U.S. consumers sue Bumble Bee, Chicken of
the Sea, StarKist over 'dolphin-safe' tuna claims
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[May 15, 2019]
By Jonathan Stempel
(Reuters) - U.S. consumers sued Bumble Bee,
Chicken of the Sea and StarKist, accusing the country's three major
packaged-tuna brands of deceiving them into thinking their tuna is
caught only through "dolphin-safe" fishing practices.
The proposed class actions filed on Monday said the defendants employ
fishing techniques that kill or harm dolphins, and do not always use
safer, costlier pole-and-line and other methods used by such rivals as
Whole Foods and Trader Joe's.
The consumers said this makes the defendants' dolphin-safe labels false
and misleading, violating the laws of several U.S. states including
California, Florida, New Jersey and New York.
They also said StarKist violated federal racketeering law through its
alleged dealings with foreign fishing companies.
Concern about dolphin safety "makes tuna fish consumers no different
from Hindus attributing zero value to beef products, or vegans
attributing zero value to animal products, or vegetarians attributing
zero value to meat, fish, and poultry," the complaints said.
StarKist said it does not discuss pending litigation, but would not buy
tuna "caught in association with dolphins." It also condemned
"indiscriminate fishing methods" that trap dolphins along with the
intended catch.
Bumble Bee did not immediately respond on Tuesday to requests for
comment. Chicken of the Sea had no immediate comment.
The lawsuits filed with the U.S. District Court in San Francisco seek
full refunds for consumers nationwide who bought tuna in the last four
years, or for premiums paid for the dolphin-safe claims.
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An aisle of a grocery store is pictured in Altadena, California
U.S., December 1, 2016. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
It was not immediately clear how the consumers plan to show the
claims were misleading. Their law firm did not immediately respond
on Tuesday to requests for comment.
The complaints said the defendants have made dolphin-safe claims
since 1990, when the federal Dolphin Protection Consumer Information
Act banned false labeling of tuna products.
In December, the World Trade Organization said U.S. laws governing
dolphin-safe labels complied with that group's rules.
Bumble Bee is controlled by private equity firm Lion Capital,
Chicken of the Sea by Thailand's Thai Union Group PCL, and StarKist
by South Korea's Dongwon Industries Co.
The cases in the U.S. District Court, Northern District of
California are Gardner et al v StarKist Co, No. 19-02561; Duggan et
al v Tri-Union Seafoods LLC, No. 19-02562; and Duggan et al v Bumble
Bee Foods LLC, No. 19-02564.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Bernadette
Baum)
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