Missouri Archives - Real Milk https://www.realmilk.com/tag/missouri/ Tue, 15 Jun 2021 19:18:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 Morningland Dairy, Missouri https://www.realmilk.com/morningland-dairy/ https://www.realmilk.com/morningland-dairy/#comments Wed, 01 Jun 2011 21:05:36 +0000 http://realmilk.urlstaging.com/?page_id=568 By Pete Kennedy, Esq. Update, Spring 2013 On January 25 a two-and-a-half year battle between Morningland Dairy and the Missouri State Milk Board ended when the […]

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Case-Morningland-600x626By Pete Kennedy, Esq.

Update, Spring 2013

On January 25 a two-and-a-half year battle between Morningland Dairy and the Missouri State Milk Board ended when the Milk Board carted off 36,420 pounds of raw cheese from Morningland’s facility to a local landfill for disposal. Morningland owners, Joe and Denise Dixon, and dozens of supporters of the dairy were present to witness the destruction of cheese never proven to be harmful.

The Milk Board shut down Morningland’s manufacturing operation and ordered all cheese at the facility embargoed on August 26, 2010, after receiving a report from the California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) that Morningland cheese seized in a raid of the Rawesome food club in Venice, California in June 2010 had tested positive for Listeria monocytogenes and Staphyloccocus aureus. Not a single block of cheese in the warehouse had the same batch number as the cheese seized in the Rawesome raid. A Milk Board inspector initially told Joe Dixon that he would only be shut down for a few days—but that changed when FDA stepped up their involvement in the case a short time later and pressured the Milk Board not to let Morningland resume their operations. The Milk Board sent the Dixons a letter requesting that they destroy the entire inventory of cheese at the facility on October 1, 2010; when the Dixons refused, the Milk Board filed a petition in the Circuit Court of Howell County to obtain an order for the destruction of the Morningland cheese. After a two-day trial before Judge David Dunlop, the judge issued a decision on February 23, 2011, ordering the destruction of the cheese. Morningland appealed the decision but the Court of Appeals sided with the Milk Board on September 27, 2012. A petition to the Missouri Supreme Court to hear the case was rejected on December 18, paving the way for the destruction of the cheese to take place.

Neither the Milk Board nor FDA ever tested any of the cheese stored at Morningland. FDA did take one hundred environmental swabs at the facility, all of which tested negative for listeria. Some cheese samples taken by a Morningland employee tested positive for Listeria monocytogenes and Staph. aureus but the employee didn’t follow proper protocols in taking the samples; if the test results had been negative, they never would have been accepted by either the Milk Board or a court as valid. There was no accusation that any cheese Morningland produced had made anyone sick; there had never been any reported illness from the consumption of Morningland products in the thirty years the farmstead cheese operation had been in business.

The Morningland case was about FDA’s agenda to restrict access to raw dairy products with the eventual goal of banning them. The agency doesn’t hesitate in sacrificing a business like the Dixons’ in order to move its agenda along. Media coverage about the destruction of the cheese was heavy, hopefully keeping in the public memory FDA’s role in causing the end of a once prosperous operation.

Update, Winter 2012

On September 27, a Missouri appellate court affirmed the judgment of the Howell County Circuit Court in ordering that all cheese at Morningland Dairy’s facility should be destroyed. The dairy’s cheese manufacturing plant has been shut down since August 2010 when the Missouri State Milk Board embargoed fifty thousand pounds of cheese at the facility after two samples of cheese seized in a June 2010 raid of the Rawesome Food Club in venice, California, tested positive for both listeria monocytogenes and Staph. aureus. On February 23, 2011, the circuit court issued the destruction order [see Wise Traditions Fall 2010, Winter 2011 and Spring 2011 issues for background].

Morningland has appealed the appellate court ruling to the Supreme Court of Missouri on two grounds: first, that only the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services had the authority to embargo the dairy’s cheese under Missouri law and, second, that there was no proof of adulteration to legally justify the embargo since none of the cheese stored at Morningland’s facility was produced on the same dates as the cheese that was seized during the Rawesome raid. While the Missouri Supreme Court has not yet decided whether to grant the appeal, it has submitted a number of questions about the case to the milk board. Morningland has never been accused of making anyone sick with it products; the Supreme Court needs to scrutinize the actions of the State in putting a dairy with a thirty-year track record out of business. Morningland’s owners, Joe and Denise Dixon, have suffered tremendous financial losses and other hardship due to the failure of the Missouri State Milk Board to follow the rule of law; the court should hold the milk board accountable.

Update, Spring 2011

A trial was held January 11-12 at the Howell County Courthouse in West Plains, Missouri, to determine whether approximately 29,000 pounds of cheese held at the facility of Morningland of the Ozarks, LLC (d/b/a Morningland Dairy) should be destroyed despite no reports of illness. Morningland’s entire inventory of cheese has been under embargo since August 26, 2010. Morningland is a farmstead cheese operation that has been in business for more than thirty years without any reported illnesses from the consumption of its products.

On October 22, 2010 the Missouri State Milk Board filed a petition in the Circuit Court of Howell County to order the destruction of the embargoed cheese. On October 1, 2010 the Milk Board had issued a letter to Joe and Denise Dixon, owners of Morningland, requesting that the dairy destroy its entire cheese inventory because some pieces of cheese sent off for testing on August 27 came back positive for Listeria monocytogenes (L. mono.) and others came back positive for Staphylococcus aureus (Staph. aureus or S. aureus).

The trial before Judge David Dunlap went for ten hours each day with much of the testimony focusing on whether the cheese was adulterated and whether the conditions at the Morningland cheese facility were unsanitary. Retired pathologist Dr. Ted Beals, an expert witness for Morningland, testified that it cannot be presumed that a food is adulterated just because its contains L. mono., but that it must be shown it is a type of L. mono. that is capable of making people ill. The Milk Board provided no evidence at the trial as to the type and amount of L. mono. present in the cheese.

As to the sanitation at the Morningland facility, the state had stipulated during a deposition that all 100 environmental swab samples collected by FDA last September at Morningland’s cheese plant had all tested negative for L. mono. Further, Morningland had never been cited for having unsanitary conditions during any inspection of the plant since the Dixons had taken over its operation in 2008.

On February 23, Judge Dunlap issued his decision siding with the Milk Board and ordering that all the embargoed Morningland cheese be destroyed. The judge held for the state based on his conclusions that the cheese was made from milk produced by diseased animals and that the cheese was produced under unsanitary conditions, both of which would be in violation of state statute.

What the judge had done in issuing his ruling was to substitute his judgment for that of the Milk Board. Judge Dunlap found that the Morningland herd was diseased because three tests for somatic cell counts in the herd exceeded the limit allowed by regulation. The Milk Board had never taken any action against Morningland for the high somatic cell tests because there is only a violation of law if the somatic cell count is higher than the maximum limit in three out of five consecutive tests. The dairy’s three high counts were spaced out among some sixteen different testings. Further, if the Milk Board had suspected that animals in the herd were diseased, it would have had a state veterinarian check the herd—something that was never done.

In addition to the high somatic cell counts, the judge concluded that testimony from Denise Dixon provided further evidence the herd was diseased. Dixon testified that several cows had been culled in September 2010; Judge Dunlap stated in his opinion that it could be inferred that the reason for culling was animal disease. In October 2010, Morningland did obtain a Grade A permit enabling them to sell raw milk to a co-op for pasteurization; however, at the time of the culling, the Dixons had no income from their dairy operation since the Milk Board had embargoed all the cheese in their facility and had shut down any further production. The Dixons culled the animals to raise desperately needed funds for the dairy. There wasn’t a shred of evidence introduced at the trial to show that the culling had been done because of diseased cows. Cows would have had to be tested individually to determine which ones to cull; the Dixons never conducted such tests.

In ruling that the cheese facility was unsanitary, Dunlap relied entirely on the testimony and reports of Milk Board inspector Don Falls. In the inspection reports Falls compiled on the Morningland plant, he wrote Morningland up for changes that needed to be made to the facility; during the trial, Falls admitted during cross-examination that nothing he wrote the plant up for amounted to unsanitary conditions.

Morningland will be filing a motion for a new trial. If the motion is denied, an appeal will be filed on Judge Dunlap’s decision.

Update, Winter 2010

Morningland Dairy cheese was seized by both FDA and the California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) in the June 30, 2010 raid on the Rawesome food store in Venice (see Wise Traditions Fall 2010 issue for background on the raid). In August, CDFA informed the Missouri State Milk Board that samples of Morningland cheese had tested positive for Listeria monocytogenes and Staphyloccocus aureus. It should be noted that L. mono is widespread in the environment and many subtypes of this bacteria have not been implicated in human illness. Staph. aureus is present normally on everybody’s skin and is considered protective. Most subtypes of this organism do not produce the toxin, although some subtypes can occasionally cause vomiting. Gastrointestinal illness from Staph. aureus is self limiting, meaning medical treatment is not necessary.

The evidence is that the procedures the agency used in taking the cheese from Rawesome and recording the test results were sloppy at best.

On August 26, the Milk Board issued Morningland orders not to ship any cheese at the facility and to cease all production. On August 27, Morningland sent cheese samples off for testing. Unfortunately, as in California, proper protocols were not followed in taking the samples. A number of the samples came back positive for L. mono and Staph. aureus.

On August 31, Joe and Denise Dixon, owners of Morningland, issued a voluntary recall asking their customers to either destroy or return over sixty thousand pounds of cheese produced from January 1, 2010 onward. (On August 27 FDA had sent out a press release as the Dixons had not yet decided whether to issue a recall.) From August 30 through September 1, FDA conducted an inspection of the Morningland facility, taking one hundred environmental swabs, all of which tested negative for pathogens.

On September 24, the Milk Board verbally requested that Morningland destroy the entire cheese inventory; the Dixons asked that the request be put in writing, which was done on October 1. Morningland responded by objecting to the destruction order and proposing that each batch at the facility be tested, allowing the sale of only those batches of cheese testing negative for contamination.

The next day, the Milk Board rejected the Dixons’ proposal, petitioning the Howell County Court to order destruction of the entire inventory; the hearing was scheduled for October 8, giving the Dixons almost no time to prepare a defense, and was only cancelled when a scheduled state witness was not able to attend. On October 22 the Milk Board again filed a petition for a condemnation order; a hearing on the petition has been scheduled for January 11. If the Court issues the condemnation order, Morningland would be required to destroy fifty thousand pounds of cheese (market value of about two hundred fifty thousand dollars) located at Morningland’s cheesemaking facility.

There have been no reported illnesses from the consumption of cheese produced by Morningland. In fact, there have not been any cases of illness attributed to Morningland products in the thirty years of its existence. The Dixons have a loyal following and sell to hundreds of retail stores across the country as well as direct to consumers through their mail order business. As of the beginning of December, Morningland had not produced any cheese in over two months.

What is unjust about the actions taken against Morningland is that there has not been an adequate level of proof shown to establish that the bacteria found in the cheese are actually harmful to human health. There are many subtypes of L. mono and Staph. aureus; as mentioned above, many of these subtypes have not been found to cause illness in humans. The agencies have the capability to determine the subtype of a pathogen found and to determine whether that particular subtype is on record as having caused human illness; if the subtype has not, then there is no adulteration and no need to destroy the product.

The Milk Board, which is working at the direction of FDA, has not conducted any testing to determine the subtype. Once the agency had the initial positive tests from CDFA and the Dixons, it should have done subsequent testing for the subtype. Even if the subtype is known to cause illness in humans, it still needs to be determined whether the amount of bacteria in the food is enough to actually do so. FDA has a zero tolerance policy for L. mono, a standard widely rejected by the scientific community throughout the world. The zero tolerance policy, in fact, reduces the incentive to test for L. mono., thus potentially making our food supply less safe.

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Bechard Family Farm, Missouri https://www.realmilk.com/bechard-family-farm/ Thu, 31 Dec 2009 18:10:38 +0000 http://realmilk.urlstaging.com/?page_id=2449 By Pete Kennedy, Esq. Update, Fall 2012 On July 31 Armand and Teddi Bechard entered into a consent agreement with the State of Missouri, ending a […]

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By Pete Kennedy, Esq.Case-Bechard-600x626

Update, Fall 2012

On July 31 Armand and Teddi Bechard entered into a consent agreement with the State of Missouri, ending a case that began in 2009. On two occasions in the spring of 2009, undercover agents from the Springfield-Greene County Health Department allegedly purchased raw milk at the Bechards’ central delivery point, a health food store parking lot in Springfield.

The Missouri State Milk Board through the state attorney filed a lawsuit to enjoin the Bechards from delivering raw milk and cream to their customers at a central distribution point. Missouri statute allows for the sale and delivery of raw milk by unlicensed farmers; however, the Milk Board was insisting that raw milk could only be delivered to the customer’s residence while prohibiting delivery at a central distribution point. The Greene County district attorney’s office also brought a criminal action against Armand for allegedly selling milk at a premises off the farm; he was later acquitted on appeal in January 2011.

FTCLDF General Counsel, Gary Cox, provided the following summary of the settlement: “On July 31, 2012, Armand and Teddi Bechard entered into a settlement agreement with the Missouri State Milk Board over allegations that the Bechards illegally sold raw milk at a parking lot. The consent judgment, signed by Judge Michael J. Cordonnier, enjoins the Bechards from selling milk to ‘strangers’ who have not previously arranged for the sale and purchase of raw milk from the Bechards.

“However, the Bechards are free to sell raw milk to anyone they want and, after the sale has been arranged, can deliver the raw milk anywhere they want. In fact, the Bechards are allowed to deliver the raw milk to the customer’s home, to a central distribution point like a parking lot in a shopping center, or to the customer at the Bechards’ own farm.

“The prohibition against selling raw milk to ‘strangers’ would mean that the Bechards, when making a delivery to a central distribution point or at any other location, could not sell milk to anyone who ‘walks up’ to them and who has not previously arranged for the sale and purchase of the raw milk. In entering into the consent judgment, the Bechards did not make any admissions to any of the State Milk Board’s claims or allegations.”

Update, Winter 2009

Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster has filed a petition for both a preliminary and permanent injunction against Armand and Teddi Bechard, seeking an order from the Greene County Circuit Court enjoining Bechard Family Farm from delivering raw milk and cream to its customers at a central distribution point. Under state law, “an individual may purchase and have delivered to him for his own use raw milk or cream from a farm.” The state’s position is that any delivery of raw milk must be direct to the customer’s home.

The petition alleges that two separate purchases of raw milk from Bechard Family Farm were made by undercover agents working for the Springfield-Greene County Health Department. The purchases took place in April, 2009 at the parking lot of Mama Jean’s Natural Food Market in Springfield. According to the complaint, undercover agents “never ordered milk from Mr. and Mrs. Bechard or any representative of the Bechard Family Farm and therefore never requested that the milk be personally delivered to [them] from the farm,” as permitted by state law.

The Bechards’ contention is that the law does not limit delivery of raw milk and cream to the consumer’s residence. All of the Bechards’ customers want delivery to take place at a central distribution point. The case has attracted widespread attention throughout Missouri, with many wondering why the state can’t find a better use for its resources.

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