3 Comments

  1. Sue Frasier says:

    Well we can only stand around and guess just who it is that Seattle is “suing” since the original Monsanto Aroclor PCB Factory in Anniston, Alabama went out of business at the turn of the millennium. They are no longer even known as “Monsanto” anymore and the former address is owned by a new company, Eastman I think it is. They have no corporate ties at all to the former Monsanto Aroclor Factory in Alabama so we can only guess where all of this ends up other than a fleeting moment of headlines in this news column. —- Sue Frasier, Albany New York near the Hudson River PCB dredging project of Upstate New York.

    1. They can run, but they can’t hide, no matter how many name changes and mergers. Monsanto and Solutia Inc. had to (cough) cough up $700 Million to pay claims by over 20,000 Anniston residents over contamination by PCBs.

      1. Sue Frasier says:

        Yes but you are overlooking one small but very important detail on what you just said. Monsanto and Solutia paid BEFORE they went out of business and now Solutia is owned by Eastman and not Monsanto. The End. This Seattle case is at high risk of getting dismissed without any processing at all by the courts.

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