|
Monsanto's
Bullying of Farmers Starting to Backfire
|
[Note that they now have a department with 75 staff
and a $10M annual budget
just to sue farmers!]
Monsanto reaps some anger with hard line on reusing
seed
updated: 05/12/2003 02:04 AM
Agriculture giant has won millions in suits against
farmers
By Peter Shinkle
Of the Post-Dispatch
A
farmer secretly gathers seed, glancing nervously over
his shoulder and
wondering whether a neighbor might dial the anonymous
tip hot line.
A corporation sends out spies and goes out of its way
to make examples out
of growers it catches violating patents.
A
defiant farm owner makes a stand and is sentenced to
prison. It's a hardball battle out there between an
uncounted slice of farmers and Monsanto Co., the agricultural
giant based in Creve Coeur that assembled a staff of
75 and a budget of $10 million a year to win it. For
years, Monsanto fought environmentalists over potential
effects of its genetically modified seed. Now, it's
fighting activists who embrace the seed but not the
contract that comes with it.
Farmers
generally find the seed easier and cheaper to use. But
some resent a purchase contract that says they cannot
reuse seed from the crops they grow. More and more,
their differences are ending up in court. Often, that's
federal court in St. Louis. In fact, farmers agree to
the court venue, convenient to Monsanto, when they sign
the agreement.
Monsanto has not yet lost a single fight. But there
are still some farmers
battling.
Save
Our Seed
Mitchell
Scruggs hardly fits the profile of an activist.
A 53-year-old Mississippian, Scruggs runs a cotton gin
and owns the biggest farm in three counties surrounding
Tupelo. Until a few years ago, he had never protested
over civil rights, the environment or anything else.
That changed when he found that Monsanto forbids those
using its product from the age-old practice of saving
seeds from one crop to plant the next. The
licensing agreement says they must buy new seed each
year. Now Scruggs is fighting in the courts, by word
of mouth and just about any way he can. He helped form
Save Our Seed, a farmers' rights group that advocates
seed recovery as it has been done for generations. I'm
opposed to what Monsanto's about," Scruggs said
in an interview last week. "They're raping farm
communities and breaking farmers, because farmers do
nothave any other place to go to get this planting seed."
The manufacturer says it is entitled to protect the
value of its "intellectual property" and to
recover research costs. It says those who violate the
licenses commit "seed piracy."Scruggs, whose
family has farmed in Mississippi for more than a century,
isamong 73 farmers sued by Monsanto in the past five
years on civil claims ofpatent violations. He countersued,
saying that the patents are invalid andthat Monsanto
enforces a monopoly over the seed industry.The case
is pending in U.S. District Court in Tupelo. But many
farmers have accepted Monsanto's agreements as legitimate.
Neal
Bredehoeft, who works the land near Alma, Mo., and is
a director of the American Soybean Association, said
his family saved soybean seeds for decades but stopped
to use Monsanto's. "Monsanto has to have the dollars
there to do some research," he said. "I believe
they are taking the technology fee and doing research
to make abetter bean."
The
company touts a string of victories in the courts, including
a $2.5
million settlement with an Arkansas farmer. Farmers
also are turning to the courts. Some have filed class-actionlawsuits
asserting Monsanto is violating anti-trust laws by gaining
control of seed
markets. Monsanto denies it.
A
farming revolution
Saving seed has long been an elemental part of farming,
although some
farmers favored the practice more than others. Many
have bought seed for
generations.
In
the 1990s, Monsanto began marketing its patented seeds
with genetic
modifications. They included soybean and cotton seeds
engineered for
immunity to Monsanto's own herbicide, known as Roundup.
The new technology meant that farmers could simply spray
Roundup to kill
weeds without taking labor-intensive measures to avoid
also killing their crops.
Monsanto
says its Roundup Ready seeds make for better crops with
less use of chemicals and less work. Bredehoeft said
he will use Roundup Ready seeds for all 1,000 acres
of soybeans he grows about 65 miles east of Kansas City.
"The
Roundup Ready seeds have really improved the economics
of soybean
farming," he said. It's so popular that about 80
percent of the 73 million acres of soybeans to be planted
in 2003 in the United States are expected to be herbicide-resistant,
according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Monsanto
says its technology accounts for virtually all of the
herbicide-
resistant soybean seeds on the market.
Farmers are allowed to take seeds produced from the
crops and use them to feed pigs or crush them as fertilizer
for a flower bed. But second-generation seeds cannot
legally be planted, said Scott Baucum, lead manager
for intellectual property stewardship at Monsanto.
Baucum, who grew up saving seed on his family's cotton
farm in western
Texas, says Monsanto's product is so good that it's
worth buying fresh every year.
A
bitter harvest
Some farmers don't see it that way. One of them is Kem
Ralph, 47, who raises soybeans and cotton with his brother
on a farm in Tipton County, Tenn., 40 miles northeast
of Memphis.
In 1999, Ralph decided to help Dewayne Hendrix, a longtime
friend and fellow farmer.
When they were young, the two men had started out driving
trucks for big-time farmers like Lloyd Bentsen, father
of the former U.S. senator from Texas. They had finally
gotten their own farms, and by the late 1990s, they
were each planting thousands of acres near Covington,
Tenn.
But in 1999, Hendrix was struggling financially, Ralph
would later testify.
Hendrix had used Monsanto's engineered cotton seed in
1999, and instead of complying with the license, he
saved a truckload of seed from his ginned cotton and
took it to a company in Kennett, Mo., for processing,
federal prosecutors say.
There,
lint was removed from the seed, and it was placed in
bags for the
next growing season. It was a risky step. Monsanto has
inspectors who visit farmers' fields, and seed handlers
to check for crops grown from saved seed. Monsanto also
has a toll-free hot line to encourage anonymous tips.
The
company says it is unfair that some farmers honor the
agreement and
others don't. Many farmers share that view.
In December 1999, Ralph arranged for documents to be
sent to theKennett
company indicating that the seed belonged to him, not
Hendrix, according to a plea agreement Ralph signed
in February. Hendrix's brother picked up theseed and
signed a receipt indicating it was Ralph's.
Monsanto catches on Monsanto began investigating Ralph's
handling of Monsanto seed. In January 2000, it sued
in federal court claiming that testing discovered illicit
Roundup Ready seeds in Ralph's fields in 1999.
At Monsanto's request, U.S. District Judge Rodney Sippel
ordered Ralph not to move his crops or seed.
But
on March 2, 2000, he took a truckload of cotton seed
from his farm and dumped it into a gravel pit. With
the help of his brother and some farm
workers, he used tires and diesel fuel to start a fire
that burned for two
days. When Ralph told his lawyer, Lou Leonatti of Mexico.,
Mo., about the burning, Leonatti reported it to Monsanto's
lawyers. A few days later, Monsanto investigators took
samples at the burn site.
On
March 24, 2000, Ralph unburdened himself, admitting
he burned an
estimated 900 bags of saved seed. His actions would
cost him. Judge Sippel ordered Ralph to pay Monsanto
about $100,000. Sippel also threw out Ralph's defense,
which included a claim that he had never signed a Monsanto
licensing agreement.
Under
Sippel's ruling, Ralph was automatically found to have
violated the
agreement. A jury considered only how much he would
have to pay Monsanto for using the seed improperly,
and it settled on $1.7 million.
In February 2003, Ralph pleaded guilty in St. Louis
to conspiring to commit mail fraud when he helped Hendrix
hide the saved seed. His plea included a finding that
Ralph had obstructed justice by burning the seed.
On Wednesday, Ralph was sentenced to eight months in
prison and ordered to pay the company $165,469 more.
The
enforcers
Monsanto has built a whole department to enforce its
seed patents and
licensing agreements. It has 75 employees and an annual
budget of $10 million, said spokeswoman Shannon Troughton.
The company tries to settle with farmers before taking
them all the way to court, but that doesn't always work
out, Troughton said. It often turns to Husch & Eppenberger,
the big St. Louis law firm that handles much of the
company's legal work.
Of the 73 suits filed against farmers, 30 of them are
in federal court in
St. Louis because of a provision in the licensing agreements
that gives Monsanto the choice of having them heard
here. The other cases are spread over 19 states ranging
from Nebraska, east to New Jersey, and from Michigan,
south to Louisiana.
Monsanto
also distributes information to farmers and seed companies
about its court victories, including five cases that
have gone to trial.
A "Seed Piracy Update" brochure published
by the company lists the Ralph
case as well as judgments of $780,000 against farmer
Homan McFarling of Mississippi and $593,000 against
Bill "Dude" Trantham of western Tennessee.
When Ralph appeared in federal court for sentencing
Wednesday, Baucum, Monsanto's lead manager for intellectual
property stewardship, told the judge that others would
make decisions "according to the results here today."
Paul
D'Agrossa, attorney for Ralph, told the judge that Monsanto
has
distributed information about his client in an effort
to damage his
reputation and "destroy his family." Emerging
from court after Judge Richard Webber sentenced Ralph,
D'Agrossa said: "I don't believe justice is served
by sending Mr. Ralph to jail for one day. As far as
I'm concerned, it's a pound of flesh Monsanto has been
after for a long time."
Baucum said later: "We have not been focused on
doing anything to Mr. Ralph. We have been focused on
defending our interests." Some critics contend
that Monsanto has gone too far. Missouri state Rep.
Wes Shoemyer, a Democrat from the rural northeastern
part of the state, complained that the company's commercials
encourage farmers to inform anonymously on each other.
They
put a rift in the social fabric of America that I absolutely
abhor:
Look at your neighbor as someone to turn in," he
said. Hoemyer, a farmer, is the sponsor of legislation
that would permit Missouri farmers to save seed if they
pay a royalty to the patent owner. The bill passed the
House Agriculture Committee 22-0 recently, and Shoemyer
said he hopes to advance it as an amendment on the House
floor in the closing days of the legislative session
this week. Farmers turn to law Scruggs, the Mississippi
farmer, is using the courts to fight back. He hired
James Robertson, a lawyer who served nine years as a
justice on the Mississippi Supreme Court. Scruggs denies
that he saved Monsanto seed and also contends that Monsanto'spatents
are invalid and monopolistic. Peter Carstensen, a University
of Wisconsin law professor hired as an exper for Scruggs,
said Monsanto has put an anti-competitive restraint
on farmers. The company denies it.
Last
fall, Monsanto sought to remove the dispute over one
of its patents
from Scruggs' trial, saying it would simplify the litigation.
The judge refused the request, and Scruggs says he sees
a weakness. "I don't think any of the patents are
good, and I'm ready to go to court, the quicker the
better," he said. But attorney Clifford Cole, who
represented Arkansas farmer Ray Dawson, says anyone
should be cautious before taking on Monsanto. Dawson,
who once farmed 50,000 acres in three states, used to
goad thecompany by wearing a hat bearing the words,
"Monsanto Folds, Dawson Farms." But in the
end, Dawson filed for bankruptcy and later settled withMonsanto
for $2.5 million, though the settlement ultimately permitted
him to pay only about $200,000, Cole said. "They
were going to beat our brains out," Cole said of
Monsanto's attorneys. "These old boys, they're
good. They've got the tools, they've got the law on
their side, and they've got the money to back 'em."
Reporter
Peter Shinkle:
E-mail: pshinkle@post-dispatch.com
|