to Dominguez’s claim, Lamppost employees offered him a
sample of one the restaurant’s house beers, which allegedly contained the
potassium hydroxide.
Upon drinking the sample, the claim reads, Dominguez felt a burning
sensation in his mouth, throat and stomach, ultimately vomiting and
throwing up blood.
He was initially treated at Huntington Beach Hospital for severe
caustic injuries, has experienced gastrointestinal bleeding, and most
recently underwent surgery to replace damaged portions of his esophagus
with intestinal tissue.
Marler said his client is looking to recoup medical costs that have
totaled more than $300,000 to date, as well an undisclosed amount in lost
wages since he has not been able to work since the incident.
“Obviously, it is a very life-altering thing for Steve,” Marler went
on, adding that Dominguez hasn’t been able to eat normally since his
hospitalization. “How and what he eats is going to change.”
As of last week, Lamppost Pizza or the Draft Beer Maintenance Co. have
not filed any legal challenge to Dominguez’s suit.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.