----- forwarded message -----
Date: Thu, 17 May 2001 23:31:56 +0200
From: secr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: GenetiX Alert Press Release: Activists Destroy GE Crops at Research
Facility in Brentwood,          CA
----- forwarded message -----
Subject: [EF!] Fw: GenetiX Alert Press Release: Activists Destroy GE
Crops at Research Facility in Brentwood, CA
Date: Thu, 17 May 2001 18:34:37 +0100
From: "ELP Support Network" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
----- Original Message -----
From: GenetiX Alert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



GENETIX ALERT NEWS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Denny Henke
Cell: 901.438.9907 Office: 901.458.9907
Date: May 17, 2001


Activists Destroy GE Crops at Research Facility in Brentwood, CA

Brentwood, CA - On May 16th, 2001 anti-biotech direct actionists
destroyed transgenic strawberry, tomato, and onion plants were uprooted
and destroyed. According to the  communiqu� �a group dedicated to the
right to good food, untainted by genetic engineering, occupied and acted
against one DNA Plant Technology research facility.�

The communiqu� continues �DNA Plant Technology Holdings was recently
acquired by ELM, a multinational bioengineering corporation that also
owns Seminis Vegetable Seeds, the largest distributor of fruit and
vegetable seeds in the world.  DNAP is currently growing more than
15,000 acres of genetically engineered field crops crops under in Mexico
and the US, mostly without the public's knowledge. DNAP has more than 50
patents for such technologies as promoters, gene introduction,
selectable markers plant regeneration.�

This  action, the 3rd of 2001, comes nearly 2 months after an action by
OSU students in Corvallis, OR. Since November 1998 there have been over
40 anti-genetic direct actions in North America.  The direct actionists
continue to maintain that biotechnology is completely unnecessary and is
being developed at the expense of human and ecological health solely to
increase the profits of large multinational corporations. With the North
American growing season at hand it is likely that direct actions against
facilities producing and testing genetically engineered organisms will
resume.

The activists link the direct action movement against biotechnology to
the developing movement against global capitalism stating that �In
recent years, more and more Americans are becoming fed up with corporate
secrecy and lack of accountability for the changes they make in
communities, human health, and the environment. The backlash against the
WTO was one sign of this dissatisfaction, and ongoing anti-biotechnology
test plot sabotage actions are another.  Upset by what we were learning
of the health and environmental ramifications of Roundup Ready
technology and of the business practices of Seminis and DNAP in
particular, we rounded up our favorite animal friends and decided to
take action in spite of their boasted security measures.�

The communiqu� concludes �Safely outside on DNAP's poisoned earth, we
turned our attention to a half acre test plot of mature onion plants
that deserved to share the tomatoes' and strawberries' fate. Our frenzy
of uprooting took down another experiment in 5 minutes. A good nights
work lying in shreds behind us, we melted into the night the way we had
come.�

*Attached is copy of the communiqu�.



--- Begin communiqu� ---
In the early morning of May 16th, 2001 a group dedicated to the right to
good food, untainted by genetic engineering, occupied and acted against
one DNA Plant Technology research facility.  This research location is
located outside of Brentwood CA on Balfour Road, 1/2 mile east of
Highway 4.  We prevented further steps in transgenic crop experiments,
within this entity, from occurring this season. Transgenic strawberry,
tomato, and onion plants were uprooted and destroyed.

This is not the first time that people have taken direct action against
transgenic strawberry experiments: the first anti-GE action in the US
took place less than a mile from the DNAP facility.  Nighttime gardeners
targeted GenTech's Frostban strawberry, setting the stage for more than
50 anti-GE actions to date.

DNA Plant Technology Holdings was recently acquired by ELM, a
multinational bioengineering corporation that also owns Seminis
Vegetable Seeds, the largest distributor of fruit and vegetable seeds in
the world.  DNAP is currently growing more than 15,000 acres of
genetically engineered field crops crops under in Mexico and the US,
mostly without the public's knowledge. DNAP has more than 50 patents for
such technologies as promoters, gene introduction, selectable markers
plant regeneration.  One gene silencing technology, trademarked
Transwitch, allows agribusinessmen to switch genes on and off at will,
for example the gene responsible for ethylene production in tomatoes.
The Flavr Savr tomato utilizes this technology to create a tomato with a
shelf life of two to three weeks. Like most applications of genetic
engineering, this trait benefits neither the workers who grow the tomato
nor the people who buy these pale-pink, plastic-wrapped, nutritionally
zapped tomatoes.

In 1999, DNAP entered into a "technology collaboration agreement" with
Monsanto in order to adapt Monsanto's Roundup Ready technology to
strawberries.  Faced with the phase-out of methyl bromide (a
highly-toxic herbicide/ soil fumigant) in 2003, DNAP hopes to force
chemical-dependent farmers to adopt this new weed control technology.
Meanwhile, the "fruits of such manipulations are filling up the shelves
of our supermarkets. They come with a cheap price per pound, but hold
the least nutritional value.

DNAP has pushed the EPA to change its standards for allowable worker
exposure to Roundup.  Since workers enter the fields two times per week
to pick the berries, their exposure to this toxic and carcinogenic
herbicide would be greatly increased by the implementation of this
technology. In addition, Roundup Ready technology results in the fields
being literally saturated with poison, with dire effects on the health
of the soil. Once again, the giants of genetic modification are
sacrificing the health of the people and the land for a pure profit
motive.

Now DNAP is moving into so-called "second wave" research which is trying
to incorporate drugs into the tissues of food plants.  But our
resistance is rooted deep in the land, and as long as they attempt to
develop these alter our food, our resistance will continue.

Researching this company and it's facilities, we discovered an unusual
level of secrecy surrounding it's operations. DNA Plant Holdings was
conspicuously absent from tax assessors listings, had no posted signs of
any sort in this otherwise neighborly agricultural community, and
otherwise went to great lengths to conceal the nefarious nature of their
business.  We unearthed a report for DNAP stockholders that boasted of
the site's remoteness and inaccessibility to public view.  Seminis, also
owned by ELM, has been a frequent target of anti-biotechnology actions,
and the DNAP report reflected this paranoia. They even reassured the
stockholders that the test plots were protected by security guards
against 'fauna trespassers'.

In recent years, more and more Americans are becoming fed up with
corporate secrecy and lack of accountability for the changes they make
in communities, human health, and the environment. The backlash against
the WTO was one sign of this dissatisfaction, and ongoing
anti-biotechnology test plot sabotage actions are another.  Upset by
what we were learning of the health and environmental ramifications of
Roundup Ready technology and of the business practices of Seminis and
DNAP in particular, we rounded up our favorite animal friends and
decided to take action in spite of their boasted security measures.

On a dark night we slipped through the open field surrounding the
experimental facility.  Working less than 50 feet from a brightly-lit
house equipped with motion sensor/security light apparently aimed at the
DNAP fields, we entered the 1-acre strawberry test plot.  True to
Roundup Ready test protocol, the plants were enveloped in a dense carpet
of weeds, ready for application of the poisonous herbicide.  We removed
an acre of the enormous, leathery Frankenplants to a short new life- in
plastic bags full of bleach to prevent any possibility of survival and
replanting.

We next proceeded to one of the two greenhouses of DNAP's tomato
experiments.  We took a walk right through the walls, found a 1/4 acre
of 4-foot tall fruiting tomatoes and dispatched them to their rightful
dwelling place in hell.  We invalidated the year's experiment in less
than 10 minutes, and caused some uncounted amount of economic damage.

Safely outside on DNAP's poisoned earth, we turned our attention to a
half acre test plot of mature onion plants that deserved to share the
tomatoes' and strawberries' fate. Our frenzy of uprooting took down
another experiment in 5 minutes. A good nights work lying in shreds
behind us, we melted into the night the way we had come.


^^^^^^^^^^^^^END COMMUNIQU�^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
GenetiX Alert is an independent news center that works with other
above-ground, anti-genetic engineering organizations. GA has no
knowledge of the person(s) who carryout any underground actions. GA does
not advocate illegal acts, but seeks to explain why people destroy
genetically engineered crops and undertake other nonviolent actions
aimed at resisting genetic engineering and increasing the difficulty for
entities which seek to advance genetic engineering or its products. GA
spokespeople are available for media interviews. An archive of
anti-biotech direct actions can be found at http://tao.ca/~ban/ar.htm

Reporters and other interested parties may contact GenetiX Alert at:
cell phone: 901.438.9907
office phone: 901.458.9907
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web: http://tao.ca/~ban/gapo.htm
787 Ellsworth
Memphis, TN 38111 USA
contact: Denny Henke






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