The California jury found on Monday that Monsanto was responsible for the lawsuit raised by the schoolyard manager who said that her company's herbicide, including the round-up, caused his cancer. The company was charged for damages of 289 million dollars.
The 46-year-old venue manager Dewayne Johnson's lawsuit, which claimed that round-up and other glyphosate herbicides caused cancer, was the first lawsuit. Monsanto is a subsidiary of German conglomerate Bayer (Bayer), which earlier acquired 62.5 billion dollars and faced more than 5000 similar cases in the United States.
Mr. Johnson's lawyer said he used Roundup and Ranger Pro (another Monsanto glyphosate herbicide) for the onset of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma as a member of the California County School System Pest Management Administrator.
San Francisco California High Court jury reviewed it for three days before discovering that Monsanto did not warn Johnson and other consumers about the risk of cancer caused by their herbicides.
Monsanto said in a statement that it will appeal to the verdict. More than 800 scientific research and reviews support "the glyphosate does not cause cancer and supports the fact that it does not cause Johnson's cancer," the company said.
Due to Mr. Johnson 's cancer severity, the case filed in 2016 was subject to prompt hearing. His doctor said he can not live until 2020
Mr. Johnson's attorney, Brent Wisner, said in a statement, "To prove that Monsanto has proved that glyphosate, in particular round-ups, can cause cancer for decades" The document said the jury first saw it. Consider safety of consumers as the first priority, exceeding profits "
In September 2017, the Environmental Protection Agency completed the evaluation of glyphosate risk for decades and found that the chemical substance is unlikely to cause cancer in humans. But in 2015, the cancer institution of the World Health Organization classified glyphosate as "possibly carcinogenic to humans".
Glyphosate is the active ingredient of Roundup and Monsupo herbicide is the most used pesticide in the United States. A California jury last week ordered Monsanto to pay $ 289 million in damages for men who died of cancer, which he attributed to him. Repeated exposure to numerous round-ups and other glyphosate herbicides while working as a school ground manager. The EWG has tested dozens of brand oatmeales to provide Americans with information about exposure during meals managed by government regulators. In April, the internal e-mail from the "right to know" of non-profit organizations showed that the US Food and Drug Administration conducted a two-year food test on glyphosate and found "a significant amount", however The FDA did not announce the investigation. as a result
Last week, the San Francisco jury ordered Monsanto to pay damages of $ 289 million to school facilities managers using the company 's popular herbicide herbicide Roundup. An amazing report announced shortly after testing by environmental groups found traces of chemicals in dozens of daily foods, ranging from cereal to granola bars. Before cancer called non-Hodgkin's lymphoma occurred, Roundup was regularly used in the trial of plaintiff Dewayne Johnson, recently a facility manager at a public school in California. Paying 250 million dollars in addition to his medical expenses, pain and suffering to Monsanto by ignoring Johnson (and other general members) about the potential ties between round-up and cancer I ordered Johnson to pay 39 million dollars. Punitive damages (or punishment)
Common herbicides are at the heart of Monsanto's $ 289 million cancer case. This is how much you should worry about
Monsanto recently was ordered to pay a $ 289 million damages to a Californian man who claimed that her herbicide caused his cancer. This decision is only the first of unresolved claims from Monsanto, a subsidiary of Bayer AG, a German pharmaceutical company that currently maintains the safety of glyphosate.
The 46-year-old venue manager Dewayne Johnson's lawsuit, which claimed that round-up and other glyphosate herbicides caused cancer, was the first lawsuit. Monsanto is a subsidiary of Bayer AG, a conglomerate in Germany, which has acquired $ 62.5 billion and has more than 5000 similar cases in the United States. Mr. Johnson's attorney, Brent Wisner, said in a statement, "To prove that Monsanto has proved that glyphosate, in particular round-ups, can cause cancer for decades" The document said the jury first saw it. Consider safety of consumers as the first priority, exceeding profits "