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Arby’s manager died after being trapped in freezer, lawsuit says

May 31, 2023 at 4:14 a.m. EDT
A nighttime shot of an Arby’s restaurant. Yellow police caution tape cordons off the building.
The Arby’s restaurant in New Iberia, La., where Nguyet Le was found dead on May 11. (KATC)
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On the morning of May 11, workers who arrived to start their shifts at a Louisiana Arby’s found the doors locked and, with no way to enter, returned home. That evening, a regional supervisor noticed from afar that no sales had been recorded for the day and asked employee Nguyen Le to check on the store, which was managed by his mother, Nguyet.

He arrived to a horrifying discovery: his mother collapsed facedown on the floor of the restaurant’s walk-in freezer in the fetal position.

Nguyet had become trapped in the freezer after arriving at the restaurant to open that morning, according to Le’s attorney and a lawsuit filed by Le and his family.

The restaurant’s operators had neglected to fix the latch on the freezer door, which had been broken since as early as August, the lawsuit alleges. Employees had been using a screwdriver to open and close the door and propping it open with a box of oil.

Nguyet, who was working at the Louisiana restaurant on a temporary assignment, died of hypothermia after becoming trapped in the freezer, the lawsuit says.

Le and several other family members on Thursday sued Arby’s, brand owner Inspire Brands, Arby’s franchisee Turbo Restaurants and restaurant management services company Sun Holdings, which owns Turbo Restaurants, in Harris County, Tex., alleging gross negligence.

An Arby’s spokesperson said the New Iberia restaurant is independently owned and operated by Turbo Restaurants and deferred comment to the franchisee and Sun Holdings.

Sun Holdings’ counsel did not provide comment. A New Iberia police spokesperson said an investigation into Nguyet’s death is ongoing.

Nguyet, 63, was a widow and mother of four who lived in Harris County and served as restaurant manager of a Houston Arby’s, according to Le’s lawsuit.

Through their attorney, Le and his siblings declined to comment. Nguyet’s death devastated the “very, very tightknit” family, said Paul Skrabanek, Le’s attorney.

In February, Nguyet’s supervisor had directed her to manage the Arby’s in New Iberia, La., on a temporary assignment, the lawsuit states.

“I think she was a great employee,” Skrabanek said. “They trusted her, she did a great job [and] she was diligent at what she did.”

The assignment, which was intended to last about a month, began approximately six weeks before Nguyet’s death. It was extended after four weeks, Skrabanek said, and Nguyet was still working at the Louisiana Arby’s on May 11 when she arrived about 9 a.m. to open the restaurant.

No other restaurant employees were present when Nguyet became trapped, the lawsuit states. An investigator later reported that the inside of the freezer door was bloodied and speculated that Nguyet had beat her hands on the door in a panic, pounding for help.

Le, Nguyet’s oldest son, who lived with her and also accompanied her to work at the Louisiana Arby’s, discovered his mother around 6 p.m. after arriving to check on the restaurant. Le called an ambulance for Nguyet, but she was pronounced dead at the scene, KATC initially reported.

Nguyet’s manager, the regional supervisor, was aware of the faulty freezer door at the restaurant to which Nguyet was assigned, Le’s lawsuit alleges. According to a former employee at the Louisiana Arby’s, Nguyet’s supervisor had visited the New Iberia restaurant in August when the broken door latch was reported, but no repairs were ever made, according to the lawsuit.