Friday, April 23, 2010

Be aware.....

UDDERLY RIDICULOUS

Feds invade farm for 5 a.m. inspection
Serve warrant on farmer up to milk cows

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Posted: April 22, 2010
10:55 pm Eastern


By Bob Unruh
© 2010 WorldNetDaily


Federal agents invaded an Amish farm in Pennsylvania at 5 a.m. to inspect cow-milking facilities then followed up the next day with a written notice that the farmer was engaged in interstate sale of raw milk in violation of the Public Health Services Act.




A failure to correct the situation could result in "seizure and/or injunction," the warning letter from Kirk Sooter, district director of the Philadelphia office of the Department of Health and Human Services, told farmer Dan Allgyer of Kinzer, Pa., on Wednesday.

The farm invaded Tuesday is the one agents visited in February, driving past "Private Property" signs to demand Allgyer open his property for their inspection, saying, "You have cows. You produce food for human consumption."

The case is being publicized by the National Independent Consumers and Farmers Association, which promotes traditional methods of linking farmers with consumers.

Spokeswoman Deborah Stockton told WND Allgyer "is the type of farmer who exemplifies what we are trying to restore." On her organization's website is the commitment "to promote and preserve unregulated direct farmer-to-consumer trade that fosters availability of locally grown or home-produced food products."

She reported she got details directly from Allgyer of Tuesday's early morning inspection, which highlights the growing conflict between farmers who want to provide health food locally and federal regulators.

Allgyer could not be reached immediately for comment.

(Story continues below)




The farmer told NICFA he came out of his house about 4:30 a.m. for his milking routine and noticed a lot of traffic on Kinzer Road.

Shortly later, the cars were coming up his lane.

"I stood back in the dark barn to see what they were going to do. They drove past my two 'Private Property' signs, up to where my coolers were, with their headlights shining right on them," Allgyer reported.

He called to the five men as they were preparing to knock on his home, where his wife and family remained asleep.

"Two were from the FDA, agent Joshua C. Schafer who had been there in February and another. They showed me identification, but I was too flustered to ask for their cards. I remember being told that two were deputy U.S. marshals and one a state trooper. They started asking me questions right away. They handed me a paper, and I didn't realize what it was," he said.

"Schafer told me they were there to do a 'routine inspection.' At 5:00 in the morning, I wondered to myself? 'Do you have a warrant?' I asked, and one of them, a marshal or the state policeman, said, 'You've got in your hand buddy.' I asked, 'What is the warrant about?' Schafer responded, 'We have credible evidence that you are involved in interstate commerce,'" the farmer reported.

WND telephone calls and e-mails to the FDA requesting comment did not generate a response.

Allgyer said he confirmed his identification but then said he wouldn't answer anything further.

He said he questioned their arrival at his farm at 5 a.m. when the warrant clearly stated it was valid during "reasonable times during ordinary business hours," but one of the agents said "ordinary business hours for agriculture start at 5 a.m."

The agents spent their time "rooting around, like a couple of pigs, in the freezer and cooler area and took many pictures," Allgyer reported.

"They came in the dark, shining bright flashlights while my family was asleep, keeping me from milking my cows, from my family, from breakfast with my family and from our morning devotions, and alarming my children enough so that the first question they asked my wife was, 'Is Daddy going to jail?'" Allgyer said.

The subsequent warning letter was an all-inclusive notice that federal regulations prohibit "the delivery into interstate commerce of milk and milk products in final package form for direct human consumption unless they have been pasteurized."

"It is your responsibility to ensure adherence with all requirements. … Failure to make prompt corrections could result in regulatory action without further notice," the letter said.

The letter directed Allgyer to notify Compliance Officer Richard Cherry of the corrections.

Stockton warned the requirement now is for federal agents to claim they have "credible evidence" regarding a case, but a proposed federal change would strike those words in the law and replace them with "reason to believe."

"The phrase 'reason to believe' would be inserted 14 times into the code with S 510," she said. "If this bill goes through, the FDA will have control of farms. They will not need 'credible evidence' to act. They will essentially be given a free hand to act as they want. And look at how they already act, even with the existing constraints in place."

Allgyer previously had told the officers that as a private farmer, he does not sell to the public.

Advocates say raw milk is healthier.

According to natural-foods blogger Kimberly Hartke, Kevin Trudeau touts raw milk in his New York Times best-seller "Natural Cures They Don't Want You to Know About," and Sally Fallon Morell's cookbook, "Nourishing Traditions," which has sold 350,000 copies.

On a forum page at Chronwatch-America.com, a participant concluded, "The food produced on that farm is probably far safer than anything you get at the grocery store."

That opinion was endorsed on the Food Freedom blog, where one participant wrote, ""Factory foods are the ones making people sick & getting recalled."

The Weston A. Price Foundation, which is among the nonprofits that educate consumers about more natural food-production methods, said demand for such products is growing.

"Raw milk … is a supremely healthy food that should be available to those who want it," said Morell, the foundation's president.

In January, Canadian farmer Michael Schmidt won a court victory when he was found not guilty of selling raw milk to members of a cow-sharing consortium.

In a previous U.S. case, Mennonite farmer Mark Nolt of Maryland had his farm raided by SWAT-type agents. He was fined more than $4,000 and had his equipment confiscated for providing unpasteurized milk to participants in his program.

8 comments:

Farming On Faith said...

This is totally unreal!!
What a nightmare!

Mama Mess said...

What a mess our country is becoming, faster and faster every day our freedoms are being taken away. Prayer is the only thing I know to do right now, so that is what I'm going to do, right now!

Michaela Dunn Leeper said...

I was just reading this before I started blog hopping. This and a few other stories of the same liking.

Bastards.

Kelle at The Never Done Farm said...

I've never understood how our freedom of choice, I mean in choosing what we want to eat and how we coose to live, was handed over to the FDA, USDA and alike. Just look at their record of supposedly protecting all of us from harmful diseases, reactions to perscription drugs,food borne illness( that's a good one, yeah right!) and etc....

I'm sorry I guess I'll be breaking many a law when and if this Cap and Trade deal gets rammed down our throats, just like Obamacare was. We WILL garden and promote buying local foods,we WILL continue to raise our own produce and animals without interference of the government and we WILL stand our ground and fight if needed, until the bitter end! We,all have been pushed into a corner, now is the time to push back and make a change for the better and it WILL work if we all stand together.
Blessings,
Kelle

Mama Mess said...

I feel the same way Kelle! I won't stop!

Nekkid Chicken said...

You know what I find to be a MIRACLE? Americans have not formed a huge revolt and stormed Washington and state leaders. Completely ousted them from their comfortable chairs.

That is just distasteful....

Found you from 3 Acres blog.

Nice to meet you,
Mal

Kelle at The Never Done Farm said...

Goodwife,
Somehow I knew you would too, thanks for standing firm*wink*

Mal,
NIce to meet you and I am in complete agreement with you and that is what I plant to do in our local election, state election and the national election this year. Of course we have been doing this, it's just that nobody else was awake, and instead thought we were radical nuts, LOL!!!!

Hope to see you back and thanks for your comment.
Blessings,
Kelle
PS. can you tell it's rainy here and I'm just NOT feeling like cleaning the house, even though I WILL because it needs a good deep cleaning*wink*

Jennifer said...

I think just the aggressive and rude manner in which farmers are treated by police and federal agents is ridiculous and so unnecessary. It is getting more and more common for them to treat farmers like drug dealers. Very sad!

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