Monsanto kept “watch lists” on pesticide friends and foes in Europe, Bayer says, as Roundup legal battles continue

Bayer’s public relations headaches over its mammoth takeover of Monsanto intensified Tuesday, as a scandal about “watch lists” of pro- or anti-pesticides figures kept by the U.S. group snowballed across Europe. The German group said the lists covered politicians, journalists and others across seven European countries and in Brussels.

Bayer’s admission adds to the company’s woes that have piled up since it acquired Monsanto for $63 billion in 2018 — one of the largest in German corporate history — which has also lumbered it with a massive burden of health-related lawsuits.The Leverkusen-based group said Tuesday that PR agency FleishmanHillard “drew up lists of stakeholders in France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Poland, Spain and United Kingdom, as well as regarding stakeholders related to EU institutions” on Monsanto’s behalf.
Bayer promised transparency over the lists earlier this month, after a French television channel revealed the existence in France of files on prominent backers and opponents of pesticides and genetically modified crops.”The lists primarily include journalists, politicians and other interest groups,” the company said. Elected officials and media in France and beyond immediately cried foul over the affair, prompting Bayer to apologize.AFP has filed a complaint with a French regulatory body, the Commission Nationale Informatique et Libertes, because some of its journalists were on the list.Bayer said Tuesday it had hired law firm Sidley Austin to investigate the lists and to determine whether they extended to other countries.Its lawyers will also contact the individuals named to inform them what data FleishmanHillard collected on them, Bayer said, starting “no later than” May 31.Meanwhile, the Leverkusen-based group said it would suspend the agency’s PR work and that it “is examining the contractual options for a possible exit as soon as possible” in other areas, although marketing projects would be upheld.