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Tropicana gets sued

Lewis

Member
Lawsuits slam 'natural' claims from OJ to chips

Lawsuits slam 'all natural' claims from Tropicana orange juice to chips and ice cream

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Orange juice maker Tropicana markets its brand as fresh from the grove, but a series of lawsuits nationwide claim the company's juice is so heavily processed it shouldn't be called "natural."
In approximately 20 lawsuits, the first one filed in New Jersey, lawyers claim the company adds chemically engineered "flavor packs" to its juice, making it taste the same year-round. On Thursday, lawyers came together in Washington to argue before a panel of judges about where the lawsuits should be heard as a group.


Tropicana declined to comment but said in a statement that it is committed to full compliance with labeling laws and to producing "great-tasting 100 percent orange juice."
The orange juice lawsuits are just the latest disputes over "all natural" claims. Over the past several years, a number of major national brands have been attacked for what consumers have called deceptive labeling. Tostitos, SunChips, Snapple and Ben & Jerry's ice cream have all faced similar attacks.


The lawsuits have become common enough that the Grocery Manufacturers Association, which represents more than 300 food and beverage makers, had a panel that discussed the topic as part of a conference in February. Lawyers representing food and beverage companies have told their clients to be wary. Part of the problem, lawyers agree, is that consumers are looking for healthier products, and companies have responded by creating and branding their products as "all natural."


The Food and Drug Administration, the agency that oversees packaged food labeling in the United States, has no definition of what counts as "natural." As long as a food labeled "natural" doesn't contain added color, artificial flavor or synthetic substances, the agency doesn't object.
That's not enough guidance, some lawyers said.
"The whole natural issue is a mess," said Michael Jacobson, the executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a Washington-based food safety and advocacy group that helped get the makers of 7UP and Capri Sun to stop making natural claims about their products.


Jacobson and others say the FDA's lack of guidance has left lingering questions.
One question has been whether a product with high fructose corn syrup, which is made by processing corn but does not occur naturally, can be labeled natural. That was the issue in a 2007 lawsuit over Snapple drinks. Snapple has said it no longer uses high fructose corn syrup in products marked "all natural," and a New York judge ultimately ruled in Snapple's favor and closed the case last year, but other lawsuits are still questioning the use of the term.
Many "all natural" lawsuits are still in their infancy, said Kellie Lerner a lawyer who is involved in the orange juice litigation and closely following "all natural" cases.



Lerner said like the orange juice lawsuit, other similar lawsuits have sought class action status, where one or more consumers sue on behalf of all people who bought the product.
The lawsuits could get dismissed or go to trial, but companies could agree to settle with consumers and offer product vouchers or rebates. The company that owns Ben & Jerry's and Breyers ice cream, for example, settled "all natural" lawsuits for $7.5 million earlier this year, providing customers who bought flavors like "Chubby Hubby" and "Chunky Monkey" cash rebates of up to $20. The ice cream company also agreed to change its packaging, and that's something lawyers involved in the orange juice lawsuit want too.


"I'd like them to modify their marketing so that consumers can make an informed judgment on their purchases," said Stephen A. Weiss, a lawyer involved in one of the lawsuits against Tropicana.
The Tropicana lawsuits are partly the result of a 2009 book about the orange juice industry, Alissa Hamilton's "Squeezed: What You Don't Know About Orange Juice." Hamilton, a doctoral student at Yale when she started researching orange juice, spent five years learning about the industry, interviewing Tropicana employees, growers, farmers, and others. Hamilton, who has consulted with one of the firms involved in a Tropicana lawsuit, said she would like to see Tropicana be clearer in its labeling and stop using words such as "fresh," ''natural" and "pure."


"It's not simply orange, it's complicated orange," she said. "I'm just trying to advocate for more honesty and more transparency."
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Welcome to the processed food world. This is why I always add the disclaimer "provided it was not man altered in some way".

I think someone has a political bug up themselves and then use that as an excuse to nail them with a lawsuit. Tropicana probably does not process their stuff any more than the next food company.

And if any food is truly natural, then the next recourse is to blame saturated fats, cholesterol, salt and the like as an excuse.

Let's face it, it's not only the food companies involved in this. Even the government agencies (e.g. FDA), Pharmaceuticals, AMA and Obama's henchmen all endorse margarine over butter for example finding fault with the butter's "saturated fats". But who's kidding who? Margarine is one of the most processed foods there is, and they're coming after Orange Juice? :gavel
 
hahahaha! I totally agree with you! Sad but true fact: if all the companies were honest about what they were selling no one would buy anything. lolz. We put so many chemicals in to our bodies daily from cereal, ORANGE JUICE, candy, drinks, condements, and who knows what else! Why don't we sue ALL the food companies! Well as long as the chemicals aren't toxic to me I'm fine. I've been eating porcessed food my whole life and I know none of it is "pure" or "natural" but I eat it anyway. :popcorn:coke Yummy!
 
i got a kick out of you with the soda thing and yet i can power a light with two oranges and some cathodes and anodes and finnaly wire.

citric acid generates voltage as all acids do if they are in water. OH- vs h+.
it may not be much but its enough to make a point.
 
Jason, maybe a better example is frozen pepperoni. It has a known carcinogen, but isn't carcinogenic unless heated, thus it has passed the mark by the FDA. Do you eat your pizza frozen? Is this good practice? Does your lemon example apply here?
 
Jason, maybe a better example is frozen pepperoni. It has a known carcinogen, but isn't carcinogenic unless heated, thus it has passed the mark by the FDA. Do you eat your pizza frozen? Is this good practice? Does your lemon example apply here?
i dont eat frozen pizza.
and yes it does since pepporonis are older then that .
let me put it this way. with science learning more about conccusions. its common to see alot more injuries from that that are cumalative. if ali did the rope a dope today. he would have died most likely fighters are more powerful now then then.

eating his veggies will not cure his parkinsons.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pepperoni

pork is well natural is it not?
 
I am not suggesting veggies will cure the Parkinsons. I don't think anyone suggested that.

Pork is a natural product, but there is a difference between free range swine and anti-biotic/growth hormone filled swine that has been doped with carcinogenic preservatives. Do I think that a piece of that pepperoni will give me cancer? No. Do I think that eating the whole pizza will give me cancer? No. Just like a single cigarette won't give me lung cancer, but a life time of putting trash in my body beyond what my body can repair will greatly deteriorate health and well-being. See, it works just like concussions.

Lying about the healthfulness of tropicana and other foods is a serious issue.
 
I am not suggesting veggies will cure the Parkinsons. I don't think anyone suggested that.

Pork is a natural product, but there is a difference between free range swine and anti-biotic/growth hormone filled swine that has been doped with carcinogenic preservatives. Do I think that a piece of that pepperoni will give me cancer? No. Do I think that eating the whole pizza will give me cancer? No. Just like a single cigarette won't give me lung cancer, but a life time of putting trash in my body beyond what my body can repair will greatly deteriorate health and well-being. See, it works just like concussions.

Lying about the healthfulness of tropicana and other foods is a serious issue.
i live near tropicana. that is why i dont buy their stuff. pork in the ot was well banned for the reason of diseases called parasites. they get in and they are hard to kill.
 
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