Boston Herald

$265M awarded in weedkiller suit

Some crops made resistant, others died from the fumes

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CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. — A jury over the weekend awarded $265 million in punitive damages to a southeaste­rn Missouri peach farmer who argued that weedkiller dicamba that had drifted onto his orchards from other farms had severely damaged his trees — an award that could bode well for other farmers suing the chemical’s makers.

The punitive damages awarded to farmer Bill Bader, of Campbell, on Saturday, came a day after the jury awarded him $15 million in actual damages, agreeing with his argument that dicamba had drifted over from other farms and severely damaged Bader Farms, which is one of the largest peach farms in Missouri. Bader’s attorneys argued that his trees likely wouldn’t survive the dicamba exposure, The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported.

Attorneys for Bayer, which makes dicamba, vowed to appeal.

“We want our customers to know that, as this legal matter continues, we remain steadfast in our commitment to delivering them the effective and sustainabl­e tools they need in the field,” Bayer said in a statement.

The awards in Bader’s lawsuit could bode well for other similar lawsuits filed against Bayer and BASF, which invented the pesticide. The lawsuits blame dicamba for damaging millions of acres of crops across the country.

Farmers have been using dicamba for more than 50 years, but after Monsanto — which was bought by Bayer in 2018 — released dicambatol­erant cotton and soybeans, the weedkiller’s use became more widespread, leading to more complaints from neighborin­g farms whose non-dicamba-resistant crops were getting killed off by dicamba drift.

In response, the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency has increased the restrictio­ns on the dicamba’s usage in recent years, and many states have imposed additional restrictio­ns, including requiring increased training and implementi­ng cut-off dates after which the chemical cannot be sprayed.

Attorneys for the companies argued that the trees on Bader’s farm were damaged by root fungus and adverse weather, not dicamba drift.

 ?? AP FILE ?? NOT PEACHY: Bill Bader surveys his peach trees for damage he says is from illegal use of the herbicide dicamba at Bader Farms in Dunklin County, Mo., in 2016.
AP FILE NOT PEACHY: Bill Bader surveys his peach trees for damage he says is from illegal use of the herbicide dicamba at Bader Farms in Dunklin County, Mo., in 2016.

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