Plaintiffs
in U.S. lawsuit say Monsanto ghostwrote Roundup studies
Send a link to a friend
[March 15, 2017] By
Brendan Pierson
(Reuters) - Employees of Monsanto Co
ghostwrote scientific reports that U.S. regulators relied on to
determine that a chemical in its Roundup weed killer does not cause
cancer, farmers and others suing the company claimed in court filings.
|
The documents, which were made public on Tuesday, are part of a mass
litigation in federal court in San Francisco claiming Monsanto
failed to warn that exposure to Roundup could cause non-Hodgkin's
lymphoma, a type of cancer.
The company has denied that the product causes cancer. Plaintiffs
claim that Monsanto's toxicology manager ghostwrote parts of a
scientific report in 2013 that was published under the names of
several academic scientists, and his boss ghostwrote parts of
another in 2000.
Both reports were used by the EPA to determine that glyphosate, a
chemical in Roundup, was safe, they said.
They cited an email from a Monsanto executive proposing to
ghostwrite parts of the 2013 report, saying, "we would be keeping
the cost down by us doing the writing" while researchers "would just
edit & sign their names so to speak."
In an email, a Monsanto spokeswoman denied that Monsanto scientists
ghostwrote the 2000 report but did not directly address the 2013
report. She said the ghostwriting allegations were based on
"cherry-picking" one email out of 10 million pages of documents.
Another filing focused on Jess Rowland, a former deputy director at
the Environmental Protection Agency who chaired a committee on
cancer risk and who plaintiffs say worked with Monsanto to suppress
studies of glyphosate.
The filing includes an email from a Monsanto employee recounting how
Rowland told him he "should get a medal" if he could "kill" a study
of glyphosate at the Department of Health and Human Services, a
separate federal agency.
[to top of second column] |
Rowland, who is retired, is not a defendant in the litigation. He
could not immediately be located for comment. The EPA had no
immediate comment.
The federal mass litigation includes about 60 lawsuits, according to
Aimee Wagstaff, an attorney for the plaintiffs. Several hundred more
lawsuits are pending in state courts, she said.
A California state court judge on Friday in a separate lawsuit ruled
that California could classify glyphosate as a cancer risk. The case
is In re Roundup Products Liability Litigation, U.S. District Court,
Northern District of California, No. 16-md-02741.
(Reporting By Brendan Pierson in New York; editing by Noeleen Walder
and Cynthia Osterman)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|