| The maker of    Budweiser is using splashy newspaper ads to poke fun at a lawsuit that    alleges its beer is watered down. In full-page ads in 10    U.S. newspapers on Sunday, including The New York Times and Los Angeles    Times, Anheuser-Busch InBev shows one of the 71    million cans of drinking water it has sent to the American    Red Cross and other relief organizations responding to disasters. "They must have    tested one of these," the ad says. The class action lawsuit, filed in several states,    accuses the brewer of cheating consumers out of the stated alcohol percentage    by adding water just before bottling its beers. The water cuts the    alcohol content by 3 percent to 8 percent, according to the lawsuit's lead    lawyer, Josh Boxer. The lawsuits are based on    information from former employees at the company's 13 U.S. breweries, some in    high-level plant positions, he has said. Anheuser-Busch InBev says    the claims are groundless. In the ads, the company calls its beer "the    best beer we know how to brew." "We take no    shortcuts and make no exceptions. Ever." Neither the ads nor a    statement by an Anheuser-Busch spokesman on    Sunday directly address the complaint. "We never waver on quality,"    a spokesman said in the statement. Boxer said in a statement    Sunday that the ads amount to "classic non-denial denials." He said    that the company will be asked to produce internal alcohol testing data in    court that will prove his case. "These alcohol    readings, taken six times a second as the finished product is bottled, will    confirm the allegations made by the growing number of former employees who    keep coming forward to tell us the truth," he said. The suit involves 10 Anheuser-Busch products: Budweiser, Bud Ice, Bud    Light Platinum, Michelob, Michelob Ultra, Hurricane High Gravity Lager, King    Cobra, Busch Ice, Natural Ice and Bud Light Lime. Anheuser-Busch, based in    St. Louis, Mo., merged with InBev in 2008 to form the world's largest alcohol    producer, headquartered in Belgium. In 2011, the company produced 10 billion    gallons of malt beverages, 3 billion of them in the U.S., and reported $22    billion profit from that category, the lawsuit said. Lawsuits have been filed    in California, Colorado, Ohio, Missouri, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Texas    so far. Each seeks at least $5 million in damages. | 
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