Hot dog feud ends. Pair cleared of trying to rob 'M-A-S-H' eatery.

Hot dog feud embroiled Tony Packo's – the restaurant made famous by the 'M-A-S-H' television series – in scandal. Tony Packo III, accused of plotting to rob the business his grandfather founded, was acquitted of wrongdoing by an Ohio jury, bringing the hot dog feud to a close.

A stack of hot dogs at a hot dog eating contest is shown in this 2009 file photo. A family fight over the iconic Tony Packo's restaurant ended this week. Packo's grandson was cleared of trying to steal money from the business, ending a hot dog feud that jeapordized the future of the restaurant featured in the 'M-A-S-H' TV series.

Shannon Stapleton/Reuters/File

October 12, 2012

The grandson of an Ohio man who founded a hot dog eatery made famous on the TV series "M-A-S-H" was acquitted Thursday of scheming with a company controller to steal nearly $250,000 from the restaurant that sells its hot dog sauce and pickles in food stores nationwide.

Jurors took about an hour to come back with not guilty verdicts in favor of Tony Packo III and the former company controller, ending the hot dog feud.

Prosecutors accused the pair of working together to steal from the restaurant chain and said that Packo III believed he was entitled to more money even though he owned only a minority share of the business. His father and a cousin owned the majority.

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Defense attorneys told jurors that the charges were the result of a family feud and that Packo's cousin cooked up the theft accusations so that he could take over.

The family fight put the future of Tony Packo's in doubt after a bank foreclosed on its loans and a third party was put in charge of daily operations in the spring 2011. But a sale finalized in February put the restaurant in the hands of a private group aligned with Tony Packo Jr. and Tony Packo III.

Packo's became a household name in the 1970s when actor Jamie Farr portrayed a homesick U.S. soldier in the Korean War who longed for the hot dogs.

"If you're ever in Toledo, Ohio, on the Hungarian side of town, Tony Packo's got the greatest Hungarian hot dogs," Farr's character, Cpl. Max Klinger, said on an episode in 1976.

The original Packo's remains a tourist destination and is decorated with "M-A-S-H" memorabilia.

Howard University hoped to make history. Now it’s ready for a different role.

Its new ownership group said after the verdict that Tony Packo III and his father will stay onboard with the restaurant group.

Bob Bennett, who won the bidding for Packo's, said last year that he planned on putting Tony Packo III and his father in charge of the day-to-day operations of the five Packo's outlets around Toledo.