D26—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 19,1984 False health records spawn much tragedy WASHINGTON, D.C. - “False disease records can have tragic ef fects for personal lives, people’s businesses and for entire in dustries,” explains Bert W. Hawkins, administrator of the Animal and Plant Health Inspec tion Service of the U.S. Depart ment of Agriculture. “These tragedies surprise some people who forge government forms to save themselves time and trouble, they think that no one but a few bureaucrats are affected. That is far from the truth. “A recent case in point involves multiple violations by Ernest Mendel and his family’s business, Albert Mendel and Sons, Inc., of Patterson, N.Y. They were in dicted on 52 counts of misrepresen ting the health status of cows and making false statements regar ding blood samples taken from these rows. Stipulated expert ■ testimony established that blood samples used in tests for brucellosis were taken from two healthy bulls - not from Mendel’s cows,” Hawkins said. Brucellosis causes aborted calves, breeding problems, and lower milk yields. Annual economic losses to the beef and dairy industries are estimated at more than $32 million. The disease can be spread to humans, where it is called undulant fever. Undulant fever Several cases of cattle infected Market line ANNAPOLIS, Md. - The “MDA Market Line” news service went into service again on Monday for its second season of providing five day-a-week reports on crops, weather, prices and availability of fresh fruits and vegetables. Here’s the weekly lineup of reports: Monday- Crop and Weather summary information; Tuesday- farm prices, inventory, planting intentions, etc.; Wed nesday- Highlights of the weekly supermarket price survey; Thursday- excerpts from the “Maryland Feed and Grain Report”; and Friday- updated information on fruit and vegetable crop and supply conditions in Maryland. Information carried in the reports is from the Maryland- Delaware Crop Reporting Service YBEAN WOA ALLEN SUMMERS RDI Nottingham, Pa. 19362 215-932-4761 . with brucellosis, as well as one case of undulant fever, were trac ed to cows shipped by Mendel. The human disease is almost unknown in New York today, although it was fairly common before stringent health measures went into effect. Dr. Alfred E. Brewer of Lakeville, N.Y., was surprised when he saw the symptoms in one of his farmer-patients in 1979. The man reported feeling strangely weak and feverish, and the symp toms reminded Dr. Brewer of symptoms that he hadn’t seen since he first started practicing medicine in 1940. Undulant fever! he thought. Tests confirmed his diagnosis. “I had purchased some cattle two or three weeks earlier,” the farmer, Ted Upson of Lakeville, was quoted in press reports at the time. “But I didn’t know there was a problem. Indeed there was a problem. Besides the damage to his own health, Upson’s entire dairy herd had to be killed because of the disease. “The mental strain of starting over is more than people realize,” Upson said. Brucellosis broke out in several New York locations in 1977 and continued through January 1981. New York previously had been brucellosis-free for many years, and officials of the state’s depart ment of agriculture believe that back in Md. and the Maryland Department of Agriculture, Marketing Services Section. Reports consist of a three minute taped program which can be accessed by calling (301) 841- 5763 and are put on line at 4 p.m. each day. The fruit and vegetable report is left on the line through the weekend to enable consumers to plan their buying and picking trips. According to Bradley H. Powers, Chief of the Marketing Services Section of the Maryland Depart ment of Agriculture, “we initiated the service in 1983 and found that it proved helpful to many consumers and farmers and served as an economical means of getting timely information out so that people could make use of it in their planning.” ON YOUR FARM DON’T WASTE IT ROAST IT ike higher profits from all grains. Roast ; improves TDN, destroys molds, re ds toxins and removes moisture. ISTOM GRAIN ROASTING DONE IN PA YD SURROUNDING STATES OR OWN YOUR OWN ROAST-A-MATIC GRAIN ROASTER. DALE L. SCHNUPP RD 6, Lebanon, Pa. 17042 PH: 717-865-6611 PENN OHIO GRAIN ROASTING RD 2. Box 91 Enon Valley. PA 16120 412-336-5443 APHIS head explains that TING This little piggy went to market, This little piggy stayed home. This little piggy had... ROASTED SOYBEANS DAVID N. GROFF RD 1 Box 506 C Lewisburg, Pa. 17837 717-966-3593 Mendel was responsible in part for the recurrence. A costly program succeeded in again eradicating brucellosis from New York. Herds slaughtered Entire herds had to be slaughtered, not only in New York but also in other nearby and far-off locations, including Massachusetts and Puerto Rico. Sick cattle also were exported as far as Mexico and Iran. Because of the widespread damage caused by Mendel’s falsifications, severe actions were taken. First, Mendel and his firm lost their state license to trade cat tle in New York for two years, star ting in 1979, and they were fined $500,000 by the state. Also in 1979, Dr. Charles Frumerie, a private veterinarian practicing in Pawling, N.Y., lost his federal accreditation to per form official testing of livestock for one year because of his involve SILVERCREEK PRODUCE & SUPPLY Un.VHI Low Density Mulch Film “K Other Sizes 4n|j *Ol [S fn Available uix-JJwUU CAU OR WRITE FOR PRICES Earlier Crops Use HOTKAPS SPECIAL ESt.""* $85.00 per 1000 Qoicki ’ o6oi 1000 per case 1 3cs^ 9 15 Call between 7:30 A.M to Noon n 25 ”38 25 717-3744010 26 99 cs 37 50 SILVERCREEK PRODUCE t SUPPLY 100 & Over Ask 07.110X34$ TOOT TOEVERTON, PA MOORE AERIAL SPRAYING SERVICE R.DJI Box 3968 Winfield. PA. 17889 717-524-7151 ment in the Mendel case. Mendel’s falsifications were made on blank state and federal health cer tificates presigned illegally by Dr. Frumerie. Finally, federal court action began with a grand-jury indict ment in February of 1983. Mendel was found guilty on 23 counts of falsified documentation. On March 6, 1984, Federal District Judge Whitman Knapp of New York, N.Y., sentenced Mendel to a year and a day in prison plus three years of probation and a fine of $50,000. The family firm was fined an additional $lOO,OOO. The federal court decision is being appealed. “These penalties are more than justified, in my opinion,” said APHIS’s Bert Hawkins. “I have been in the cattle business for many years, and I know that most people cooperate the best they can To Insure Knapsack Sprayir SOLO JETPAK-42S A World-Wide Success World’s first and only all-plastic sprayer on sale now only $97.75 '"*4 Crop Spraying & Fertilizing Forest Spraying Gypsy Moth Control Cover Crop Rye Seeding Reasonable Rates Low Acreage Minimums Aerial Photos Also Available Large fines with regulations, which are meant to stop disease. Whenever possible, we try to enforce animal health laws by educating people to their responsibilities. But we intend to prosecute those who intentionally break the law. “At the moment, I am encourag ed by the progress we have made in controlling and wiping out cattle brucellosis. Fifteen states and parts of two others and the Virgin Islands are classified brucellosis free, meaning that there have been no known infected herds for a year or longer. Twenty other states have herd infection rates of a quarter of one percent or less. The remaining states have made con siderable recent progress. It peo ple understand the rules and obey them, brucellosis will be eradicated from all the states, and tragedies like the ones caused by the Mendel’s will not recur.”