(Reuters) — American wheat farmers and a food safety advocacy group filed a lawsuit June 6 against biotech seed developer Monsanto, accusing the company of failing to protect the U.S. wheat market from contamination by its unauthorized wheat.
The petition, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Washington, seeks class-action status to represent other farmers it says were harmed by lower wheat prices as some foreign buyers have shied away from U.S. wheat.
It names Clarmar Farms Inc., farmer Tom Stahl, and the Center for Food Safety as plaintiffs.
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The suit follows a similar action filed June 3 by a Kansas wheat farmer, alleging that he and other growers have been hurt financially by the discovery of an unapproved genetically modified wheat that Monsanto said it stopped testing and shelved nine years ago.
The wheat was approved as safe for human and animal consumption, but was never approved for commercial use because Monsanto never applied for registration.
Two other farmers lodged a similar lawsuit in federal court in the western district of Washington state.
The lawsuits come after the U.S. Department of Agriculture an-nounced May 29 that a wheat farmer in Oregon had discovered Monsanto’s experimental wheat growing on his farm.