California fruit giant hit by shocking ‘highly toxic’ accusations and deception

The world’s largest berry company, Driscoll’s, is facing a consumer fraud class action lawsuit alleging that the fruit company’s strawberries contain “forever chemicals.” The Watsonville-based berry company is accused of consumer fraud and deceptive practices in a lawsuit filed by six people living in New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts and Illinois. The lawsuit hinges on a laboratory report that tested two boxes of Driscoll’s strawberry and found that the produce “contained residues of 12 different pesticides at levels prohibited in the European Union, Taiwan, Chile, Korea & Russia.” Eight of the dozen chemicals found are considered PFAS “forever chemicals,” meaning they are extremely persistent and highly toxic, the laboratory said in its report.
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The world’s largest berry company, Driscoll’s, is facing a consumer fraud class action lawsuit alleging that the fruit company’s strawberries contain “forever chemicals.” The Watsonville-based berry company is accused of consumer fraud and deceptive practices in a lawsuit filed by six people living in New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts and Illinois. The lawsuit hinges on a laboratory report that tested two boxes of Driscoll’s strawberry and found that the produce “contained residues of 12 different pesticides at levels prohibited in the European Union, Taiwan, Chile, Korea & Russia.” Eight of the dozen chemicals found are considered PFAS “forever chemicals,” meaning they are extremely persistent and highly toxic, the laboratory said in its report. The case documents, reviewed by The California Post, allege the company didn’t disclose their supposedly pristine produce –– branded as “Only the Finest Berries” –– are loaded with allegedly dangerous, long-lasting “forever chemicals.” “Driscoll’s ran an environmentally friendly campaign—greenwashing its true farming and manufacturing practices that included these forever chemicals known to be extraordinarily difficult to clean up and break down and [to] accumulate in the environment and living organisms, including humans,” the lawsuit said. Plaintiffs Robert Berlinger, Robert Duxler, Francesca Hammersmith, Maria Khangi, Phylicia Washington, and Bianca Weins frequently purchased Driscoll’s strawberries in May and June of 2026.
Read the full report at New York Post ↗
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- The world’s largest berry company, Driscoll’s, is facing a consumer fraud class action lawsuit alleging that the fruit company’s strawberries contain “forever chemicals.” The Watsonville-based berry company is accused of consumer fraud and deceptive practices in a lawsuit filed by six people living in New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts and Illinois. The lawsuit hinges on a laboratory report that tested two boxes of Driscoll’s strawberry and found that the produce “contained residues of 12 different pesticides at levels prohibited in the European Union, Taiwan, Chile, Korea & Russia.” Eight of the dozen chemicals found are considered PFAS “forever chemicals,” meaning they are extremely persistent and highly toxic, the laboratory said in its report.
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California fruit giant hit by shocking ‘highly toxic’ accusations and deception
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