School incidents Over time, the challenge became more controversial, as some participants required medical attention. While Paqui warned that the One Chip Challenge should have been attempted by adults only, children and teens still accepted the stunt. In September 2022, the challenge was banned by Huerfano School District RE-1 in
Huerfano County, Colorado, as many children of their schools were accepting the challenge and being subsequently hospitalized. Other schools later followed suit, including
Lodi High School in
Lodi, California, and schools in
Pearland Independent School District in
Pearland, Texas. In November 2022, first responders were called to
Dunwoody High School in
Dunwoody, Georgia to treat a student who tried to participate in the challenge.
Death of Harris Wolobah In September 2023, a 14-year-old boy from
Worcester, Massachusetts named Harris Wolobah ate a Paqui chip, complained about a severe stomach ache, and died within a few hours. The company asked retailers to withdraw the challenge chips from sale and offered refunds to customers who had purchased them. A spokeswoman for Paqui said, "We care about all of our consumers and have made the decision to remove the product from shelves. Paqui presently has several representatives visiting retailers to retrieve the recalled product, in effort to prevent further injury through "under the tables" sales." The autopsy report obtained in May 2024, listed the cause of death as
cardiopulmonary arrest "in the setting of recent ingestion of food substance with high
capsaicin concentration." Harris also had an
enlarged heart and a
congenital heart defect, according to the report shared by Timothy McGuirk, spokesperson for the Massachusetts Executive Office of Public Safety and Security.
Ed Currie, who originally bred the Carolina Reaper, said "there's a lot more attention" now on
capsaicin in his industry. Currie called challenges like these "stupid" and stated that "We don't market our products to children at all." Currie went on to say that "I think, as an industry, we need to inform people of what they're getting into. To me, that's common sense." ==See also==