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Monsanto Reaches 'Agent Orange' Settlement With US Victims
Residents living near a now defunct Monsanto plant in Nitro, West Virginia demand cleanup of toxic legacy
Reports indicate that Monsanto has reached a settlement in a class action lawsuit brought by US residents who say they were poisoned by chemicals used in the manufacturing of the Agent Orange in their town of Nitro, West Virginia.
The Guardian reports:
The long-running suit was brought by residents living near a now defunct Monsanto plant in Nitro, West Virginia that between 1949 and 1971 produced the agricultural herbicide 2,4,5 trichlorophenoxyacidic acid, a key ingredient in Agent Orange. [...]
The suit – filed on behalf of tens of thousands of people who lived, worked and went to school in Nitro after 1949 – claims that Monsanto spread toxic substances including dioxins, which have been linked to cancer, all over the town.
The plaintiffs say they were exposed to levels of dioxins 100,000 times higher than acceptable levels. "Dioxin is a known human carcinogen and is so hazardous to human health that no "safe" level of exposure has been established," the suit claims.
It demands ongoing testing for at least 5,000 people who may have been affected by exposure to hazardous chemicals.
The Charleston Gazette reports that the judge in the case, Judge Derek Swope, had raised some questions about the agreement including concerns the man Monsanto suggested administer the medical monitoring program is a former defense expert for the company.
The Charleston Gazette adds:
If a settlement is not agreed upon on Friday, a more extensive jury selection is scheduled to begin on Monday, Swope said. Six jurors and six alternates would have to be selected out of the 28-person jury pool.
Mediation efforts last October and December failed to produce a settlement.
Swope warned lawyers on Thursday that a gag order, preventing lawyers from talking with the press about the case, is still being strictly enforced. The judge sealed all documents pertaining to the proposed settlement. He would not talk to a reporter after Thursday's hearing.
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22 Comments so far
Show AllThe USA cant afford that compensation. It would probably break the USA financially. Also, if the Vietnamese victims of agent orange were ever compensated, then the next claim would be the Iraqi victims of DU poisoning. If the USA ever had to pay for what they have done, it would financially break them.
Similarly, no amount of punishment could redress the injustices by the neocons and zionists who fomented the war on Iraq.
Once I met a Vietnam vet. He was the last of his unit still alive, and he wasn't healthy himself. His unit handled Agent Orange.
Trylon
Mynquestion not answered in the article is How Many of the victims suing Monsanto are still alive?
It's well past time to 1. Enforce The Death Penalty on Corporations
2. The executive staff should be held criminally accountable - the corporate system as practiced today is just an excuse to murder and maim humans and the environment - and to Limit Liability -
It's well Past Time to allow Liaility to flow thru to the executives running these predator corporations.
Of course in reality NOTHING is guaranteed despite what others may claim.