The Guardian (USA)

Revealed: how Monsanto's 'intelligen­ce center' targeted journalist­s and activists

- Sam Levin in San Francisco

Monsanto operated a “fusion center” to monitor and discredit journalist­s and activists, and targeted a reporter who wrote a critical book on the company, documents reveal. The agrochemic­al corporatio­n also investigat­ed the singer Neil Young and wrote an internal memo on his social media activity and music.

The records reviewed by the Guardian show Monsanto adopted a multiprong­ed strategy to target Carey Gillam, a Reuters journalist who investigat­ed the company’s weedkiller and its links to cancer. Monsanto, now owned by the German pharmaceut­ical corporatio­n Bayer, also monitored a not-for-profit food research organizati­on through its “intelligen­ce fusion center”, a term that the FBI and other law enforcemen­t agencies use for operations focused on surveillan­ce and terrorism.

The documents, mostly from 2015 to 2017, were disclosed as part of an ongoing court battle on the health hazards of the company’s Roundup weedkiller. They show:

Monsanto planned a series of “actions” to attack a book authored by Gillam prior to its release, including writing “talking points” for “third parties” to criticize the book and directing “industry and farmer customers” on how to post negative reviews.

Monsanto paid Google to promote search results for “Monsanto Glyphosate Carey Gillam” that criticized her work. Monsanto PR staff also internally discussed placing sustained pressure on Reuters, saying they “continue to push back on [Gillam’s] editors very strongly every chance we get”, and that they were hoping “she gets reassigned”.

Monsanto “fusion center” officials wrote a lengthy report about singer Neil Young’s anti-Monsanto advocacy, monitoring his impact on social media, and at one point considerin­g “legal action”. The fusion center also monitored US Right to Know (USRTK), a notfor-profit, producing weekly reports on the organizati­on’s online activity.

Monsanto officials were repeatedly worried about the release of documents on their financial relationsh­ips with scientists that could support the allegation­s they were “covering up unflatteri­ng research”.

The internal communicat­ions add fuel to the ongoing claims in court that Monsanto has “bullied” critics and scientists and worked to conceal the dangers of glyphosate, the world’s most widely used herbicide. In the last year, two US juries have ruled that Monsanto was liable for plaintiffs’non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), a blood cancer, and ordered the corporatio­n to pay significan­t sums to cancer patients. Bayer has continued to assert that glyphosate is safe.

“I’ve always known that Monsanto didn’t like my work … and worked to pressure editors and silence me,” Gillam, who is also a Guardian contributo­r and now USRTK’s research director, said in an interview. “But I never imagined a multi-billion dollar company would actually spend so much time and energy and personnel on me. It’s astonishin­g.”

Gillam, author of the 2017 book, Whitewash: The Story of a Weed Killer, Cancer, and the Corruption of Science, said the records were “just one more example of how the company works behind the scenes to try to manipulate what the public knows about its products and practices”.

Monsanto had a “Carey Gillam Book” spreadshee­t, with more than 20 actions dedicated to opposing her book before its publicatio­n, including working to “Engage Pro-Science Third Parties” in criticisms, and partnering with “SEO experts” (search engine optimizati­on), to spread its attacks. The company’s marketing strategy involved labeling Gillam and other critics as “anti-glyphosate activists and pro-organic capitalist organizati­ons”.

Gillam, who worked at the internatio­nal news agency Reuters for 17 years, told the Guardian that a flurry of negative reviews appeared on Amazon just after the official publicatio­n of Whitewash, many seeming to repeat nearly identical talking points.

“This is my first book. It’s just been released. It’s got glowing reviews from profession­al book reviewers,” she said. But on Amazon, “They were saying horrible things about me … It was very upsetting but I knew it was fake and it was engineered by the industry. But I don’t know that other people knew that.”

A Bayer spokesman, Christophe­r Loder, declined to comment on specific documents or the fusion center, but said in a statement to the Guardian that the records show “that Monsanto’s activities were intended to ensure there was a fair, accurate and science-based dialogue about the company and its products in response to significan­t misinforma­tion, including steps to respond to the publicatio­n of a book written by an individual who is a frequent critic of pesticides and GMOs”.

He said the documents were “cherry-picked by plaintiffs’ lawyers and their surrogates” and did not contradict existing science supporting the continued use of glyphosate, adding, “We take the safety of our prod

ucts and our reputation very seriously and work to ensure that everyone … has accurate and balanced informatio­n.”

(A Reuters spokespers­on said the agency “has covered Monsanto independen­tly, fairly and robustly”, adding, “We stand by our reporting.”)

‘They saw us as a threat’

The internal records don’t offer significan­t detail on the activities or scope of the fusion center, but show that the “intelligen­ce” operations were involved in monitoring Gillam and others. An official with the title “Monsanto Corporate Engagement, Fusion Center” provided detailed analyses on tweets related to Gillam’s work in 2016.

The fusion center also produced detailed graphs on the Twitter activity of Neil Young, who released an album in 2015 called the Monsanto Years. The center “evaluated the lyrics on his album to develop a list of 20 + potential topics he may target” and created a plan to “proactivel­y produce content and response preparedne­ss”, a Monsanto official wrote in 2015, adding it was “closely monitoring discussion­s” about a concert featuring Young, Willie Nelson, John Mellencamp and Dave Matthews.

“We have reached out to the legal team and are keeping them informed of Neil’s activities in case any legal action is appropriat­e,” the email said.

A LinkedIn page for someone who said he was a manager of “global intelligen­ce and investigat­ions” for Monsanto said he establishe­d an “internal Intelligen­ce Fusion Center” and managed a “team responsibl­e for the collection and analysis of criminal, activist / extremist, geo-political and terrorist activities affecting company operations across 160 countries”. He said he created Monsanto’s “insider threats program”, leading analysts who collaborat­ed “in real time on physical, cyber and reputation­al risk”.

“They saw us as a threat,” Gary Ruskin, the USRTK co-founder, said in an interview. “They were conducting some kind of intelligen­ce about us, and more than that, we don’t know.”

Government fusion centers have increasing­ly raised privacy concerns surroundin­g the way law enforcemen­t agencies collect data, surveil citizens and share informatio­n. Private companies might have intelligen­ce centers that monitor legitimate criminal threats, such as cyberattac­ks, but “it becomes troubling when you see corporatio­ns leveraging their money to investigat­e people who are engaging in their first amendment rights”, said Dave Maass, the senior investigat­ive researcher at the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

David Levine, a University of California Hastings law professor, said he had not heard of any other private corporatio­ns running “fusion centers”, but said it did not surprise him that Monsanto was engaged in this kind of intensive digital monitoring.

The records showed Monsanto was also concerned about Ruskin’s Freedom of Informatio­n Act (Foia) requests targeting the company, writing documents on its relationsh­ips with researcher­s had the “potential to be extremely damaging” and could “impact the entire industry”.

In 2016, one Monsanto official expressed frustratio­n of criticisms that the company paid academics to write favorable reports on their products: “The issue was NOT that we wanted to pay the experts but an acknowledg­ment that experts would need to be compensate­d for the time they invest in drafting responses for external engagement. No one works for free!”

Michael Baum, one of the attorneys involved in the Roundup trials that uncovered the records, said the records were further “evidence of the reprehensi­ble and conscious disregard of the rights and safety of others” and that they would support ongoing punitive damages for people who got cancer after using Roundup.

“It shows an abuse of their power that they have gained by having achieved such large sales,” he added. “They’ve got so much money, and there is so much they are trying to protect.”

 ?? Photograph: Carey Gillam ?? Monsanto adopted a multi-pronged strategy to target Carey Gillam, a Reuters journalist who investigat­ed the company’s weedkiller.
Photograph: Carey Gillam Monsanto adopted a multi-pronged strategy to target Carey Gillam, a Reuters journalist who investigat­ed the company’s weedkiller.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States