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Lawsuit for high levels of arsenic in Wines
#1
For all you wineo, check out the list link in the article to see if your favorite wines contain high levels of arsenic. LOS ANGELES, CA— Many popular, low priced, brands of wine contain illegal and dangerously high levels of poisonous inorganic arsenic, according to a lawsuit filed March 19, 2015 in California Superior Court.
The suit claims dozens of wineries are violating California state law by knowingly producing, marketing and selling arsenic contaminated wine and failing to warn consumers about the potential danger.
The 28 California defendant wineries “produce and market wines that contain dangerously high levels of inorganic arsenic, in some cases up to 500% or more than what is considered the maximum acceptable safe daily intake limit,” the lawsuit says.
Some of the popular wine brands named in the lawsuit include Franzia, Ménage à Trois, Sutter Home, Wine Cube, Charles Shaw, Glen Ellen, Cupcake, Beringer and Vendage. The wines named in the lawsuit are primarily inexpensive white or blush varietals including Moscato, Pinot Grigio and Sauvignon Blanc.
The arsenic testing referenced in the lawsuit was conducted by BeverageGrades, an independent Denver, Colorado lab. Their results were confirmed by two additional labs. BeverageGrades tested 1306 different types of wine and found 83 showed dangerously elevated levels, according to the suit.
The defendants, “produce and market wines that contain dangerously high levels of inorganic arsenic, in some cases up to 500% or more than what is considered the maximum acceptable safe daily intake limit,” the lawsuit says. Medical experts say the risks of arsenic exposure include cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular ailments.
The class action lawsuit was filed on behalf of California consumers who purchased the wines in the last four years.

http://www.taintedwine.com/
FDA is sleeping on the job as usual. [Sad!]
http://khon2.com/2015/03/19/lawsuit-clai...f-arsenic/
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#2
Dangit, I KNEW there was a reason why I felt so bad after drinking that !
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#3
I don't know what a wineo is, but thanks the the news. Can't imagine I'd buy wine from the list you gave in the first place, but thanks.
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#4
The complaint is interesting reading. Here is the link to the PDF: https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/f053...plaint.pdf


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#5
One foot on sand... One hand HEINEKEN
HAWAIIAN I am

Born&Raised Hawai'i Island
Born&Raised Hawai'i Island
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#6
How does the arsenic get into the wine?
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#7
"While potentially dangerous, arsenic naturally occurs in soil. It can also be introduced into wine by filtering with bentonite and possibly through pesticide residue."

More here :

http://www.wine-searcher.com/m/2015/03/s...ic-in-wine

Looks like a typical class action suit were the lawyers will get millions if they prevail and everyone else not so much!
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#8
Somewhere in the filtering process I would imagine. Or maybe the pesticides they use on the grapes! But then why only cheap white wine?
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#9
It isn't just wine that has arsenic. Some rice, especially brown rice, has been found to have unacceptable levels of arsenic, high enough that rice cereals are not being recommended for baby food any more. The polished white rice has less arsenic because of the extra processing. Organic rice was found to be closer to arsenic free, so I would guess pesticides are the culprit.

http://www.foodsafetynews.com/2014/11/ne...Qzg5VfUAmE
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#10
The bottom line is that they were using safety standards for water to prove their point !

The safety standards for water should be much more strict than wine .

The lesson I learned is that if you are going to make your children drink wine. it should be expensive wine.
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