By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) - General Mills Inc
The release was sent around midnight Eastern time on PR Newswire, a large U.S. distributor of corporate press releases and a unit of Britain's United Business Media Ltd
Some major news media outlets reported contents from the release before the hoax was confirmed.
The fake release said Obama late Tuesday evening "ordered a full investigation into the General Mills supply chain in most major global markets" following voluntary recalls on food products, "most notably its cereal and fast food items in the US, UK, Europe and Asia."
General Mills spokeswoman Kirstie Foster said: "The release was entirely false."
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission's last posted recall for General Mills dates from 1999, though the company did recall some Nature Valley granola nut clusters last July as a precaution because of possible tainting with salmonella.
General Mills has dozens of food brands, including Cheerios, Green Giant, Haagen-Dazs, Pillsbury and Wheaties.
PR Newswire and Business Wire, a unit of Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc
In a statement, PR Newswire said it has "stringent editorial procedures and safeguards" to thwart hoaxes, and breaches are "extremely rare." It said it has alerted regulatory authorities" and will cooperate in any probe.
General Mills said it is also investigating, and "law enforcement is involved."
Fake releases are often issued to manipulate stock prices. The fake General Mills release is the latest in a series of hoaxes targeting publicly traded companies.
Last July, several media outlets received faxed statements on a Sunday about a nonexistent buyout offer for audio equipment maker Harman International Industries Inc
And in 2000, Emulex Corp
DETAILS
The fake General Mills release carries a New York dateline while General Mills is based in Minneapolis, spells "yogurt" as "yoghurt," and has a contact phone number located in New Zealand. In addition, the contact person is shown as Steve Sanger, a former General Mills chief executive.
Reuters
General Mills said Fox Business News, also owned by News Corp, also posted incorrect material.
"The false release was issued by a press release service and as part of a direct feed was published on Dow Jones Newswires," Dow Jones spokeswoman Emily Edmonds said. "A kill notice was issued, and a subscriber notice was immediately published on the wire."
Reuters said: "Reuters issued an advisory to clients as soon as it was discovered that the press release was a hoax."
A call made to the number shown on the fake release was answered by a man who identified himself as Tom Reed.
"People have been calling all day," he said, declining to provide more detail because he had dinner guests.
Sanger was not immediately available for comment.
Shares of General Mills were up 0.5 percent at $38.36 in late afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
(Additional reporting by Brad Dorfman, Christopher Kaufman and Jennifer Saba; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick and Lisa Von Ahn)