In an extraordinary public mea culpa, a top Dole Food Co. executive Wednesday pleaded with jurors considering punitive damages against the firm to separate the "old Dole" from what he called the enlightened "new Dole."
C. Michael Carter, executive vice president and general counsel, testified in Los Angeles County Superior Court that "today's Dole" would never put concern for production over the safety of its 75,000 workers, as it did in 1977 when it ignored evidence that the pesticide DBCP could leave its banana workers unable to have children.
Last week, jurors ordered Dole to pay $3 million in compensation to six laborers who were rendered sterile. On Wednesday, the same jury gathered in the courtroom of Judge Victoria G. Chaney to determine whether the company's behavior deserved financial punishment.
Duane Miller, the workers' lawyer, questioned Carter closely and suggested that Dole still uses dangerous pesticides in Central America, including paraquat, a weed killer, long after competing growers have stopped.
Miller said that Dole's behavior was worse than simply failing to protect its workers from sterility. Dole, he argued, actually made it impossible for workers to protect themselves.
"It is reprehensible conduct," he said. "It should be punished."
Carter testified that he is "flat certain" that the Westlake Village-based corporation has cleaned up its act, suggesting that punishment is pointless. Only one of 60 top executives employed by the firm in 1977 is still working for Dole today, he said. Dole was publicly held until 2001, when it became a private corporation.
A new corporate code of conduct designed to "empower" employees has been distributed to all workers worldwide in 11 languages, Carter said. In it, the company pledges never to use pesticides banned in the United States or Europe, and states that worker safety and environmental concerns are top objectives.
Rick McNight, Dole's lawyer, asked whether the document had been put into practice.
"It's not simply words. We've told employees this is the way we're going to conduct our business," Carter testified.
DBCP, which has been banned worldwide, fights pests that attack the roots of fruit trees. However, the chemical also stops rabbits from procreating, and rendered both field hands and production workers incapable of having children. The chemical boosts the weight of banana harvests by 20%, according to testimony in the six-month-long trial.