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Cannabis farmworker in California is on life support after chaotic federal immigration raid, family says

Cannabis farmworker in California is on life support after chaotic federal immigration raid, family says

Yahoo19 hours ago
LOS ANGELES — A farmworker at a Southern California cannabis farm is in critical condition after being injured during a chaotic immigration raid by federal officers, local officials said Friday.
Jaime Alanis Garcia is hospitalized at Ventura County Medical Center and remains in critical condition, county officials said in a statement authorized by the man's family.
His family told NBC Los Angeles that the man is on life support using an assistive breathing machine and has "catastrophic" injuries. He has a broken neck, broken skull and a severed artery, a niece said.
The United Farm Workers had previously said Garcia, an employee of Glass House Farms, died after falling some 30 feet.
'These violent and cruel federal actions terrorize American communities, disrupt the American food supply chain, threaten lives and separate families,' UFW President Teresa Romero said in a statement to NBC News.
Immigration officials said in a statement that Garcia was not in federal custody at the time of the fall.
'Although he was not being pursued by law enforcement, this individual climbed up to the roof of a green house and fell 30 feet,' Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said. 'CBP immediately called a medivac to the scene to get him care as quickly as possible.'
Outside federal agents lobbed less-lethal weapons and tear gas at protesters who gathered at the Camarillo grow house Thursday while employees were being rounded up and arrested inside.
Officers pepper-sprayed a disabled U.S. Army veteran who served in Iraq and works as a security guard at the facility, the man's wife told NBC News.
George Retes complied with federal officers when he arrived to check on friends and colleagues who might have been affected by the raids, she said, but instead he was arrested on suspicion of assault, according to immigration officials. A hearing is scheduled Monday.
'He wasn't even a protester,' Guadalupe Torres said of her husband. 'They smashed his window, and after they smashed his window, they pepper-sprayed him.'
Aerial footage from NBC Los Angeles showed farm equipment being loaded up into tow trucks and people standing around in handcuffs.
President Donald Trump said in a Truth Social post Friday night that he watched the protests 'in disbelief' as unruly demonstrators threw rock and bricks at cars belonging to federal agents. He directed Homeland Security and immigration officials to use 'whatever means is necessary' to arrest people who do not obey the law.
At a cultivation center in Carpinteria owned by Glass House Farms, manager Edgar Rodriguez said federal officers assaulted and handcuffed him after he repeatedly asked them to identify themselves and provide a warrant.
Rodriguez was standing behind a window when 10 unidentified men in fatigues arrived Thursday morning in unmarked cars and one armored vehicle.
Rodriguez, a U.S. citizen, said he asked the men several times to identify themselves and provide a reason for arriving heavily armed. The officers refused and responded by saying they were 'not ICE' but did not specify which agency they were from.
One of the officers can be seen in video obtained exclusively by NBC News attempting to coax Rodriguez outside by telling him he wouldn't be harmed.
'I'm just trying to talk to you. We're not here for you,' the officer said in the video. 'We have a federal warrant. We have a right to be here. Please come out.'
'I got you,' the officer said as Rodriguez began to tentatively leave his post.
Once outside, tensions escalated.
Rodriguez was led by the federal officers toward dumpsters, where the same officer who had told him not to worry slapped Rodriguez's cellphone from his hands.
Two other officers then pushed him to the ground, Rodriguez said. His phone fell, and voices can be heard arguing in the background.
Rodriguez said he was handcuffed for more than an hour, and one officer twisted his arm behind his back. The officers knelt on his neck and head, he said, and he began to lose feeling in his hands. He later went to a hospital covered in scratches and bruises, he said.
Rodriguez said he saw at least 10 employees get arrested, all of them in their 40s to their 60s. He said several had work visas and have been in the U.S. for more than 20 years.
"They were really scared," he said. "They kept saying they didn't do anything wrong, that they had visas."
The indoor cannabis farm where Rodriguez works was one of two Glass House properties raided by federal officers on Thursday.
In Camarillo, about 40 minutes away, the other enforcement operation drew hundreds of protesters outside the 5.5 million-square-foot facility.
Some 200 people were arrested in the two operations, the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement.
Several workers including U.S. citizens, "remain unaccounted for," the United Farm Workers said. Employees were held on site for eight hours or more, the labor union said.
U.S. citizens were released only after agreeing to delete videos and photos of the raid from their phones, the UFW added.
The FBI is offering a $50,000 reward for information on a person who appeared to fire a pistol at federal officers. The U.S. attorney in Los Angeles, Bill Essayli, said it occurred around 2:30 p.m. Thursday outside the Camarillo grow house.
'While ICE and CBP officers are being assaulted by rioters and dodging bullets to save children, Sanctuary politicians are demonizing ICE and CBP,' Essayli said in a statement. 'We will prosecute to the fullest extent of the law anyone who assaults or doxes federal law enforcement.'
U.S. Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Rodney Scott posted a photo on X Friday of what appeared to be 10 young people detained at the Camarillo farm.
"These are the juveniles found in the marijuana facility — almost all unaccompanied, one as young as 14. California are you ready to partner with us to stop child exploitation?" the post read.
Glass House said in a statement on X that it "never knowingly violated applicable hiring practices and does not and has never employed minors."
The UFW said it was aware of the reports and demanded legal representation for the minors.
"To be clear, detaining and deporting children is not a solution for child labor," the union said in a statement.
Rodriguez said Glass House has a policy of only employing people who are at least 21 years old, and he could not personally identify the people in the photo, whose faces were blurred.
He said "there are no underage workers" at the two facilities he manages in Carpinteria.
'I am absolutely positive of that,' he said.
The raids Thursday came after more than a month of confrontations between the Trump administration and mass deportation protesters.
The protests have occasionally shut down parts of Los Angeles and its many immigrant-majority communities, where many residents say they are afraid to go to work.
On Friday, Mayor Karen Bass signed a directive requiring city departments to submit preparedness plans outlining how employees, including contractors, should respond if approached by federal immigration agents. The goal, she said, is to ensure that residents and city workers know their rights and can safely access services without fear.
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com
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MAGA leaders sound alarm about discontented Trump base: ‘A huge risk'
MAGA leaders sound alarm about discontented Trump base: ‘A huge risk'

Washington Post

time12 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

MAGA leaders sound alarm about discontented Trump base: ‘A huge risk'

TAMPA — The Gen Z audience inside the downtown convention center, wearing a mix of T-shirts and shorts, sport coats and ties, represented the most devoted of the president's young supporters — a demographic that swung notably toward Donald Trump in November and helped return him to office. The crowd at Turning Point USA's Student Action Summit was thrilled Trump was back in the White House. They weren't all thrilled, however, about everything Trump is doing there. Some MAGA leaders at this weekend's gathering worried that dynamic could cost the Trump movement in next year's elections and beyond, as they sought to raise alarms 900 miles away in Washington. The 'excitement I saw among younger voters could be defused,' said Charlie Kirk, the 31-year-old founder of Turning Point, in an interview with The Washington Post, likening it to 'air out of a balloon.' 'Do I think this is the end of MAGA? No. I've never said that,' Kirk continued. 'Do I think the extra 10 to 15 percent of [less inclined to vote] bros that are trading crypto and wake up at 2 p.m. every day … do I think they're going to be, like, 'Screw it?' Yeah. That's a huge risk.' Across age demographics, some of Trump's most dedicated supporters are uneasy about the White House's decision to keep sending U.S. weapons to Ukraine and disappointed by the prospect that immigration raids might spare some sectors of the economy. At the Turning Point gathering dominated by his youngest voters, attendees were especially bothered by the administration's announcement last week that — despite promises to the contrary — there would be no additional files released on the deceased child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Crowds of devout young conservatives still lined up to make donations to receive '47' hats and cheered as photos flashed on-screen of Trump's mug shot, of him raising his fist after surviving an assassination attempt, of him waving from a McDonald's drive-through window. They did the Trump dance as 'YMCA' played, and they gave frequent standing ovations as speakers championed aspects of the president's agenda such as securing the border and opposing 'woke' ideology. But other moments revealed that issues were 'bubbling under the surface' of their movement, as Fox News host Laura Ingraham explained it. 'How many of you are satisfied with the results of the Epstein investigation?' Ingraham asked to resounding boos. 'How many of you are happy that we are continuing to send weapons to Ukraine?' More boos rang out. 'How many of you are in favor of carveouts from the concept of mass deportation for agriculture or hospitality?' Ingraham asked. 'Are you for those?' They were not. White House officials — and Trump himself — have dismissed complaints about the Epstein case, trying to argue that a vocal but small minority of his supporters were upset over the decision to not reveal new information, though an outcry on social media and elsewhere has been difficult for his advisers to ignore. But Kirk warned that Trump's newer young male supporters are especially rankled by what they see as a lack of transparency on Epstein. 'Their trust of government is zero,' Kirk said. 'The only reason they were able to succumb themselves to engaging was because of Trump.' He jokingly described young Trump-voting men as becoming the 'Lost Boys of MAGA,' arguing that they're more likely to merely become politically disengaged due to 'mass cynicism' than they are to veer to the left and 'become card-carrying members of the Mamdani movement,' referring to Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic socialist New York City mayoral candidate. Abigail Jackson, a spokesperson for the White House, said Trump 'is keeping his promises to his MAGA base on a daily basis' and that the GOP under Trump 'is more unified than ever.' Jackson pointed to the passage of Trump's 'One Big Beautiful Bill,' which enacted a number of his campaign promises, and said Trump 'will never stop listening to the voices of his closest allies and delivering for the American people.' But the prospect that the White House might alienate key segments of the movement that put Trump in Washington was a constant theme in speeches from some of the biggest commentators in MAGA politics. One after another, speakers dropped hints — or made explicit warnings — about their worries. They often cloaked their concerns in criticism of people working around Trump and influencing him, rather than the president himself. 'This could actually cost Trump in the midterms,' conservative podcaster and former Fox News host Megyn Kelly said, as she spent more than half an hour railing against Attorney General Pam Bondi over her handling of the Epstein files. 'We need to make a smart choice right now. We can't lose any of the MAGA base.' Former senior White House adviser Stephen K. Bannon, taping his daily podcast live from a small stage in the convention center Friday morning, was even more alarmed. 'It's deeper than Epstein!' Bannon shouted as a crowd gathered around him. The administration's refusal to release more on the investigation and Epstein's potential ties to power, as it had once promised to do, is 'not about just a pedophile ring and all that,' he said. 'It's about who governs us, and that's why it's not going to go away.' 'For this to go away,' a fired-up Bannon continued, telling his producers they'd have to blow through the scheduled commercial break, 'you're going to lose 10 percent of the MAGA movement. If we lose 10 percent of the MAGA movement right now, we're going to lose 40 seats in '26, we're going to lose the presidency. They don't even have to steal it.' A White House official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the delicate situation, said Bondi is 'not going anywhere,' and Trump has 'extreme confidence' in her. The official dismissed the significance of the conservative influencers' complaints. Still, Tucker Carlson, another former Fox News host and a leading voice in MAGA, said the official response to criticism over Epstein reminded him of the Biden administration. 'The fact that the U.S. government, the one that I voted for, refused to take my question seriously and instead said 'Case closed. Shut up, conspiracy theorist' was too much for me, and I don't think the rest of us should be satisfied with that,' Carlson said. It wasn't all doom and gloom from the stage. Trump's administration was well-represented at the gathering, and his son, Donald Trump Jr., a longtime friend of Kirk, was among the speakers praising the work of Turning Point USA. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, also a former Fox News host, pitched the young audience on a career in the military, touting the administration's spikes in enlistment numbers since January. Border czar Tom Homan was due to speak Saturday night, as was Homeland Security Secretary Kristi L. Noem. The president pushed back this week on concerns that some undocumented farm and hotel workers might not be deported, saying there would be 'no amnesty' but rather a 'work program.' And most young supporters in the crowd said they were still happy overall with Trump. Mingling among tables selling MAGA-themed coffee ('Stay awake! Not woke!'), 'Based Nutrition' liver supplements and 'Birthright' prenatal vitamins, they said they had no plans to leave the movement. 'I think the last two weeks have been both a great surge with the Big Beautiful Bill, and then sort of a bit of a drop-off with all the other stuff,' said Alex Peña, a 24-year-old from Tampa who works in education, wearing a cowboy hat patterned like the American flag. A child of Cubans who immigrated legally, Peña, too, was opposed to Trump offering safety from deportations for some migrant workers. He was flummoxed over the Epstein announcement, and he described Trump's continuation of Ukraine military aid as 'the same stuff we were complaining about under Biden.' 'If the midterms were today, I think it'd be kind of rocky,' Peña said. 'But you know, a lot can change in a year, and a lot can change in 3½ years, when 2028 comes around.' Vince Smith, an 18-year-old from Redwood City, California, who is preparing to begin studying construction management at Virginia Tech in the fall, said he was impressed by the Trump campaign's social media strategy last year and how it 'organically' fit with what teenagers were already seeing online. 'I'd say a larger subset of youth is worried about more 'America First'-style policy, so just ensuring that they stay on track with that, and that sort of happens in parallel to anything that might be more controversial — that's really important,' Smith said. Trump's base has proved to be resilient — handing him the 2024 presidential nomination after a period of political uncertainty in the wake of his 2020 loss and the Jan. 6 riot, even though some formidable Republicans tried to stop him. But now that Trump is back in the White House with a wider coalition — tech workers in Silicon Valley, more Latino voters and Black men, longtime liberals disenchanted by Democrats' handling of covid restrictions and vaccine requirements, and young men not previously engaged with Republican politics — it remains to be seen whether they'll all stay in the MAGA fold for good. At the conference, Kirk and Carlson preached the importance of lowering housing costs to make it easier to start families, a sentiment that attendees brought up during interviews as a top concern. 'If we do not improve the material conditions of the younger voters, and do it quickly, the Mamdani effect will spread,' Kirk told The Post, calling on Trump's GOP to make a big statement by instituting a 'we're going to build 10 million homes, Marshall Plan-type thing' to address affordability. From onstage, Kirk celebrated the gains that his and other organizations made in convincing young people to support Trump. Gen Z was 'making all the liberals confused' over their shift away from the Democratic Party, he said, describing it as 'the greatest generational realignment since Woodstock.' 'We turned that red MAGA hat from a symbol that everyone was afraid to wear back in 2016,' Kirk said, 'where now in 2024, we turned that into a symbol of hope, into a symbol of optimism, of patriotism and taking back our country.'

Bondi says all charges against doctor who allegedly destroyed COVID vaccines have been dropped
Bondi says all charges against doctor who allegedly destroyed COVID vaccines have been dropped

Fox News

time13 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Bondi says all charges against doctor who allegedly destroyed COVID vaccines have been dropped

U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi announced Saturday that charges against a doctor accused of destroying COVID-19 vaccines and giving children fake shots at their parents' request have been dropped. "At my direction @TheJusticeDept has dismissed charges against Dr. Kirk Moore," Bondi wrote on X. "Dr. Moore gave his patients a choice when the federal government refused to do so. He did not deserve the years in prison he was facing. It ends today." Moore, whose trial got underway Monday, was facing decades in prison for allegedly destroying more than $28,000 in COVID-19 vaccines and fraudulently completing and distributing hundreds of vaccination record cards. The Utah-based plastic surgeon was indicted by a federal grand jury in January 2023. Prosecutors say Moore and his three co-defendants ran a scheme out of Plastic Surgery Institute of Utah Inc. to "defraud the United States and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)." On Tuesday, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., said she was writing a letter to the Justice Department to urge it to drop charges against Moore. "This man is a hero, not a criminal," she contended on X. "The charges were filed under Biden's DOJ, not Trump." Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. also praised Moore on X in April, writing, "Dr. Moore deserves a medal for his courage and his commitment to healing!" Greene thanked Bondi on Saturday. "Thank you AG Pam Bondi for dropping the WRONGFUL charges against Dr. Kirk Moore!" she wrote on X. "We can never again allow our government to turn tyrannical under our watch. Thankfully, as soon as I told Pam Bondi about Dr. Moore's case she swiftly moved to drop the charges against him. This is a big win!" Bondi wrote that getting the charges against Moore dropped would not have been possible without Greene, "who brought this case to my attention. She has been a warrior for Dr. Moore and for ending the weaponization of government." Bondi's actions come as some supporters of President Trump are calling for her resignation after the Justice Department and FBI on Sunday released a joint review that ended theories about an alleged Jeffrey Epstein client list, concluding there was no such list detailing the names of the world's elite who allegedly took part in Epstein's history as a sexual predator. The DOJ also concluded the disgraced financier committed suicide in his New York City jail cell in 2019 while awaiting further sex trafficking charges. Public outrage ensued after the release of a prison surveillance video that the administration used to prove that no one entered Epstein's cell in the hours leading up to his death. The 10-hour video, though, has one minute missing, which has fueled conspiracy theories that the administration is participating in a cover-up involving Epstein's death. "President Trump is proud of Attorney General Bondi's efforts to execute his Make America Safe Again agenda, restore the integrity of the Department of Justice, and bring justice to victims of crime. The continued fixation on sowing division in President Trump's Cabinet is baseless and unfounded in reality," White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt siad. FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino is also considering resigning over the Justice Department's handling of the Epstein files after a heated argument with Bondi this week, a source told Fox News Digital this week. Bongino has not been seen in his office since Wednesday, a source said, adding he has yet to make a final decision about his future.

The U.S. debt outlook is so dire it now resembles the student loan crisis, former White House economic adviser says
The U.S. debt outlook is so dire it now resembles the student loan crisis, former White House economic adviser says

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The U.S. debt outlook is so dire it now resembles the student loan crisis, former White House economic adviser says

Jared Bernstein, who previously served as the chair of President Joe Biden's Council of Economic Advisers, has had a change of heart when it comes to U.S. debt. After being a longtime dove, he has become a hawk 'because our nation's budget math just got a lot more dangerous.' He cited President Donald Trump's tariffs and tax cuts. The U.S. is inviting a debt shock if it continues on its current trajectory, which is starting to look like unsustainable student loans, according to Jared Bernstein, who previously served as the chair of President Joe Biden's Council of Economic Advisers. In a New York Times op-ed on Wednesday, he acknowledged that he was once a longtime dove when it came to budget deficits and previously argued that fiscal austerity often does more harm than good. 'No longer. I, like many other longtime doves, am joining the hawks, because our nation's budget math just got a lot more dangerous,' Bernstein wrote. In particular, he pointed to the math around economic growth versus debt interest. Governments can sustain budget deficits if GDP expands faster than the interest rate on their debt, Bernstein explained, citing research from economist Olivier Blanchard. That's where the student debt analogy comes in. College graduates can keep up with monthly payments as long as they haven't borrowed too much and their income is rising faster than their loan bills. 'Conversely, though, if they borrowed to the hilt—and if their student loan debt starts growing faster than their income—they can quickly get in trouble,' Bernstein said. 'And that's where our country is right now.' It's an ominous warning given that delinquency rates have soared among student loan borrowers, resulting in seized wages and credit scores plummeting. That's after the number of Americans with debt from federal student loans more than doubled from 21 million to 45 million between 2000 and 2020, according to the Brookings Institution. Meanwhile, the total amount owed more than quadrupled from $387 billion to $1.8 trillion during that time, growing faster than any other form of household debt. When it comes to the federal government's finances, America's debt costs relative to income used to be more benign. Since the early 2000s, the inflation-adjusted yield on 10-year Treasuries was below the running 10-year forecast for economic growth. But that changed recently, with the two now converging at just above 2%, due in part to government spending during the pandemic and higher inflation—which forced the Federal Reserve to hike interest rates aggressively, dragging yields higher. 'That's a potential game changer for debt sustainability,' Bernstein said. He didn't mention that the Biden administration added trillions to the debt with expansive spending that also stoked inflation. Instead, he pointed to President Donald Trump's economic policies, namely his trade war and the tax-and-spending bill that he signed into law last week. High tariff rates will lower economic growth while boosting inflation and interest rates. At the same time, tax cuts will increase debt and likely to raise the interest costs for servicing it, he added. To help avoid a debt shock that forces the government to precipitously slash spending or raise taxes, Bernstein suggested Congress pre-determine 'break-glass moments' and binding fiscal responses. The U.S. already pays more in interest on its debt than it spends on Medicare and defense. Those interest payments will hit $1 trillion next year, trailing only Social Security as the government's biggest outlay, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a think tank. Meanwhile, Trump's tax cuts and spending are expected to add trillions to the deficit in the coming years, with the total debt-to-GDP ratio surpassing the post-Word War II record soon. 'But that path remains unsustainable: The primary deficit is much larger than usual in a strong economy, the debt-to-GDP ratio is approaching the postwar high, and much higher real interest rates have put the debt and interest expense as a share of GDP on much steeper trajectories than appeared likely last cycle,' Goldman Sachs said in a note last month. This story was originally featured on Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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