VANCOUVER -- After vandals reportedly discharged a stink bomb at Real Housewives of Vancouver participant Jody Claman's West Vancouver catering business in March, health inspectors ordered it temporarily shut down.

Sometime after closing on Thursday Mar. 21, someone spray-painted the door of 1425 Clyde Ave., home to Glass House Couture and Jody's Fine Food and Catering. The vandal or vandals also spread the noxious-smelling substance in the area.

Claman said the substance was pushed through her mail slot by an angry reality show fan and called the stink bomb an "act of terrorism" that forced her to throw out her inventory and shut down for two months.

"It was a fan, obviously, who dislikes me immensely because of the light that I have been shown," Claman said. "When people do acts like that on people's livelihoods, that's an act of terrorism."

However, an anonymous user from the radical animal rights group Animal Liberation Front has taken credit for the attack. Activists posted a statement on the ALF website a few days later, claiming responsibility for spray-painting “ALF” on the door of Glass House Couture and spraying a noxious chemical inside.

The activists said they targeted the store because Claman sells fur there and because she is known to wear fur on TV.

“Jody Claman supports and promotes the abuse, torture and murder of tens of thousands of innocent furry animals on her stupid TV show Real Housewives of Vancouver,” the statement reads. “She has a reputation for wearing dozens of dead animals in the form of her grotesque full fur coats. She prances around through her useless, meaningless life looking like a psychotic bastard child of Cruella Deville (sic) and Barbie.”

Claman said the "three-to-four-week-old distilled potato juice" permeated her stores with a smell akin to rotten milk, but there was never any health hazard.

Vancouver Coastal Health Authority spokeswoman Tiffany Akins said that investigators arrived on March 22 and found what they believed to be butyric acid, which is derived from milk and is harmful to ingest in large amounts and can be an irritant.

"An environmental health officer came to the premises and issued a closing order," Akins said. "Staff in the catering business were preparing food in the kitchen after the bomb was released.

"The operator was required to discard of all food that was in the open and sanitize the surfaces of the kitchen."

Vancouver Coastal Health Authority closed the catering business until May 6, when a follow-up inspection lifted the order and deemed it safe to reopen.

West Vancouver Police spokesman Const. Jeff Palmer said that there are no suspects in the stink bomb incident.

"The investigation is still open but, that I'm aware of, we haven't received new information and we don't have an identified suspect," Palmer said.

The reality show participant recently unveiled a new line of canned dog and cat food.

With a file from The North Shore News