Northeast
Pennsylvania court drops injunction against Amish farmer who suffered from police raid
A court in Pennsylvania dropped an injunction against an Amish farmer, who suffered a police raid last month for selling milk in violation of government regulations, but blocked them from selling raw milk to the public.
County Judge Thomas Sponaugle ruled on Friday that the injunction against Amos Miller’s farm was lifted following a battle with the state’s agriculture department and Attorney General Michelle Henry.
The lawsuit alleged that Miller’s raw milk products had been connected to E. coli outbreaks in two other states.
Those reports led to a raid of Miller’s farm in early January, followed by a lawsuit from the agriculture department.
CONSERVATIVES RALLY BEHIND PENNSYLVANIA AMISH FARMER WHO SUFFERED FROM POLICE RAID OVER MILK SALES
The lawsuit alleged that raw milk products had been connected to E. coli outbreaks. (iStock)
Following the hearing, the judge ruled that Miller is allowed to sell his farm’s raw to “immediate family,” but is blocked from marketing and selling their products to the public.
The judge also ruled that Miller’s farm must allow the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture to “inspect, draw records, draw samples [and] conduct tests.”
“This court cannot ignore this Commonwealth’s regulations requiring a permit to sell raw milk,” the ruling said.
Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky. (AP Photo / J. Scott Applewhite / File)
Retail sale of raw milk is illegal in 23 states, and producing it in Pennsylvania requires a license.
“For years, this business has brushed off efforts to bring its commercial farm operation into compliance with the law — as all commercial farms are required to do,” Henry argued at the filing of the lawsuit.
NOROVIRUS ALERT: FDA WARNS OF CONTAMINATED RAW OYSTERS FROM MEXICO
Following the farm’s raid and the lawsuit, some Republicans condemned the raid on Miller’s farm.
Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., condemned the raid as “shameful” in January, arguing it was a classic example of government overreach.
“It’s a shame that small farmers have been pushed into these situations by overbearing government regulatory agencies and lawmakers captured by corporations and monopolies,” he told Newsweek in a statement on Wednesday.
“I support all small farmers and consumers who wish to engage in voluntary transactions. It’s imperative that Congress take up my PRIME Act to ameliorate the plight of small farmers like Amos,” he added.
Donald Trump Jr. (Melissa Sue Gerrits / Getty Images / File)
Donald Trump Jr. also weighed in on X, sharing a video of the police raid and condemning Pennsylvania for going after “farmers selling to their neighbors.”
“Imagine what law enforcement could accomplish if they went after oh I don’t know, say, members of elite pedophile rings rather than farmers selling to their neighbors?,” Trump Jr. wrote in an X post.
The Pennsylvania state border. (iStock)
Not all Republicans sided with Miller, however.
State Rep. Dave Zimmerman, a Republican who represents nearby Lancaster County and a member of the Agriculture and Rural Affairs committee, argued that Miller is not above the law.
“Let me be very clear, I’m 100% against government overreach and have spent much of my time in the legislature fighting overregulation,” he wrote in a Jan. 17 statement. “I also recognize that while limiting the government is critical, some government is necessary.”
“Mr. Miller’s case is not about the buying and selling of raw products as some have suggested — many farmers throughout the state sell raw products. I can go to a local farm right now to purchase raw products. There are many farmers with roadside stands right here in Lancaster County who sell raw products. Mr. Miller’s case is about following basic agriculture regulations that every other farmer in the state is subject to for the production of safe food. Is it too much to ask for farmers to follow these basic requirements to ensure food safety?” he asked.
“Is the solution to simply ignore Mr. Miller and allow him to violate basic regulations that all other farmers must follow? That would certainly not be fair to other farmers,” he said.
Fox News Digital’s Anders Hagstrom contributed to this report.
Read the full article from Here
Boston, MA
Sonny Gray shines again, and the Red Sox make it two straight wins at the Angels to start grinding road trip – The Boston Globe
In Boston, even after a successful homestand, the Sox are 17-27 — thus the overall 39-48 record record that has them stuck in the bottom third of the league.
What’s up with that?
“That’s a really good question, because it doesn’t feel a whole lot different to me,” Connor Wong said. “I feel like we’re the same group of guys trying to do the same thing.”
Interim manager Chad Tracy said: “I just think we’re playing well on the road. Give us credit, too. We played well at home last, so hopefully it’s just a ‘we’re playing well’ thing. But we have done that the majority of the year.”
This one featured a little of everything: Home runs from Willson Contreras and Romy Gonzalez, a strong start from Sonny Gray, and three double plays turned by the infield.
The Angels (36-54) totaled four hits, and just one after the third inning.
The Red Sox have won seven of their past nine games overall.
“That was a fight,” said Gray, whose 2.61 ERA is second in the American League. “That was just one that you grind through and you try to figure out a way to get better as it goes on. It wasn’t easy, but I’m happy to win.”
That was an unexpected take from Gray, given that he held the Angels to one run and four hits in six innings. The righthander struck out seven and walked two.
Unlike in his previous outing, when he took a no-hit bid into the eighth inning against the Yankees, Gray eliminated the drama early. Josh Lowe homered — an estimated 437 feet to center field — in the second.
Gray’s most significant wobbling came immediately thereafter, when Jo Adell walked and Wade Meckler singled. Following a mound visit from pitching coach Andrew Bailey, Gray recovered by striking out Donovan Walton and Tyler Heineman, both flailing at sweepers well below the strike zone.
Across the rest of his night, Gray faced just one more than the minimum number of batters, using a pair of double-play grounders to help him stay efficient and effective.
“Definitely wasn’t at my best,” he said, referencing that he had trouble recovering “physically, mentally.” “Finally able to settle down there after the second.”
Before the game, Gray found out he was not selected for the All-Star Game, which he admitted was disappointing “for sure.”
“Used a lot of stuff for fuel tonight,” he said without getting specific. “Maybe that was a little part of something. I was a little bummed.”
Tracy pulled Gray after just 70 pitches because of the game situation.
“We had a sizable lead, full bullpen, some guys that haven’t thrown,” Tracy explained. “It felt like we had a pretty good handle on it. And after pushing him hard with the potential no-hitter last time, just felt like it was good to give him a little extra breather.”
The Red Sox struck early against left-handed starter Sam Aldegheri, who walked two of his first three batters — after getting ahead in the count, 1-2, on both. Contreras blasted a no-doubt, three-run home run to left field to boost the Sox to a fast, sizable lead after just one out.
That was the only hit Aldegheri allowed across four innings and 88 pitches, but he had twice as many walks (four) as strikeouts (two) and his ERA jumped to 5.08.
As soon as Aldegheri exited, the Sox blew it open against rookie reliever Samy Natera Jr., who had been quite good across his first month in the majors (0.84 ERA, 15 strikeouts in 10⅔ innings).
Anthony Seigler slapped a double inside the first-base line, and Ceddanne Rafaela drew a walk. Wilyer Abreu smoked a double off the right-field wall, scoring both. Rafaela hesitated coming around third base, but — after the Angels made a delayed throw to try to get Abreu at second — went for it.
With two outs, Gonzalez hammered a slider over the middle of the plate to left field. It eked over the short wall for a two-run homer, his first long ball of the year (in his fifth game).
“We … got three big swings from the big boys,” Tracy said. “Between Willson, Romy, and Abreu — all those are multiple-run extra-base hits, and those are huge. But it starts with the at-bats before and putting people on and taking our base when it’s given to us.”
Tim Healey can be reached at timothy.healey@globe.com. Follow him @timbhealey.
Pittsburg, PA
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