
Ice attacks in Glass House Farms threaten Californian legal cannabis landscape
An attack in July on Glass House Farms led to 361 arrests, 14 minors arrested and a death of agricultural workers. No cannabis has been confiscated, but the tariff of the largest licensed producer of the state has worked out the legal cannabis market in California under the shadow of the Federal Law.
A massive immigration attack on glass house farms – California's largest licensed cannabis producer – triggered widespread fear throughout the legal pot industry and urgently raised questions about state authority about cannabis.
The law enforcement agencies carried out armed raids in Camarillo and Carpinteria greenhouses from Glass House on July 10 and arrested 361 workers' workers from them and during the chaos a 57-year-old agricultural worker named Jaime Alanís García, trying from the greenhouse while they turned against Agents. Tear gas was used and protests followed quickly.
The Glass House co -founded by Kyle Kazan and Graham Farrar was not charged. Officials gave concerns about child labor and exploitation in the facilities, but no cannabis was confiscated during the raid.
The industry leaders fear that the state's largest licensed producer signals a shift from the Federal Authority against legal cannabis and undermine the sickle leaf regime of California. The United Farm Workers Union warned undocumented workers, cannabisjobs – even in licensed facilities – to calculate illegal federal law.
These raids follow increased immigration procedures in Southern California and come under the increasing criticism of working groups and local officials through enforcement procedures that are perceived as aggressive and politically motivated.
Post a comment: