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California professor unmasked as protester who 'hurled tear gas at ICE agents' during pot farm raid

California professor unmasked as protester who 'hurled tear gas at ICE agents' during pot farm raid

Daily Mail​14 hours ago
A California professor has been accused of hurling tear gas at ICE agents during a tumultuous raid on a cannabis farm last week.
Jonathan Anthony Caravello was taken into custody on Thursday, with U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California Bill Essayli claiming on social media that he threw a tear gas cannister at law enforcement officials who descended on Glass House Farms in Ventura County.
Essayli went on to deny the California Faculty Association's earlier claims that Caravello - who teaches math and philosophy at California State University Channel Islands - was 'kidnapped' by federal agents.
Instead, a criminal complaint obtained by the Ojai Valley News claims that after agent deployed cannisters of tear gas, Caravello was caught on body camera footage 'attempt[ing] to kick the canister' which proceeded to roll past him.
'Caravello turned around, ran towards the canister, picked it up and threw the canister overhand back at [Border Patrol] agents,' an affidavit says, adding that it 'came within approximately several feet above law enforcements' heads.'
In the aftermath, Caravello allegedly left the scene - only to return a few hours later wearing different clothes, according to the affidavit.
It also claims that Caravello was seen 'holding a microphone' at the cannabis farm when Border Patrol agents 'attempted to clear a safe pathway' between the protesters and government-owned vehicles attempting to leave.
He was arrested just before 6pm, according to the criminal complaint, which states that agents placed the professor on his stomach on the ground and gave him 'verbal commands... but Caravello would not comply and attempted to grab a [Border Patrol] agent's leg.
'Caravello continuously kicked his legs and refused to give the BP agents his arms,' the complaint alleges.
Witnesses at the scene, though, offered a different version of events.
They claimed the professor was attempting to dislodge a tear gas cannister that became stuck underneath another protester's wheelchair when he was arrested, ABC 7 reports.
Angelmarie Taylor, 24, also told the Los Angeles Times she saw agents fire tear gas after Caravello and others refused to move out of the way of agents' vehicles.
At that point, four masked agents took Caravello from the protest site and placed him in an unmarked vehicle without identifying themselves, stating a reason for his arrest or disclosing where they were taking him, the California Faculty Association claimed.
'They didn't give us a dispersal order,' Taylor recounted. 'They didn't say anything.'
In a statement, California State University Channel Islands said it is working to get 'additional information to fully understand the circumstances of the incident.'
'At this time, it is our understanding that Professor Caravello was peacefully participating in a protest - an act protected under the First Amendment and a right guaranteed to all Americans,' the university said.
'If confirmed, we stand with elected officials and community leaders calling for his immediate release.'
Members of the California Faculty Association and VC Defensa, an immigration rights group, then hosted a rally demanding the release of at least 12 Ventura County residents - including Caravello - on Sunday.
'As part of our union's antiracism and social justice agenda, we show up for our immigrant communities, including faculty and students engaged in efforts to stop and protect our communities from the invasion of ICE, [Department of Homeland Security], National Guard and local law enforcement,' the California Faculty Association said in a statement.
A spokesperson for the group also spoke up about Caravello's detention in remarks to the Coyote Chronicle.
'This was not just an arrest - it was a disappearance,' the spokesperson said.
'Dr. Caravello is a US citizen, a public servant and an advocate for justice. His abduction is part of a deeply alarming trend of silencing dissent and criminalizing compassion.'
VC Defensa also shared a message on Instagram asserting that Caravello was 'defending the immigrant community and supporting other people who come to show their support.
'Let's be critical before sharing news that he was "violent,"' the immigrant rights group urged. 'We have so many witnesses that know he was attacked by ICE and assaulted for no reason other than he was in the crowd that stood against ICE.
'This is an egregious lie by the ruling class (as always!!),' it claimed.
Still, Caravello is now facing federal charges of 'assaulting, resisting or impeding certain officers or employees,' which can carry up to 10 years in prison if the offense involves a weapon or causes injury.
He was released on a $15,000 bail on Monday, with an arraignment set for August 1.
Meanwhile, Democrats have spoken out against the ICE raid at the cannabis farm, as they insisted the migrants agents were after were just children picking strawberries.
Ventura County Democratic Party Chair Steve Auclair called the raid 'a military attack on our community,' Auclair said.
'First they came for the farmworkers. Now they're coming for all of us,' he declared.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom even declared that President Donald Trump is 'the real scum' for conducting the nationwide ICE raids.
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