Black Farmers File Class Action Lawsuit Against Stine Seed Company After Discovering They Were Sold Fake Seeds

Black Farmers File Class Action Lawsuit Against Stine Seed Company After Discovering They Were Sold Fake Seeds

 

A group of Black farmers have filed a class action lawsuit against #StineSeedCompany after discovering that they were sold fake seeds, costing them millions of dollars. 

Thomas Burrell, president of the Black Farmers and Agriculturalists Association, says that the company sold the seeds to farmers all across the Mid-South region — including parts of Tennessee, Mississippi, Missouri, Kentucky, Arkansas and Alabama — and as a result, it only produced them a tenth of the bushels they are used to. 

“Mother nature doesn’t discriminate,” Burrell said. “It doesn’t rain on white farms but not black farms. Insects don’t [only] attack black farmers’ land…why is it then that white farmers are buying Stine seed and their yield is 60, 70, 80, and 100 bushels of soybeans and black farmers who are using the exact same equipment with the exact same land, all of a sudden, your seeds are coming up 5, 6, and 7 bushels?”

The farmers sent their seeds in for testing at Mississippi State University and it was discovered that the black farmers had not received the same quality “certified” seeds that white farmers had bought. Burrell believes that the seed swap is racially motivated in an attempt to get their land and at a good enough price. 

“All we have to do is look at here: 80 years ago you had a million black farmers, today you have less than 5,000. These individuals didn’t buy 16 million acres of land, just to let is lay idle. The sons and daughters, the heirs of black farmers want to farm, just like the sons and daughters of white farmers.”

Via WCM Action News:

“The black farmers said the distributor working for Stine Seed Company used labeled certified seed backs–tampering with factory sewn seals, in order to remove the certified seeds. The distributor would then sell the fake certified seeds to black farmers at a high price.

The farmers bought more than $100,000 in soybean seeds from the distributor, plus an additional $100,000 purchase in chemicals.”

The farmers have filed a class-action lawsuit in the United States District Court for the Western District of Tennessee Western Division in Memphis on April 19, 2018 against Stine Seed Company— one of the largest genetic seed trait manufacturers in the world.

TSR STAFF: Talia O. @theclosetratchet on IG

Source: https://www.rawstory.com/2018/07/black-farmers-deliberately-sold-fake-seeds-scheme-steal-land-report/

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