The German conglomerate Bayer CropScience has been ordered to pay six Arkansas rice farmers $940,000 for allowing genetically altered rice into the commercial market.
A jury in Desha County, Ark., found the farmers suffered losses when exports and rice prices fell after the contamination was announced in 2006.
Bayer issued a prepared statement saying it will consider its legal options and that the company “maintains it acted responsibly and appropriately at all times” in handling the rice.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has said the rice poses no health risk – but it had not been approved for human consumption at the time.
Three federal juries and three juries in Arkansas have now awarded more than $53 million to farmers for damages in the case.
Information from: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Topics Lawsuits Agribusiness
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Florida Jury Awards Jack Nicklaus $50M in Defamation Suit vs. His Former Company
The Future of the Agency in a World of AI
Alaska Airlines Vows IT Upgrades After Outage Forces 400 Flight Cancellations
Update: Catastrophe Bond Investors Told to Brace for Jamaica Payout 

