Emily Sortor  |  December 19, 2019

Category: Food

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Raw honey needs to be specially processed to maintain its texture and benefits.A class action lawsuit claims honey from Strange Honey Farm LLC is not 100 percent raw honey from Tennessee, as the company states.

Plaintiffs Robert Greer and James Reimer, both of Tennessee, say they purchased honey from Strange Honey Farm, believing it to be 100 percent raw honey, as advertised.

Allegedly, they discovered after they made their purchase that the product did not live up to its advertisement.

The Strange Honey class action challenges every element of the Strange Honey Farm’s advertising claims, arguing that “Strange Honey markets and sells its honey as being 100% raw honey from Tennessee. In fact, the honey that Strange Honey sells is not from Tennessee, is not raw, and is not 100% honey.”

Launching into these allegations, the two customers argue that to make their products easier to package and bottle, Strange Honey heats or cooks the honey. This cooking reportedly destroys the enzymes for which raw honey is prized.

The customers then go on to say that the honey Strange Honey sells is not just from Tennessee, but is sourced from multiple other locations, as far from Tennessee as Vietnam.

Finally, the plaintiffs say that the product sold by Strange Honey is not even 100 percent honey at all. According to Greer and Reimer, Strange Honey or one of its suppliers adds syrup to the honey. Allegedly, syrup is much cheaper than honey, and this is an attempt to pass off an inexpensive product as a more expensive one.

The Strange Honey class action lawsuit asserts that Strange Honey is aware that customers seek out honey, especially raw honey, for the fact that it is a natural product and is seen as beneficial to health.

Allegedly, the company advertises its products as raw honey that is locally sourced to entice customers who value natural, locally sourced, healthful products.

However, this was reportedly done deceitfully, as the company knew or should have known it was providing customers with a product that was less valuable than the one advertised. 

The Strange Honey false adverting class action lawsuit aims to hold the company and owners Gary and Fonda Strange liable for misleading consumers and seeks an injunction preventing the company from misrepresenting its products in the future.

Greer and Reimer seek damages on behalf of themselves and all people who purchased Strange Honey products in Tennessee and were similarly misled.

Two other honey producers have recently faced similar claims.

Have you purchased raw honey, only to discover that it was not raw, or was not 100 percent honey? Share your experiences in the comment section below.

Greer and Reimer are represented by Al Holifield of Holifield, Janich & Ferrera LLC; Kent A. Heitzinger of Kent A. Heitzinger & Associates; and Terrrence Buehler of The Law Offices of Terrence Buehler.

The Strange Honey False Advertising Class Action Lawsuit is Robert Greer, et al. v. Strange Honey Farm LLC, et al., Case No. 3:19-cv-00518-PLR-DCP, in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee.

UPDATE: The Strange Honey Class Action Lawsuit was voluntarily dismissed on February 15, 2020. Top Class Actions will let our viewers know if we learn of any new class actions filed. 

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160 thoughts onStrange Honey Isn’t Raw or 100% Honey, Class Action Says

  1. Dorothy Thornton says:

    please add me I use honey instead of sugar in my coffee and tea

  2. Leisha Pridmore says:

    I just bought a quart 12/17/20 for a Christmas gift…. disappointed to read this!

  3. Sandra P. says:

    Please add my name to the list I have been buying their honey for years and this is so disappointing as I thought it was pure local honey we were using!

  4. Olga says:

    I bought that “raw honey” in farms market in Bellevue. I don’t know what they mixed, but this product not honey, it’s a mix of different syrups (corn, sugar) and some flavoring. Now end of November, but this “honey” still liquid, have no began process of crystallization. My jar of “honey” still full, I can’t eat it. I just waist 12$ for 1 lb.

  5. Thomas M Murrell says:

    I have been buying it for health purposes and the 100 % pure is why at 60 years of age I need every advantage I can get. I just open some the whole bottle was crystallized. I have seen little bit in the bottom of the I thought it was going bad on me. VERY DISAPPOINTING

  6. Don Goings says:

    Why was the class action dropped?

  7. Joe Dunbar says:

    I bought this homey once and knew immediate it wasn’t as advertised. Sourwood 100% pure raw etc etc. I informed the Asheville Farmers market and informed them. Now that I see this lawsuit and additional have seen an article from vice news showing actual results that Strange Honey comes from Vietnam, I’ll make sure and call the N.C. department of agriculture and get these terrible people banned from selling in NC

  8. Cheryl Cooper says:

    I buy this a lot is it real or not?

  9. Sigrid Velez says:

    I been buying this honey for 2 years now at an armish pantry. Very disappointed. Please add me.

  10. Marvin says:

    I have purchased this honey many times and have enjoyed it. The last two quarts developed about an inch of crystallized sugar in the bottom before I finished each quart, and I went on line to find out more about the producers, since this seemed unusual and irregular. It occurred to me that the base product may have been fortified with another sugar product. Well, another bubble burst.

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