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NOTE: You can listen to an excellent discussion of this lawsuit on Occupy Wall
Street Radio http://archive.wbai.org/files/mp3/wbai_120201_183052owsr.mp3
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OSGATA et al v Monsanto: Will Farmers Receive Justice?
OSGATA, 03 February 2012
http://www.enewspf.com/latest-news/science-a-environmental/30640

WASHINGTON -  It was standing room only as family farmers from around North
America filled Federal Court Judge Naomi Buchwald's courtroom in Manhattan on
Tuesday, January 31.    The topic was the landmark organic community lawsuit OSGATA
et al v. Monsanto and the Oral Argument Monsanto's pre-trial motion to dismiss
which it filed last July. Plaintiffs from at least 21 States and Provinces were
in the courtroom including Oregon, California, New Mexico, Colorado, Kansas,
Nebraska, South Dakota, Saskatchewan, Missouri, Iowa, Ohio, Florida, North
Carolina, Virginia, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Connecticut,
Massachusetts, Vermont and Maine.
Meanwhile, outside the courthouse in Foley Square, hundreds turned out for the
Citizen's Assembly of support for family farmers, an action organized by several
groups including Occupy Food Justice.  A depiction of Monsanto's infamous 100
year history including Agent Orange, Dioxin, PCBs and now gene-spliced food was
presented.  Speakers addressed topics ranging from sustainable agriculture to
risks associated with GMOs to issues of good food and food justice. After the
conclusion of the courtroom Oral Argument, the plaintiff farmers and their legal
team from the Public Patent Foundation provided details and comments on the
courtroom proceedings, to supporters at the Citizens' Assembly.

"We were very pleased that the court granted our request to have oral argument
regarding Monsanto's motion to dismiss our case today," said Daniel Ravicher of
the Public Patent Foundation, lead lawyer for the Plaintiffs.  "The judge
graciously permitted both parties to raise all the points they wished in a
session that lasted over an hour.  While Monsanto's attorney attempted to
portray the risk organic farmers face from being contaminated and then accused
of patent infringement as hypothetical and abstract, we rebutted those arguments
with the concrete proof of the harm being suffered by our clients in their
attempts to avoid such accusations.  The judge indicated she will issue her
ruling within two months.    We expect she will deny the motion and the case will
then proceed forward.  If she should happen to grant the motion, we will most
likely appeal to the Court of Appeals who will review her decision without
deference."

The large group of 83 Plaintiffs in OSGATA v. Monsanto is comprised of
individual family farmers, independent seed companies and agricultural
organizations. The total number of members within the plaintiff group exceeds
300,000 and includes many thousands of certified organic farmers.  The
Plaintiffs are not seeking any monetary compensation.  Instead, the farmers are
pre-emptively suing Monsanto and seeking court protection from
Monsanto-initiated patent infringement lawsuits under the Declaratory Judgment
Act.

President of lead Plaintiff, Organic Seed Growers and Trade Association, Maine
organic seed farmer Jim Gerritsen was in the courtroom and witnessed the Oral
Argument. Gerritsen had this to say, "Our lawyer did a good job explaining the
current injustice farmers face. We have a right to be secure on our farms and to
be free from Monsanto's GMO trespass. If we become contaminated by Monsanto, not
only is the value of our organic seed crop extinguished but we could also be
sued by Monsanto for patent infringement because their contamination results in
our 'possession' of their GMO technology. We have farmers who have stopped
growing organic corn, organic canola and organic soybeans because they can't
risk being sued by Monsanto. It's not fair and it's not right. Family farmers
need justice and we deserve protection from the court."

Early on in the legal process, Monsanto was asked by lawyers for the Plaintiffs
to provide a binding legal covenant not to sue. Monsanto refused this request
and in doing so made clear that it would not give up its option to sue
contaminated innocent family farmers who want nothing to do with Monsanto's GMO
technology.

In a remarkable demonstration of solid support by American citizens for family
farmers, co-plaintiff Food Democracy Now! has collected over 100,000 signatures
on it's petition supporting the rights of family farmers against Monsanto. "For
the past 12,000 years farmers have saved the best seeds each year to increase
yields and improve traits for the food we eat," said Dave Murphy, founder and
Executive Director of Food Democracy Now! "In 1996, when Monsanto sold its first
patented genetically modified (GMO) seed to farmers, this radically changed the
idea of how farmers planted and saved seed. Less than two decades later,
Monsanto's aggressive patent infringement lawsuits have created a climate of
fear in rural America among farmers. It's time for that to end. Farmers should
not have to live in fear because they are growing our food."

A complete 36 page transcript of the Oral Argument is available here.
Further information on OSGATA et al. v. Monsanto is available at osgata.org and
pubpat.org.

###
The Organic Seed Growers and Trade Association is a not-for-profit agricultural
organization made up of organic farmers, seed growers, seed businesses and
supporters. OSGATA is committed to developing and protecting organic seed and
it's growers in order to ensure the organic community has access to excellent
quality organic seed free of contaminants and adapted to the diverse needs of
local organic agriculture. www.osgata.org


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Website: http://www.gmwatch.org


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