logo
Federal agents use force during immigration raid at two California farms

Federal agents use force during immigration raid at two California farms

Yahoo6 days ago
Federal immigration officials carrying out raids on two southern California cannabis farms clashed with protesters, firing chemical munitions that sprayed what looked like smoke into the air to disperse the crowd.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents accompanied by national guard troops in military-style vehicles turned up at two locations operated by Glass House Farms, one in the Santa Barbara county town of Carpinteria, about 90 miles (145km) north-west of Los Angeles, and one in the Ventura county community of Camarillo, about 50 miles from LA.
Television images showed dozens of demonstrators gathered on a road between fields where uniformed officers stood in a line across from them. In other images, white and green smoke could be seen as protesters retreated, and others showed protesters shouting at agents wearing camouflage gear, helmets and gas masks. It wasn't clear why authorities utilized the canisters or whether they released chemicals.
An image from KTLA showed people sitting against a wall with their hands bound in front of them; it wasn't clear whether they were workers or protesters. The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to requests for comment.
Writing on the social media platform X, California's governor, Gavin Newsom, shared video of children fleeing from gas fired by federal agents at protesters on Thursday during the immigration raid in Camarillo.
'Kids running from tear gas, crying on the phone because their mother was just taken from the fields,' Newsom commented on the images. 'Trump calls me 'Newscum' – but he's the real scum.'
Glass House Farms said on social media that it was visited Thursday by officials from Immigration and Customs Enforcement and 'fully complied with agent search warrants'.
The company has a permit to grow cannabis in Ventura county, and as of last year used half of the space for cannabis and half for tomatoes and cucumbers, the Ventura County Star reported.
Judith Ramos said she received a call on Thursday morning from her father, who worked in the tomato fields.
'He said immigration was outside his job, and if anything happened to take care of everything,' Ramos said, her voice cracking. The 22-year-old certified nurse assistant said she has two young siblings.
Ramos went to the farm and saw a busload of people being taken out. She was protesting alongside others when agents sprayed the deterrent.
'They didn't want us to get any closer, and they started firing,' Ramos said. 'I got some in my eyes. I had to put milk on my face.'
Ramos said she did not know where her father was and had not had contact with him for more than an hour. His truck was still at the worksite, she said.
It was not immediately known which agencies participated in the raid.
At a farm in Carpinteria, Salud Carbajal, a Democratic representative, was denied entry to the area by federal agents, a scene captured on video by the Santa Barbara Independent.
'ICE was conducting a raid using disproportionate displays of force against local farm workers and our agricultural community,' Carbajal said in a statement after the incident. 'As a member of Congress and representative of the Central Coast, I have the right to conduct oversight and see first-hand what ICE was doing here. As soon as I walked up, I was denied entry and was not allowed to pass. This was completely unacceptable.'
'And let me be clear,' Carbajal added, 'these militarized ICE raids are not how you keep our communities safe. This kind of chaos only traumatizes families and tears communities apart. They are also a gross misuse of limited resources and a betrayal of the values that define us as Americans.'
Two members of the Carpinteria city council, Julia Mayer and Mónica Solórzano, were also present, they told the Santa Barbara Independent. As the officers pushed the crowd back, they also threw a smoke grenade, causing Solórzano to fall and injure her right arm, she said.
'They were pushing toward each of us and we were standing,' Solórzano said. 'They pushed us as a group into the ground.'
'It was loud,' Mayer said. 'We were just trying to be out here to support our communities.'
Related: California bishop excuses weekly mass obligation amid immigration raids
The incident comes as federal immigration enforcement agents have ramped up arrests in southern California, heading to car washes, farms and Home Depot parking lots to take people into custody while stoking widespread fear among immigrant communities.
The Trump administration has had the national guard providing protection for federal immigration agents carrying out the raids, and this week it sent a large caravan with guns and horses to a park in Los Angeles.
Andrew Dowd, spokesperson for the Ventura county fire department, said his agency was dispatched around 12.15pm on Thursday to the area to provide emergency medical aid. Crews took three people to nearby hospitals, he said, and the incident was ongoing.
Dowd said he had no information on the types of injuries or medical emergencies sustained, and he did not have any details of the people sent to hospitals. He also said he had no information on what law enforcement was doing there.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Traffic stop in California leads deputies to house with partially assembled improvised bombs
Traffic stop in California leads deputies to house with partially assembled improvised bombs

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Traffic stop in California leads deputies to house with partially assembled improvised bombs

A June traffic stop in California led deputies to discover a massive trove of illegal weapons and bomb-making materials, including partially assembled improvised explosive devices, according to police. On June 8, Riverside County sheriff's deputies located a stolen vehicle in Temecula and conducted a traffic stop. During the stop, they found four guns, a mixture of rifles and handguns, as well as a large amount of ammunition and suppressors, the sheriff's office said in a news release. In addition to detaining driver Brandon Edwards, 38, of the city of Homeland, police continued to investigate, and a Wednesday search at the man's property in an unincorporated area known as Romoland revealed even more weaponry, police say. 'Deputies found dozens of illegal firearms, ammunition, explosive-making materials, and homemade improvised devices that were in the process of being assembled,' according to the release. 'The Riverside Sheriff's Hazardous Device Team responded and seized the devices.' The Riverside County man was in possession of guns, ammo, silencers, and bomb-making materials, police say (Riverside County Sheriff's Office) Edwards faces 12 charges, including 11 felonies, on offenses related to the stolen vehicle, weapons possession, criminal threats, and bomb-making. He is currently being held in the county's Southwest Detention Center without bail, according to jail records. It is unclear if Edwards has legal representation or how he plans to plead. The Independent has contact the county public defender's office and a family member of Edwards for comment. The 38-year-old is due in court on July 25. Last year, a heavily armed man was arrested outside a Donald Trump rally in the county, in what police described at the time as a thwarted assassination attempt. The suspect in that case, Vem Miller, denied he was trying to assassinate the president and later sued the sheriff's office for defamation.

Getaway driver runs over security guard after robbery in Santa Ana parking lot
Getaway driver runs over security guard after robbery in Santa Ana parking lot

CBS News

time29 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Getaway driver runs over security guard after robbery in Santa Ana parking lot

A security guard was seriously injured after a robbery suspect ran him over in a Santa Ana parking lot. The Santa Ana Police Department said the robbery happened outside of the Food 4 Less on Bristol Street. Investigators said a young woman stole two gold chains from an elderly man before jumping into a white Mercedes-Benz SUV. Surveillance footage shows the security guard trying to stop the car in the parking lot. However, the getaway driver did not stop and ran over his leg. Officers said he had to have a few of his toes amputated. The elderly man who was robbed said he believed the woman who stole his jewelry was around 20 years old. He added that he was loading heavy cases of water into his car when the suspect approached him and attempted to help. The victim offered the woman a few dollars, but she refused. Instead, she put a bracelet on his wrist and something else around his neck. Santa Ana police said suspects commonly use this technique to distract victims and unclasp jewelry. The victim stated that he was able to save his gold cross before the woman escaped.

Security guard's 'swift move' stops determined anti-Israel agitator at Tour de France finish
Security guard's 'swift move' stops determined anti-Israel agitator at Tour de France finish

Fox News

time29 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Security guard's 'swift move' stops determined anti-Israel agitator at Tour de France finish

A protester opposing Israel's involvement in the Tour de France was swiftly apprehended after attempting to disrupt the prestigious cycling race. The man jumped a barricade near the finish line and ran toward the racers, reportedly shouting objections to Israel's participation and carrying unidentified items. Security personnel acted swiftly with one guard intercepting the protester just 25 meters from the finish line, tackling him and then forcefully throwing him back over the barrier into the crowd. The dramatic moment unfolded during Stage 11 of the three-week competition as leading cyclists neared the end of the 97.5-mile route around Toulouse in southern France. Video footage of the incident quickly spread online, showing the man wearing a shirt that said "Israel out of the Tour" and holding a keffiyeh, a scarf commonly associated with support for the Palestinian cause. "These pro-Palestinians really are the worst people. Imagine wasting your life doing this," one person commented on the video. "Tour de France security wasn't playing — an anti-Israel protester ran onto the track, but got tackled, ear-grabbed, and cleared in one swift move," another person commented. The protest occurred after the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement labeled the Israel Premier-Tech team "Team Genocide" and called for non-violent demonstrations at major cycling events where the team competes, including the Giro d'Italia, Vuelta a España and Tour de France. The group called for more "peaceful protests" along the route. "Let's ensure the roads are closed to perpetrators of genocide," the group stated on its website. The Tour de France, made up of 21 stages, will conclude July 27 along the Champs-Élysées in Paris. Fox News Digital reached out to the Tour de France for comment but did not immediately receive a response. Stepheny Price is a writer for Fox News Digital and Fox Business. She covers topics including missing persons, homicides, national crime cases, illegal immigration, and more. Story tips and ideas can be sent to

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store