Feds Again Invade Amish Farm for 5 a.m. Inspection
Submitted by Drew Kaplan on April 27, 2010 – 8:37 pm
HFA members may remember a previous
article we published about the FDA invading an Amish farm. The story
continues with agents invading the Amish farm in Pennsylvaniayet again 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 Kinzers, 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. o:p>
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.
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.
- Natural Solutions Radio Administrator's blog
- Login or register to post comments
- Printer-friendly version
Recent Article Posts
Search any Term/Word Here
Pastoral Medical Association
Restoring "choice" in health care
Are you a State licensed health care professional that would like to incorporate safe, natural medicine in your practice but do not have that "choice" because you are restrained by "standards of care"?
Are you an unlicensed natural health professional whose only "choice" in offering services is to "stay under the radar"?
Would you like to have a "choice" that provides a legal path for State licensed and unlicensed professionals alike to offer safe, natural alternatives to conventional medicine?
Click the Image to find out more.
Sovereign Medical Order of the Knights of Hope
Healing is what happens when Pastoral Practitioners minister, enabling people to receive restoration to health of body and mind through God's great love and mercy. This restoration of health is part of what is meant by the "abundant life" which the Lord promised.
Radio Show Topics
Location
We are Located in:
Health Naturally
7040 N. Mesa Suite S
El Paso, TX 79912
Phone: 915-833-0222
Toll Free: 1-800-706-0450
Alternative Listening For Live Streaming
Problems Listening to BBS Radio on your iPhone or iPod?
The QuickTime Player Below Does Work.
Just click the Player of your Choice, and get the show live.
56K Stereo hi-speed
for hi-speed
connections
DSL/Cable
24/7 stream
|
|
LISTEN LIVE windows |
|
|
LISTEN LIVE real one |
|
|
LISTEN LIVE primary flash |
|
|
LISTEN LIVE quicktime |








Recent comments
28 weeks 5 days ago
33 weeks 1 day ago
1 year 31 weeks ago
1 year 44 weeks ago
1 year 45 weeks ago
2 years 1 day ago
2 years 1 week ago
2 years 1 week ago
2 years 4 weeks ago
2 years 7 weeks ago