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UDDERLY RIDICULOUS
Police draw guns on raw-milk sellers
'There's a medical marijuana shop a
couple miles away, and they're raiding us?'
July 26, 2010
By Bob Unruh
WorldNetDaily
Agent
wielding handgun in California milk
shopraid
in image from Los Angeles Times video
The developing
dispute over the sale of raw
milk in the United States
has seen
a farmer fined $4,000, a
predawn raid prompted by the
"dangers" of the
product and even
a comment from a government
official that, "You have
cows. You produce food for human
consumption" as a reason for an
inspection of private property.
Now
supplies of
raw milk and other products have been confiscated
from a farm and a distribution point in California
for alleged violations of a long list of various
government rules, such as permit requirements.
But the ultimate
solution to the enforcement of a patchwork of
permits, licenses and regulations across the nation
probably will be a court ruling in a case brought by
the
Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense Fund, according
to a spokesman.
The case argues,
contrary to allegations by the FDA, everyone has the
right to travel across state lines with raw dairy
products in their possession, that everyone has the right to
consume the foods of their choice, that parents have
the right to feed their children the foods of their
choice and that all have the right to be responsible
for their own health.
"We believe we are
breaking new
ground in this case," Gary Cox, the fund's general
counsel, told WND earlier. "Yet in a way, we are
really asking the court to expressly recognize what
our Founding Fathers implied in the
Declaration of
Independence and in the Constitution."
The organization
brought the lawsuit earlier this
year to overturn the federal ban
that prohibits raw milk for
human consumption in interstate
commerce. The lawsuit alleges
the federal rules on the issue
are unconstitutional and outside
the FDA's statutory authority as
applied to members of the group.
The government
responded by asking the court to dismiss the lawsuit
out of hand, and the case at this point awaits the
judge's decision on the motion.
In one of the
latest battles, investigators
entered Rawsome Foods in Venice,
Calif., to track down jugs of
raw milk in a walk-in cooler.
Also taken at the same time –
while a raid also was going on
at a nearby farm, one of
Rawsome's suppliers – were
blocks of unpasteurized goat
cheese, according to published
reports.
Kennedy told WND
the latest raids highlight the need for a resolution
in the challenge his organization is raising to the
laws, rules and regulations with which producers and
consumers must cope.
According to a Los
Angeles Times report on the Venice case, California
and 10 other states allow "licensed" dairies to sell
raw milk, and another 20 states let people buy such
products from farms or participate in a cooperative
program.
The newspaper's
video showed officers entering what appears to be a
supply room with their guns drawn.
Other states have
other varying rules.
"There are just so
many rules and regulations, and [they are] so
overbroad," Kennedy told WND. "The bureaucracy
claims they cover these private contractual
arrangements. We need some court rulings."
He said one recent
case – although it was in Canada – found the
government should not interfere with private
transactions between a farmer and a consumer. But
recent raids in Minnesota and in Venice prove that
such feelings, if they exist in the U.S., still
haven't the weight of regulations.
"The only victims
really are people who lose their health [if they
lose access to natural foods]," he said.
Farm-to-Consumer
officials earlier told WND a decision in their
lawsuit "will either ensure that people have
fundamental rights endowed to them by their Creator,
or that the people have no rights except those that
are conferred upon them by government."
"Our research
shows that this nation has a long history of
consuming raw dairy products and that FDA's
prohibition against taking raw dairy for human
consumption across state lines runs counter to that
national history," Kennedy added.
One plaintiff in
that case is Georgia resident Eric Wagoner, who was
ordered by an FDA employee in a confrontation just
months ago to dump outmilk obtained in
South Carolina
and brought to him in Georgia.
More than 100
gallons of milk soaked into the Georgia dirt:
More of the episode was caught here:
In the Venice
case, publicized by the Times,
government agents entered the
store with a search warrant and
took products they considered
suspect.
"I still can't
believe they took our yogurt," Rawesome volunteer
Sea J. Jones told the newspaper. "There's a medical
marijuana shop a couple miles away, and they're
raiding us because we're selling raw dairy
products?"
The essence of the
conflict is between regulators who say they have a
responsibility to "protect" the public from
dangerous complications possible from using rawmilk
and consumers who find their health better when they
use unpasteurized products instead of those run
through heat or chemical treatments.
In the Rawsome
case, while it is legal for licensed dairies in
California to sell raw milk, regulators said the
organization failed to have proper permits and
licenses. Agents from the Los Angeles County
Department of Public Health, the FDA, the U.S. Department
of Agriculture and others confiscated 17 coolers
with honey, milk, cane syrup and other products.
According to a report on the Axis of
Logic, a volunteer-run
news and opinion site, the Rawsome raid was
accompanied by one involving 20 agents at Sharon
Palmer's farm in Ventura County.
But the report
noted the raids "appear to be happening ever more
frequently."
It noted early in
June, Minnesota enforcers shut down a "traditional
foods" warehouse in the state.
Wisconsin also has
launched three raids over the past few weeks, and
there was one case in which a farmer was prosecuted
for refusing to give authorities information about
his customers.
In response to the
raw milk lawsuit, the
government's motion to dismiss claimed Americans
have no fundamental right to choose what food they
can have.
"There is no
'deeply rooted' historical tradition of unfettered
access to foods of all kinds," stated the document
signed by U.S. Attorney Stephanie Rose, assistant
Martha Fagg and Roger Gural, trial attorney for the
U.S. Department of Justice.
"Plaintiffs'
assertion of a 'fundamental right to their own
bodily and physical health, which includes what
foods they do and do not choose to consume for
themselves and their families' is similarly
unavailing because plaintiffs do not have a
fundamental right to obtain any food they wish," the
government has argued.
The lawsuit
focuses on a set of FDA regulations that largely
bans consumers from buying raw milk and taking it
across state lines, even for their own consumption,
and the decision is expected to set a precedent for
further evaluations of the process.
The plan is
sponsored by U.S. Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., who explains
the legislation "is a critical step toward equipping
the FDA with the authorities and funding it needs to
regulate what is now a global marketplace for food,
drugs, devices and cosmetics."
His website
explains, "The legislation requires foreign and
domestic food facilities to have safety plans in
place to prevent food hazards before they occur,
increases the frequency of
inspections.
Additionally, it provides strong, flexible
enforcement tools, including mandatory recall."
The proposal
cleared the U.S. House last year but has been
languishing in the Senate because of a full calendar
of legislation. It creates a long list of new
requirements for food-producing entities to meet the
demands of the secretary of agriculture.
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