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Firm Liable for Not Warning of Dioxin Spill

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Associated Press

Jurors today found Monsanto Co. liable for failing to warn a Missouri town about the risks of a 1979 chemical spill that contained less than a teaspoon of dioxin, and awarded plaintiffs $16.2 million after one of the nation’s longest jury trials.

The 65 plaintiffs, who said they were sickened by the spill, had sought $100 million in punitive damages and $35.4 million in compensatory damages. The lawsuit accused the chemical company in the Jan. 10, 1979, spill of a 19,000-gallon rail shipment of raw material used in a wood preservative over a half-mile area in Sturgeon, Mo.

The trial began Feb. 22, 1984, and included testimony from 182 witnesses, 6,000 exhibits and more than 100,000 pages of transcripts.

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Jury deliberations began Aug. 26 and were interrupted Sept. 14 when jurors said they couldn’t reach a decision. Judge Richard Goldenhersh sent them back to continue deliberating.

The case stems from an accident in which a tank car ruptured as it passed through Sturgeon on its way to Tacoma, Wash., from Monsanto’s Sauget, Ill., plant.

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