
There are many illegal marijuana farms, but federal agents targeted California's biggest legal one
But when the federal government decided to stage one of its largest raids since President Donald Trump took office in January, it picked the biggest legal grower in California.
Nearly two weeks later, the reason for the federal raid at two Glass House farm sites northwest of Los Angeles remains unclear and has prompted speculation. Some say the raid was intended to send a chilling message to immigrants in the U.S. illegally — but also to rattle the state's legal cannabis industry.
Meanwhile, the Republican Trump administration has been feuding with heavily Democratic California over funding for everything from high-speed rail construction to wildfire relief, so it's also possible Glass House was pulled into a broader conflict between the White House and Sacramento.
'There are plenty of other places they can go to find illegal workers,' said political consultant Adam Spiker, who advises cannabis companies. 'A lot of people believe there is a hint of politics in this. It's federal enforcement coming into California to go after cannabis.'
What happened during the raids?
On July 10, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol agents executed a search warrant for Glass House's farms in Carpinteria and Camarillo, court filings show.
At the Camarillo site, armored vehicles blocked the road, which is lined with fields and greenhouses, as masked agents deployed onto the property. One farmworker who fell from a greenhouse roof while running to hide later died from his injuries.
Outside the farm, officers faced off with demonstrators and fired tear gas to disperse them, a federal agent wrote in court filings. One demonstrator threw a gas canister back at Border Patrol officers, according to the agent. Another demonstrator, who is sought by the FBI, appeared to fire a gun.
More than 360 people were arrested, most suspected of being in the country without legal status. Those arrested included four U.S. citizens, including U.S. Army veteran George Retes, 25, who works as a security guard and was held for three days.
The operation came more than a month into an extended crackdown across Southern California that was originally centered in Los Angeles, where local officials say the federal actions are spreading fear in immigrant communities.
Why Glass House?
No cannabis was seized and the criminal search warrants used to enter the farm sites are under court seal. Authorities refused to share them with The Associated Press.
The government said the business was being investigated for potential child labor, human trafficking and other abuses. Agents found 14 children at one site. No information has been released about the minors.
The company has not been charged.
Federal and state laws allow children as young as 12 to work in agriculture under certain conditions, though no one under age 21 is allowed to work in the cannabis industry.
Company officials did not respond to calls or emails. In a brief statement on the social platform X, Glass House said it complied with immigration and naturalization warrants and 'has never knowingly violated applicable hiring practices and does not and has never employed minors.'
Some believe the raid was aimed at the legal marijuana market
After the raid, United Farm Workers — the country's biggest farm worker union — posted an urgent message to its social media accounts warning that because marijuana is illegal under federal law, workers who are not U.S. citizens should avoid jobs in the cannabis industry, including state-licensed facilities.
'We know this is unfair,' it said, 'but we encourage you to protect yourself and your family.'
Industry experts point to unwelcome publicity the company received after rival Catalyst Cannabis Co. filed a 2023 lawsuit alleging that Glass House 'has become one of the largest, if not the largest, black marketers of cannabis in the state of California.' The lawsuit, formally filed by Catalyst parent 562 Discount Med Inc., was dismissed last year but the headlines might have drawn the interest of federal investigators.
Who runs the Glass House farm sites?
The company was co-founded by Kyle Kazan, a former Southern California police officer and special education teacher turned cannabis investor, and Graham Farrar, a Santa Barbara tech entrepreneur.
Glass House started growing cannabis in a greenhouse in Carpinteria in Santa Barbara County when once-thriving cut flower operations were being reduced. It later bought property in Camarillo in neighboring Ventura County for $93 million that had six greenhouses and was being used to grow tomatoes and cucumbers.
To date, two of the greenhouses have been converted to grow cannabis. Workers' relatives said tomatoes are still being grown in other greenhouses at the location.
How did Glass House do it?
The raids have put the spotlight on a company that is alternately admired and reviled because of its meteoric rise in the nation's largest legal market.
Glass House is the state's biggest legal cultivator, dwarfing its nearest rivals. Glass House Farms is part of the broader company Glass House Brands, which has other businesses that make cannabis products.
'There is no farmer in California that can compete with them at scale,' Sacramento-based cannabis consultant Sam Rodriguez said.
Many legal operators have struggled despite the passage of Proposition 64 in 2016 — which was seen as a watershed moment in the push to legitimize and tax California's multibillion-dollar marijuana industry. In 2018, when retail outlets could open, California became the world's largest legal marketplace.
But operators faced heavy taxes, seven-figure start-up costs and for many consumers, the tax-free illegal market remained a better deal.
But as other companies folded, Glass House took off, fueling envy and suspicion by rivals over its boom at a time when much of the state's legal market was in crisis, in large part because of competition from the robust underground market.
In a recent call with investors, Kazan said company revenue in the first quarter hit $45 million — up 49% over the same period last year. He said he remained hopeful for a federal shift that would end marijuana's classification as a Schedule I drug, alongside heroin and LSD.
But 'we are a company that does not require federal legalization for survival,' Kazan said.
Glass House's sales grew as many others around the state declined.
'I remain steadfast in the belief that it is not if but when the cannabis industry becomes America's next massive normalized industry, and I'm excited to participate along with investors in the corresponding reward that that change will bring,' he said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
29 minutes ago
- The Independent
Unsettled by NYC shooting, companies wonder if their offices are safe
Businesses around the country are reevaluating security after a brazen shooting at a New York City office building raised questions about what it takes to keep workplaces safe. The attack on a seemingly secure building — in a gilded part of Manhattan where the rich live in sprawling apartments and tourists window-shop designer stores — has rattled workers and prompted managers to examine whether they are adequately protected. 'What should we be doing different?' clients are asking, said Brian Higgins, founder of Group 77, a Mahwah, New Jersey, security company that is among those getting peppered with an influx of calls. 'How can we prevent something like this?' The gut reaction of some companies, Higgins said, is to buy the latest technology and blanket their workplace in cameras. But, he cautioned, that's only only effective if paired with consistency and long-term monitoring. 'If you're going to add a security measure … you have to make sure you maintain it,' said Higgins, a former police chief who teaches security at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. Four people were killed in the shooting Monday before the gunman died by suicide. Images of the shooter, toting a long rifle on a street in the biggest U.S. city, then terrorizing an office building, have companies desperate to do something to keep the scene from repeating. ' People are frightened, people are asking questions,' said Dave Komendat, the Seattle-based chief security officer at Corporate Security Advisors, where calls are also spiking. With the U.S. locked in a pattern of gun violence virtually unparalleled in the world, security firms are used to the rhythms of the business. While attacks at a corporate office are less commonplace, a major shooting or an attack on an executive focuses attention back on security for a time, before receding. 'Give it a couple weeks, a month or so, it'll go back,' Higgins said of the increased call volume. 'When security issues don't happen for a while and companies start reexamining their budget, security is one of those things that companies cut.' Gene Petrino, CEO of Survival Response in Coral Springs, Florida, has also seen an uptick in calls from potential new customers, but expects it to be fleeting. 'When things are calm it's seen as an expense they don't need right away,' he said, 'and then when a tragedy happens it's a priority again.' Petrino said companies can make changes that aren't intrusive like using cameras with artificial intelligence capabilities to identify weapons. Sometimes, it may just be a matter of improving lighting in a hallway or putting up convex mirrors to see around a corner. 'Everything doesn't have to be bulletproof and locked with security cameras everywhere,' he said. 'You don't have to be Fort Knox. You can have very basic things.' Michael Evanoff, chief security officer of Verkada, a building security company based in San Mateo, California, said technology like AI-enabled cameras to help identify threats have become even more important amid a shortage of guards. 'It's harder than many realize to find and retain trained personnel,' Evanoff said. 'That makes it even more essential that guards are equipped with technology that can extend their reach.' Security at 345 Park Avenue, the site of the shooting, included an off-duty New York Police Department officer working as a guard. He was among those killed. Rudin, the leasing company that manages the building, did not respond to a query about when the building will reopen or whether new security measures will be implemented. No matter what, though, every workplace has vulnerabilities. 'The security team has to be perfect to 100% of the time,' said Komendat, a former chief security officer for Boeing. 'Someone like this just needs to be lucky once.'


Daily Mail
30 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Girl, 13, who died alongside seven-year-old friend when barge struck their boat as they attended sailing camp
A 13-year-old girl from Chile has been identified as the second victim who died during the terrifying Miami sailboat crash. Erin Co died while onboard the boat as part of the Miami Youth Sailing Foundation summer camp when it suddenly collided with a 60-foot barge around 11am Monday in Biscayne Bay. Co was a student at San Pedro Nolasco School in Vitacura, Santiago, who recently moved to the US, the school said in a memorial post about her. She died alongside seven-year-old Mila Yankelevich, who was previously identified by Argentine newspaper La Nacion. They were among five children aboard the sunken sailboat. A 19-year-old camp counselor was also with them at the time. Co and Yankelevich were pronounced dead while on their way to Ryder Trauma Center, per the Miami Herald. Two other children, aged eight and 11, remain hospitalized in critical condition. The unidentified counselor and other child, 12, walked away unharmed. The sailboat was part of the Miami Yacht Club's youth sailing program, but since the incident, the program has been suspended while authorities investigate. The Coast Guard will look at both vessels. They have started recovering the sunken sailboat which will now be stored at the US Coast Guard base in Miami Beach. Capt. Frank Florio, Commander of Coast Guard Sector Miami said alcohol testing was conducted and results are pending. Florio said that the agency believes 'all of the girls were wearing life jackets' when the crash happened, based on interviews throughout the investigation. The investigation could take several months to complete for officials to determine what caused the deadly crash. A witness at the scene told WSVN that a crane on the barge 'completely destroyed the boat' carrying Mila and four other campers as well as the counselor. 'The boat just went under and I heard a girl shouting for help under the crane,' the witness recounted. Nine-year-old Enzo Pifer Eddy also told CBS News how 'all the kids went flying' in the aftermath. According to the Coast Guard's navigation rules, sailboats generally have the right of way over motorboats, but must yield the right of way to a vessel that is 'restricted in its ability to maneuver.' Determining whether a tugboat that was seen pushing the barge in the clash will now likely be a central focus for Coast Guard investigators. They said at a news conference they will also be questioning the captain of the barge as they noted that 'the area was safe for sailing' at the time. However, Miami Yacht Club member Katie Flood-Reiss told the Miami Herald that the sailboat's 19-year-old instructor would have had no chance of evading the barge in the bay. 'In those conditions, with almost no wind, it would have been impossible to turn that sailboat around quickly,' she explained. Yankelevich was the granddaughter of Cris Morena and Gustavo Yankelevich, two prominent Argentine producers. Her father, Tomas Yankelevich, is also a producer and director, while her mother, Sofia Reca, is an actress in Argentina. The family lived in Surfside, Florida. Yankelevich's grandmother called her 'my girl with wings, my happy and free little fairy,' in a now heartbreaking tribute she posted of her late granddaughter for her birthday in February. The sailboat was part of the Miami Yacht Club's youth sailing program She added in Spanish that their 'moments together [were] filled with dancing [and] songs' and said her granddaughter embodied 'the sun, freedom and hugs.' One year prior, in another social media post, Morena called her granddaughter 'my cutest little girl in the world... My red heart, my everything.' She went on to explain that she chose to include the song 'Todo Todo,' which translates to 'Everything, everything' for her slideshow 'because I believe that everything you wish for with your red heart, you will be able to have it... 'And always with a smile and that bright face looking at life, life will give you back a lot of light and a lot of love.' Sadly, this is not the first time the Yankelevich family was struck by tragedy. Morena and Gustavo, who passed away in 1995, had a daughter, Romino, who died in 2010 at the age of 36 from a heart attack.


Daily Mail
30 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Notorious 'motel of ill-repute' set to be shut down after being overrun with sex workers
Seattle authorities are taking aim at a crime-ridden motel on a notorious avenue that's become synonymous with sex trafficking, drug deals, and violence. The Oaktree Motel - a 39-room property located on Aurora Avenue - has officially been labeled a 'chronic nuisance' by the Seattle Police Department, following nearly a year of escalating complaints and emergency calls. City officials say the business has repeatedly failed to curb the illegal activity taking place on-site - and now they're moving to shut it down. Police records show that officers responded to the motel 43 times in 2025 alone, including for overdoses, violent assaults, and weapons-related emergencies. In one recent case, a convicted human trafficker was arrested at the motel and told officers that his girlfriend - the motel manager - lived and worked there. Investigators say both the manager and the property owner have refused to cooperate with law enforcement. Police have documented more than a half-dozen serious crimes at the motel - including a fatal overdose, a guest shot on-site, and a drug bust that uncovered crack, meth, heroin, fentanyl, and thousands in cash. Seattle Police Chief Shon Barnes criticized the motel's ownership for repeatedly disregarding public safety concerns. Seattle police have responded to the Oaktree Motel 43 times in 2025 alone, with incidents ranging from overdoses and assaults to weapons-related calls 'Time's up for irresponsible owners who turn a blind eye to criminal activity and human suffering,' Barnes said in a statement. 'For much of the past year, this motel owner has ignored requests to improve public safety at the Oaktree, putting the lives of employees, residents, visitors, passersby, and vulnerable populations in danger.' He added, 'By filing this chronic nuisance order we can improve public safety along the Aurora North corridor.' Under city law, the property owner, Madilyn Investments LLC, now has one week to respond to the official nuisance designation. If they fail to take corrective action, the City Attorney's Office could file suit, levy fines, or move to shut the motel down entirely. Seattle City Attorney Ann Davison voiced strong support for the action. 'I thoroughly support Chief Barnes and his decision to declare this a chronic nuisance property,' she said. The Oaktree is one of several motels on Aurora Avenue facing legal action as city officials move to dismantle trafficking networks and curb street-level prostitution 'I think it's crucial that we use every available strategy to stop the illegal drug activity, the use of weapons, and – most urgently – prostitution and human trafficking.' The Oaktree is just the latest in a series of motels along Aurora Avenue to face legal pressure. The area has been plagued by drugs and sex workers while dealing with a homeless crisis. In recent years, three other properties have received the same chronic nuisance label - one of which has since been sold to a commercial real estate developer.