WARNING: Don't use miracle gro birdseeds.

Stakie

Newbie
I was forwarded this but could not link it. So sorry if it breaks in places it should not. I found this to be pretty important since we use birdseed in our packets. I don't particularly use this brand but in case others do I suggest stopping. Hopefully it's okay to post this here.

Science
Scotts Miracle-Gro Company knowingly sold poisoned birdseed | @GrrlScientist
Wednesday 21 March 2012
The Scotts Miracle-Gro Company pleads guilty to knowingly selling poisoned birdseed and lawn and garden care products containing undocumented pesticides to an unsuspecting public

I recently heard about the most astonishing corporate crime: the American company, Scotts Miracle-Gro, violated US federal environmental laws by manufacturing and selling poisoned birdseed for more than two years. The Scotts Miracle-Gro company entered guilty pleas to all charges in U.S. District Court and these guilty pleas were accepted by Judge James Graham on Tuesday, 13 March 2012. Penalties have not yet been determined.

The Scotts Miracle-Gro company, based in Marysville, Ohio, USA, is the world's largest marketer of lawn and garden care products which are sold under a number of consumer brand names, including Scotts®, Miracle-Gro®, and Ortho®. In Europe, the company's brands include Weedol®, Pathclear®, Celaflor®, Evergreen®, Levington®, Miracle-Gro®, KB®, Fertiligene® and Substral®. Additionally, Scotts is Monsanto's exclusive agent for the marketing and distribution of consumer Roundup®.

In addition to lawn and garden care products, the Scotts Miracle-Gro company manufactures and distributes several widely-used and popular brands of food for wild birds, marketed under the names, "Country Pride" and "Morning Song", as well as "Scott's Songbird Selections" and "Scott's Wild Bird Food", which are collectively known as "Morning Song". These brand lines include bags of seed and seed mixes, suet blocks and other foods intended for wild birds.

Scotts Miracle-Gro added toxic chemicals to their bird seeds

According to court documents, the Scotts Miracle-Gro company added the pesticides, Storcide II and Actellic® 5E, their wild bird feeds to prevent insects from consuming the products during storage. Neither pesticide is licensed by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for use in bird foods. This is in direct violation of FIFRA -- the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act.

Storcide II contains the active ingredient, chlorpyrifos-methyl, and Actellic® 5E, contains the active ingredient, pirimiphos-methyl. According to the product label attached to Storcide II containers and Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) information accompanying this pesticide, it is toxic to fish, birds and wildlife. Additionally, because the EPA requires precautionary language on labels for all products containing chlorpyrifos, those who worked directly with manufacturing the birdseeds should have known that use in birdseed was illegal, unless they were either illiterate or blind.

The EPA's fact sheet on pirimiphos-methyl states that "[a]lthough pirimiphos-methyl is highly toxic to birds and fish, these risks are not of concern based on the use pattern", indicating that this chemical is not intended to be applied to anything intentionally fed to birds.

Both chemical toxins act as cholinesterase inhibitors that result in overstimulation of the nervous system. Small doses of either poison cause symptoms that include nausea, dizziness, and confusion, and higher doses lead to respiratory paralysis and death.
Scotts Miracle-Gro knowingly sold poisoned birdseed

According to court documents, Scotts Miracle-Gro was warned about the toxicity of these chemicals by two employees. One employee, a pesticide chemist, approached management about these dangers in the summer of 2007, whilst the other employee, an ornithologist, notified management in the autumn of that same year. The Scotts Miracle-Gro company ignored these warnings and continued to produce and distribute their poisoned birdseed products for at least another six months, until March of 2008.

At the same time, a federal registrations manager employed by the Scotts Miracle-Gro company intentionally falsified pesticide registration documents for two other products sold by the company, "Scotts Garden Weed Preventer & Plant Food" and "Scotts Lawn Service Fertilizer With Halts". Neither of these products were registered with the EPA and thus, both were illegally sold to the public. When the EPA contacted the Scotts Miracle-Gro company asking for the required documents and certificates, the manager then "fabricated correspondence and agency documents ... in an effort to deceive EPA into believing it had registered these products but lost its files", according to court documents. The EPA then launched an investigation.

According to court documents, the Scotts Miracle-Gro company voluntarily disclosed to the EPA and the USDA that they had manufactured and sold poisoned birdseed, but discontinued doing so in March 2008.

After reading the court documents, it is my opinion that either the company or its employees volunteered this illegal use of chemical poisons in their birdseed because they expected that their wrongdoing would be discovered during the ensuing investigation. If adding these pesticides to the birdseed was an accident, warnings from their employees should have caused the company to immediately stop manufacturing their poisoned birdseed and issue a voluntary national recall of all contaminated items. However, neither of these actions occurred. Based on that information, one wonders whether the company would ever have voluntarily stopped adding poisons to their birdseed if the EPA had not stepped in to investigate the forged documents and illegal use of pesticides in their lawn care products?

According to court documents, Scotts Miracle-Gro sold more than 73 million packages of these poisoned bird foods nationwide to an unsuspecting public for a period of more than two years. Only 2 million of those 73 million units could be recalled.

But it would appear that not all sellers were aware of this product recall. I found one story about a San Diego county couple who lost nearly all of their domestic aviary birds at the end of January 2010 after feeding Scotts Miracle-Gro Morning Song Wild Bird Seed that they had recently purchased from a local Wal-Mart [story]. Out of a flock numbering nearly 100 birds, only eight survived. I mention this to illustrate how poisonous this seed is to birds, how many birds can die after eating just one meal of this poisoned seed, and to show that the damages caused by these products may still be occurring.
Scotts Miracle-Gro pleads guilty and proposes a plea deal

As part of the plea deal, the company would pay a fine of $4 million and give an additional $500,000 to help support wildlife study and preservation. Judge Graham has so far deferred making a decision on this proposed penalty, and the sentencing hearing has yet to be scheduled. Under the law, civil violations are assessed fines of not more than $5,000 per offense whilst criminal violations of FIFRA are assessed fines of "not more than $50,000 per offense or imprisonment of not more than 1 year or both". If Scotts Miracle-Gro's plea proposal is accepted by the judge, I think it would be the maximum allowed under the law. Further, if these penalties are accepted by the judge, this decision may possibly be the highest ever levied under FIFRA. According to my sources, just the proposed $500,000 "donation" to environmental groups is "substantial" under this law.

But it is my opinion that neither of these penalties are substantial or severe enough. According to my calculations, even after paying the proposed fines, the company will have earned a profit from their sales of poisoned birdseed and lawn care products to an unsuspecting and trusting public. In fact, even if a penalty of $73 million -- merely $1 for each poisoned bird food item sold -- was levied against the company, Scotts Miracle-Gro will probably still earn a profit from sales of all their illegal products. For this reason, I view this penalty as a small slap on the wrist for the Scotts Miracle-Gro Company, a publicly-traded company (NYSE: SMG) with an excess of $3 billion in annual worldwide sales.

Unfortunately, when an entire company engages in criminal activity, imprisonment is not normally an option. But in my opinion, the outrageously inflated salaries paid to corporate chairman and chief executive officer (Jim Hagedorn) and president (Barry Sanders), who were in those positions in 2008, should be justified by holding them personally and criminally liable when the company knowingly commits criminal acts under their leadership, since presumably, this is partially what these outsized salaries are intended to compensate them for.

It is my hope that the judge will ensure that the maximum fines and penalties will be levied against the Scotts Miracle-Gro Company. This is the least that can be done in view of this egregious betrayal of the public trust, the damage to the environment and the terrible loss of wild birds and other wildlife -- all due to the criminal activities of this corporate giant.

At this point, it is likely that the government's lawyers are feeling pretty good about this outcome: they got an admission of criminal liability and a record-setting monetary fine without the years of litigation and thousands of man-hours that a prosecution would require. Yet I can't help but wonder what millions of dead finches, sparrows, doves, cardinals and other songbirds might say about this, if only we could understand them.
Source material and additional information:

About the Scotts Miracle-Gro Company.

"USA v The Scotts Miracle-Gro Company - FIFRA Criminal Prosecution", United States District Court for the southern district of Ohio, Eastern Division, Case: 2:12-cr-00024-JLG Doc #: 1 Filed: 01/25/12. Retrieved 19 March 2012. [PDF]

"USA v The Scotts Miracle-Gro Company - FIFRA Criminal Prosecution", Government's Plea Agreement Submission of Elements and Penalties for 7 USC §136j. Retrieved 19 March 2012. [PDF].

Storcide II product label (PDF) and MSDS (PDF).

Actellic® 5E product label (PDF) and MSDS (PDF).

Pirimiphos-Methyl IRED Facts (EPA Factsheet).

Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA)

Press release: ScottsMiracle-Gro Announces Jim Hagedorn Will Remain as CEO.

Many thanks to Mike Dunford for his help in identifying and retrieving the specific court documents and for interesting discussions about the law. Many thanks also to Bob O'Hara for interesting discussions about this piece.
 
jpariury said:
We're a bit of a ways from 2008.
yup, the court case was just finalized is all.
 
Oh, Monsanto. Destroying the world, one seed at a time.

Only they would try to pass laws that made it illegal for farmers to save seed from crops grown by Monsanto stock, and then, when that failed, came up with a terminator gene to put in the seed they sell, to make sure that any plants that grow as a result have sterile seeds. Because if that gets out into the normal population (which their anti-Roundup GMO corn has, despite reports issued by the company that it wouldn't cross-pollinate) it won't be a bad thing.
 
phedre said:
Oh, Monsanto. Destroying the world, one seed at a time.

Only they would try to pass laws that made it illegal for farmers to save seed from crops grown by Monsanto stock, and then, when that failed, came up with a terminator gene to put in the seed they sell, to make sure that any plants that grow as a result have sterile seeds. Because if that gets out into the normal population (which their anti-Roundup GMO corn has, despite reports issued by the company that it wouldn't cross-pollinate) it won't be a bad thing.

Same people well known for trying to get legal rights to heirloom breeds they stole samples of from long-running farms so as to force them to use Monsanto seed.
 
Considering I am using birdseed to hit my friends in the chest, arms, legs, and occasionally face (SORRY!), the fact that birds will die eating it doesn't seriously affect me. In fact, I see myself doing birds a favor by not buying it for the purpose of murdering birds.

That said, I have absolutely no clue what type of birdseed I buy.

-MS
 
If you're buying packaged bird seed, you're probably way over paying. I buy millet in bulk from a local grocery store for around $.40/lb, if you buy 50lb bags from a bulk supplier or feed store you can get it for around the same.
 
But Joe, most people won't have need for 40lbs of seed. I'm concerned about purchasing, storing, and transporting that amount of seed. I'm concerned that, completely by accident, I'll spill my seed upon the ground. I've heard that's bad, and don't want to risk it for spell packets.
 
obcidian_bandit said:
But Joe, most people won't have need for 40lbs of seed. I'm concerned about purchasing, storing, and transporting that amount of seed. I'm concerned that, completely by accident, I'll spill my seed upon the ground. I've heard that's bad, and don't want to risk it for spell packets.

your mocking him, aren't you.
 
It doesn't mean they've stopped doing it.

And yes, Monsanto has made a point to put just about everyone involved in agriculture out of business by claiming copyright infringement when plants cross pollinate.
 
jpariury said:
Stakie said:
Well, I hope what you buy is not made by miracle gro is all.
Seed from 2008 is not likely to be in circulation.
I store a lot of bird seed specifically to make packets. I know for a fact I have birdseed that is over a couple years old. I also know that some stores do not sell seed as fast as others. No, not saying that every store you may go to has 2008 miracle gro birdseed but it is POSSIBLE to find that birdseed or even have it in a garage. I wouldn't doubt they continued with their illegal acts after 2008. They say it, but there is no way to KNOW it.

Only letting others know what I have found out.
 
phedre said:
It doesn't mean they've stopped doing it.
That's why I don't buy BMWs. They could very well be supplying the Nazis with engines for their Luftwaffe.

Stakie said:
I wouldn't doubt they continued with their illegal acts after 2008. They say it, but there is no way to KNOW it.
Well, other than to examine the evidence.

Don't get me wrong.... I'm not saying "You must buy Miracle-Gro!". I'm pretty sure I don't even own any stock in the company. I generally think there are cheaper alternatives. But I don't know that this is the camel that breaks the straw's back for me.
 
Imma just leave this right here...

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhuMLpdnOjY[/youtube]
 
SkollWolfrun said:
obcidian_bandit said:
But Joe, most people won't have need for 40lbs of seed. I'm concerned about purchasing, storing, and transporting that amount of seed. I'm concerned that, completely by accident, I'll spill my seed upon the ground. I've heard that's bad, and don't want to risk it for spell packets.

your mocking him, aren't you.

No, I think he's saying we need to make a 40lb spell packet with a certain biata's name on it.
 
Druk said:
No, I think he's saying we need to make a 40lb spell packet with a certain biata's name on it.

I suppose this is one way to make your alchemy globes REALLY toxic. ^^
 
The mold which grows on birdseed left on the ground is toxic enough to kill a majority of birds. Any packet left to mold on the ground is likely to kill that which eats it... regardless of what birdseed you use in it.

One of the many reasons why picking up after yourself is a good idea.
 
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