Bill Gates Secures Legal Approval To Buy Huge Swath Of Prime North Dakota Farmland

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Billionaire Bill Gates has secured legal approval for the controversial purchase of prime farmland in North Dakota despite outrage from the state’s residents. 

Gates’ firm Red River Trust purchased 2,100 acres of land in the state for $13.5 million.

The state’s Attorney General Drew Wrigley, who had inquired into the land sale, issued a letter on Wednesday stating that the transaction was legal because it complied with an archaic anti-corporate farming law.

The Mail Online reports: The Depression-era law prohibits corporations or limited liability companies from owning farmland or ranchland, but allows individual trusts to own the land if it is leased to farmers, which Gates intends to do.

Gates is the largest private owner of farmland in America after quietly amassing some 270,000 acres across dozens of states, according to last year’s edition of the Land Report 100, an annual survey of the nation’s largest landowners.

However, the billionaire’s holdings make up only about one percent of the nearly 900 million total farm acres in the U.S.

The purchase of the land in North Dakota had raised legal questions as well as concerns that ultrarich landowners do not share the state’s values.

Gates’ firm, Red River Trust, purchased $13.5 million worth of land in two counties from wealthy northeastern North Dakota potato growers Campbell Farms.

About 2100 acres of land were sold in the deal, AgWeek reported. 

In a curious move, the Campbell family in February filed a partnership name certificate with the North Dakota secretary of state naming their farming operation the Red River Trust – the same name as Gates’ firm. 

But an attorney for Gates’ firm wrote to the attorney general´s office that the Campbells registered the name without his knowledge.

The Campbells did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

North Dakota’s Agriculture Commissioner, Republican Doug Goehring, previously said that many people feel they are being exploited by the ultra-rich who buy land but do not necessarily share the state’s values.

‘I’ve gotten a big earful on this from clear across the state, it’s not even from that neighborhood,’ Goehring told KFYR-TV. ‘Those people are upset, but there are others that are just livid about this.’

Corporations are exempted from the ownership ban if the land is necessary ‘for residential or commercial development; the siting of buildings, plants, facilities, industrial parks, or similar business or industrial purposes of the corporation or limited liability company; or for uses supportive of or ancillary to adjacent non agricultural land for the benefit of both land parcels,’ the law reads.

It’s not the first test for a statute that was passed in 1932. 

A federal judge in 2018 ruled the law constitutional after a conservative farm group argued that it limits business options for producers and interferes with interstate commerce by barring out-of-state corporations from being involved in North Dakota’s farm industry.

North Dakota Republican Governor Doug Burgum, a former Microsoft executive whose campaign received $100,000 from Microsoft co-founder Gates when Burgum first won in 2016, declined to comment on the farmland sale. 

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