Cohen Milstein Hausfeld & Toll Announces Class Action Lawsuit Against AWB Limited.American Wheat Farmers File Class Action Against Australian Wheat Monopoly for Its Role in Iraqi Oil for Food Kickback The seller's return of part of the purchase price of an item to a buyer or buyer's representative for the purpose of inducing a purchase or improperly influencing future purchases. Scandal WASHINGTON -- The law firm of Cohen cohen or kohen (Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male. , Milstein, Hausfeld & Toll, PLLC PLLC Professional Limited Liability Company PLLC Polk Life and Learning Center (Bartow, FL) PLLC Partners of Limited Liability Corporation today filed a class action lawsuit class action lawsuit A lawsuit in which one party or a limited number of parties sue on behalf of a larger group to which the parties belong. For example, investors may bring a class action lawsuit against a brokerage firm that has actively promoted a tax on behalf of American wheat farmers in federal district court in New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. against AWB Limited ("AWB See House Air Waybill. "), the private entity charged with exporting Australian wheat to foreign markets, and its U.S. subsidiary, AWB (U.S.A.) Limited. From 1999 until 2003, AWB allegedly paid bribes and kickbacks to the Saddam Hussein regime in exchange for exclusive contracts for wheat sales under the United Nations' "Oil for Food Program" and to keep its competition -- American-grown wheat -- out of the Iraqi market. As a result, American farmers were stuck with an oversupply of wheat during that period which depressed the prices at which they could sell their wheat. Today's complaint focuses on farmers who produced hard red winter wheat ("HRW HRW Human Rights Watch HRW Heathrow (London Airport) HRW Heated Rear Window ") during the relevant period. HRW wheat accounts for about 40 percent of total U.S. production and is grown by more than 100,000 farmers primarily in the Great Plains, including Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, South Dakota and Montana. The lawsuit invokes the federal antitrust and civil RICO RICO n. . laws to force AWB and its U.S. subsidiary to compensate American farmers for the damages they suffered. Damages to American farmers could be well over $100 million. The lawsuit is based largely on the findings of two independent investigations into AWB's conduct during the Oil for Food Program. The United Nations completed an eighteen-month investigation in October of 2005, finding that AWB was the single largest source of kickbacks in one of the largest financial scandals in modern history -- the manipulation of the $60 billion Oil for Food Program. The findings of the UN investigation were verified and further detailed by an Australian government investigation completed in November of 2006. According to Benjamin Brown, a partner at Cohen, Milstein, Hausfeld & Toll, PLLC (Washington, DC) who is representing the plaintiff farmers, "Wheat is a commodity market where price effects are globally-related. AWB knew that, by paying these bribes, it would profit at the direct expense of American farmers -- its only real competition in the Iraqi market. Unfortunately, AWB achieved its monopoly in the Iraqi market not through fair competition, but by deceiving the United Nations into unwittingly funding Hussein's corrupt regime. There has been a great deal of talk on Capitol Hill, and in the wheat farming community, about the damage inflicted on U.S. farmers by AWB's conduct. Today's filing is the first concrete step toward recovery." The Washington law firm of Cohen, Milstein, Hausfeld & Toll is joined in the lawsuit by The Law Firm of L. Palmer Foret, PC (Washington, DC), Edmond & Jones, LLP LLP - Lower Layer Protocol (Atlanta), Furth Lehman & Grant, LLP (San Francisco), Pearson, Simon, Warshaw, Penny, LLP (San Francisco), and Fine Kaplan & Black LPC (Philadelphia). Copies of the complaint are available at www.cmht.com. |
|
||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion