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Government
15 Tons of Cheese Trashed After Two Year Raw Milk Battle
Ends and Sheriffs Called In to Carry Out Order
Feb. 1, 2013 11:04am
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A
two-and-a-half-year fight over a batch of raw milk cheese produced in Howell
County, Mo., ended last week when 15 tons of the unpasteurized cheese had to be taken to the dump, the KY3
reported.
The decision in Howell County was made by
the State Milk Board.
The board, which falls under the state’s department of agriculture was
established in 1972 to “encourage orderly and sanitary production,
transportation, processing and grading of fluid milk and processed milk
products for consumption intrastate as well as interstate.”
The thousands of pounds of cheese in
question made by Morningland
Dairy was held during the more than two year legal battle after tests of
the product showed harmful bacterial contamination. But the farmers believe it
was wrongly tested.
The controversy of raw milk products is not
limited to Missouri. Last year, it was reported officials from the California Health
Department had visited the homes of raw milk customers to confiscate the
unpasteurized products. Other states have seen regulatory issues with the dairy
products, which are favored by many natural food fans, as well.
Farmer Joe Dixon and the an officer from the
sheriff’s department sent to carry out the court order to confiscate the
cheese. (Image: YouTube)
Here the Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense
Fund, a non-profit that supports the rights of farmers, chronicled
the events leading up to the cheese destruction on its blog:
The Milk Board shut down Morningland’s
manufacturing operation and ordered all cheese at the facility embargoed on
August 26, 2010 after receiving a report from the California Department of Food
and Agriculture that Morningland cheese seized in a raid of the Rawesome food
club in Venice, California in June 2010 had tested positive for Listeria monocytogenesand
Staphyloccocus aureus.
Not a single block of cheese in the warehouse had the same batch number as the
cheese seized in the Rawesome raid. A Milk Board inspector initially told Joe
Dixon that he would only be shut down for a few days—but that changed when FDA
stepped up their involvement in the case a short time later and pressured the
Milk Board not to let Morningland resume their operations.
On October 1, 2010 the Milk Board sent the
Dixons a letter requesting that they destroy the entire inventory of cheese at
the facility; when the Dixons refused, the Milk Board filed a petition in the
Circuit Court of Howell County to obtain an order for the destruction of the
Morningland cheese.
After a two-day trial before Judge David
Dunlop, the judge issued a decision on February 23, 2011 ordering the destruction of the cheese.
Morningland appealed the decision but on September 27, 2012 the Court of Appeals sided with the Milk
Board. A petition to the Missouri Supreme Court to hear the case was rejected
on December 18, paving the way for the destruction of the
cheese to take place.
KY3 reported the Food and Drug
administration tests of the cheese showed nothing out of the ordinary, while
private testing showed both Staphylococcus aureus and listeria. Dixon said to
KY3 that they requested a trial by jury and were denied as the rules governing
the safety of the product were a regulation not a law.
This video by a friend of Dixon shows the
milk board showing up on January 25 to confiscate the cheese. The county
sheriff’s office is called in due to a group of protesters. Watch the nearly 15
minutes of mild confrontation that ensues between the officers and protesters:
In the video,
the sheriff has to explain why officers were taking photographs of the license
plates of present protesters. The sheriff says although the protesters have
been peaceful, he is documenting who is present in case something were to go
awry. The videographer asks if the information collected about the protesters
present will be destroyed if no physical problem occurs, to which the sheriff
said yes.
The officer maintained he
was simply there to ensure that a court order was carried out. It is an order
the protesters feel is unjust.
“If the court asked you
or told you to confiscate firearms from the citizens of Howell County what
would you do? It should be a simple answer,” the videographer said.
(Image:
YouTube screenshot)
The officer said he
wouldn’t answer the question.
“It hasn’t happened,” the
officer said.
When the cheese was dumped, Dixon said he
saw the “the destruction of what my wife and I and family have worked to
build.” KY3 reported the dairy farmer saying his herd is now gone and he would
fear getting a complaint and being shut down again if he were to try and
restart.
KY3 contacted the milk board and the
department of agriculture, which declined to comment on the case.
2 comments:
Maybe the Judge should be arrested for ordering the contaminating of the dump and possible local water supplies with Listeria monocytogenes and Staphyloccocus aureus.
Sheriff do you job, arrest him. Oh but I guess you helped him. Umm now what to do. Ken
FIRE THE SHERIFF AND TELL THE FED TO GO TO HELL!!!!
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