Rice farmers win release of lawsuit documents
Agriculture News from HPJ - Your Ag News Source

Rice farmers win release of lawsuit documents

LONOKE, Ark. (AP)--A judge has released a handful of the million-plus documents offered under seal in a lawsuit over genetically modified rice. Plaintiffs say the documents aid their case, and a defense lawyer says the papers will make no difference.

Some Arkansas rice farmers claim they lost money after genetically altered rice grown by the Riceland Foods Inc., cooperative accidentally entered the food supply. A number of nations stopped buying Arkansas rice and producers had to sell rice for less in other countries, their lawsuit says.

Parties in the case have made available more than a million pages of documents to lawyers handling the case, with most of them filed under seal pending a review by Lonoke County Circuit Judge Phillip Whiteacre. Whiteacre ordered nine pages released Aug. 20 after plaintiffs argued the documents didn't include any trade secrets.

One set of documents shows how much trucks weighed when they left silos at Weiner with the altered rice and when they arrived at Stuttgart for incineration. Paul Byrd, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said that when some trucks arrived weighing less, part of their load may have drifted into other fields in the Delta, tainting non-modified rice. Some of the truck weights went up, too.

Another document released shows Riceland telling a French company that it could not be held responsible for the introduction of altered rice into the European Union because Riceland, too, had suffered damages.

Riceland lawyer Barry Deacon said the documents were not necessarily significant.

"These are not documents that hurt us or help us," he said.

The lawsuit says Riceland was involved in developing the LibertyLink rice strain and didn't tell farmers for months that the rice had entered the food supply. Arkansas produces the most rice in the nation.

The strain is not considered harmful to humans but the U.S. Department of Agriculture had not approved it for human consumption.

Stuttgart, Ark.-based Riceland announced in August 2006 the LibertyLink modification, known as LLRICE601 and engineered to resist Bayer CropScience AG's "Liberty" herbicide, had entered the Arkansas rice crop. Japan, the European Union and other customers stopped importing Arkansas rice, which drove down the price Arkansas farmers received.

Byrd said Riceland worked with Aventis, since purchased by Bayer, in testing the Liberty Link rice in Arkansas. Hundreds of farmers across three states have also sued, usually targeting Bayer.

9/1/08
5 Star OK\12-B

Date: 8/28/08


Click for related articles KNPS to celebrate 30th anniversary at Hays annual Wildflower Weekend event
K-State food safety expert says consumers can decide food irradadiation issue
Lampasas River watershed protection workshop offered
Local farmer featured in upcoming no-till workshop
Most crops in fair to excellent condition
Most hay prices steady, trade remains mixed

Comments on Articles article 2008- 36 - Ricefarmerswinreleaseoflaws.cfm

Article: Rice farmers win release of lawsuit documents

Add Your Comment
To post a comment on this story, enter your screen name and email address then click "Add Comment." Your email address will not be displayed.

15 Recommend | 0 Comments


Agriculture News from HPJ - Your Ag News Source
Google
 
Web hpj.com
Copyright/Privacy
Copyright 1995-2009.  High Plains Publishers, Inc.  All rights reserved.  Any republishing of these pages, including electronic reproduction of the editorial archives or classified advertising, is strictly prohibited. If you have questions or comments you can reach us at
High Plains Journal 1500 E. Wyatt Earp Blvd., P.O. Box 760, Dodge City, KS 67801 or call 1-800-452-7171. Email: webmaster@hpj.com

Crop Protection Plus from Dupont
    Equipment for the Farm

Latest Ag News High Plains Journal - Farm, Ranch, Agribusiness, Crops and Livestock
  •  BSE Timeline
  • Fertilizer Prices Drop, Seed Costs Rise
  • Davidson's Farm: Hay Values
  • Farm Groups Key on Climate Change
  • Kub's Den: Looking Back
  • Ethanol Faces Uncertainty in 2009
  • Newsom on the Market
  • Price Plateau Expected for Land Values
  • Tougher Credit Faces Farmers in 2009
    ©2009 DTN. Licensed under U.S. Patent No. 4,558,302 and foreign counterparts. All rights reserved.
    High Plains Journal - Farm, Ranch, Agribusiness, Crops and Livestock
  • DTN Early Word Grains 01/08 06:02
  • DTN Midday Grain Comments 01/08 12:05
  • DTN Closing Grain Comments 01/08 14:31
  • DTN Cattle Close/Trends 01/08 15:20
  • DTN Early Word Opening Livestock 01/09 05:42
  • DTN Midday Livestock Comments 01/08 12:30
  • DTN Closing Livestock Comments 01/08 16:57
  • DTN Chart Technical Points 01/08 15:00
  • DTN Feeder Pig Index
    ©2009 DTN. Licensed under U.S. Patent No. 4,558,302 and foreign counterparts. All rights reserved.
    Visit PickensPlan

    National Ag News Agriculture Industry Today

    Farm and ranch survey.

    High Plains Journal agriculture news RSS Feed
     

    Add agriculture and ranching news RSS XML feed to My Yahoo!
    Add agriculture and livestock RSS XML news feed to Google