If You Used Member’s Mark Super Greens and Got Sick
You are likely here because you want one answer fast: do you have a case.
For this outbreak, CDC and FDA linked illnesses to a specific imported lot of moringa leaf powder used in Member’s Mark Super Greens and related products. Official counts reached 11 illnesses in 7 states, with 3 hospitalizations and no reported deaths. CDC marked the outbreak as over on December 4, 2025.
A closed investigation does not close your legal rights. If your illness happened inside the exposure window, your claim may still be viable.
What Makes This Outbreak Legally Actionable
This investigation has stronger product linkage than many food poisoning cases:
- Federal traceback tied the outbreak to one moringa lot, Batch VFD/ORG/MORP/L/24.
- Public health labs found outbreak-matching Salmonella in multiple product samples.
- Epidemiology showed a high supplement exposure signal among interviewed patients.
When traceback, lab data, and patient interviews point in the same direction, liability arguments are often clearer than in a case built on symptoms alone.
Which Products Were Implicated
The FDA outbreak page and recall notices identify:
- Member’s Mark Super Greens powder sold through Sam’s Club
- Food To Live Organic Moringa Leaf Powder
- Food To Live Organic Supergreens Powder Mix
- Africa Imports Organic Moringa Leaf Powder
If you still have containers, lot information, or order confirmations, keep everything. Those records can matter as much as medical charts.
Who May Qualify for a Claim
You do not need every box checked before contacting a lawyer. But the strongest claims usually include:
- Salmonella diagnosis from stool testing or related medical records
- Product use tied to the outbreak window
- Costs and disruption you can document, such as ER visits, prescriptions, missed wages, or travel for care
People who were not hospitalized may still have substantial claims, especially when symptoms were prolonged or caused income loss.
Steps to Take Now
- Ask your provider for copies of test results, discharge notes, and follow-up records.
- Save product packaging and screenshots of purchase history.
- Build a dated timeline from first symptoms through recovery.
- Keep receipts for medication, urgent care, transportation, and missed work documentation.
- Speak with counsel early so evidence requests go out while records are still easy to retrieve.
Why Timing Still Matters After the CDC Closes an Outbreak
The outbreak is over from a public-health tracking perspective. Civil deadlines are different and vary by state. Evidence also gets harder to secure over time, especially retail records and product custody details.
That is why high-intent cases move early, even when the CDC page says “outbreak over.”
Talk With a Member’s Mark Super Greens Salmonella Lawyer
Ron Simon & Associates focuses exclusively on food poisoning litigation. If you or a family member became ill after consuming one of the products tied to this outbreak, our team can evaluate your claim and explain next steps in plain terms.
You pay no upfront fee. We only get paid if we recover compensation for you.