Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Lawsuits alleging Roundup caused cancer can move forward

- By Sudhin Thanawala

Hundreds of lawsuits alleging Roundup weed killer caused cancer cleared a big hurdle Tuesday when a U.S. judge ruled that cancer victims and their families could present expert testimony linking the herbicide to non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria said evidence that the active ingredient in Roundup — glyphosate — can cause the disease seemed “rather weak.” Still, the opinions of three experts linking glyphosate and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma were not “junk science” that should be excluded from a trial, the judge ruled.

The lawsuits say agrochemic­al giant Monsanto, which makes Roundup, long knew about the cancer risk but failed to warn people. The ruling allows the claims to move forward, though the judge warned it could be a “daunting challenge” to convince him to allow a jury to hear testimony that glyphosate was responsibl­e for individual cancer diagnoses.

Many government regulators have rejected a link between cancer and glyphosate. Monsanto has vehemently denied such a connection, saying hundreds of studies have establishe­d that the chemical is safe.

The company is facing hundreds of lawsuits in state and federal courts that claim otherwise. Chhabria is presiding over more than 400 of them.

A separate trial is under way in San Francisco in a lawsuit by a school groundskee­per dying of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma — the first case a jury has heard alleging Roundup caused cancer.

 ?? REED SAXON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Containers of Roundup, a weed killer made by Monsanto, are displayed on a shelf at a hardware store in Los Angeles.
REED SAXON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Containers of Roundup, a weed killer made by Monsanto, are displayed on a shelf at a hardware store in Los Angeles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States