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Federal immigration agents blockade Camarillo farm, clash with demonstrators [1]

['Tom Kisken', 'Ernesto Centeno Araujo', 'Isaiah Murtaugh', 'Cheri Carlson', 'Dominic Massimino']

Date: 2025-07-10

Federal immigration agents blockade Camarillo farm, clash with demonstrators

Show Caption Hide Caption See protesters, family members at an immigration raid near Camarillo Protesters clash with federal agents in Camarillo

Federal immigration agents descended on a farm outside of Camarillo on July 10, blocking off a road outside the facility and clashing with protesters.

Reports flooded social media in the morning of federal agents arriving at a Glass House Farms facility at 645 Laguna Road. Video posted by 805 Immigrant Coalition, a group that tracks Immigration and Customs Enforcement activity, showed men in tactical gear blocking off a roadway.

The raid marked one of Ventura County's largest since the Trump administration has ratcheted up its deportation efforts across the state and country. Days earlier, a large caravan of military vehicles drove through Los Angeles' MacArthur Park, sparking outrage from politicians.

UPDATE: About 200 swept up in farm raids near Camarillo, Carpinteria; FBI seeks alleged gunman

At the scene in Ventura County, yellow crime scene tape with U.S. Border Patrol markings stretched across Laguna Road. On one side stood what appeared to be masked and armed federal agents. On the other, a crowd of more than 100 people amassed, taunting the agents and yelling expletives.

The face-off was tense. Agents fired projectiles into the crowd, striking several people and hitting at least one in the face. Agents lobbed canisters that emitted yellow or white gas. Protesters stomped several of the canisters until they went out.

The masked agents continued to deploy gas canisters throughout the afternoon. Some people in the crowd left. Others poured milk on their faces to counteract the gas.

What is Glass House Farms?

The Glass House Farms greenhouse complex on Laguna Road is one of the largest licensed cannabis farms in California, with more than 5 million square feet of growing space. The company bought the property from Houweling's Tomatoes in 2021.

Federal agents also raided a Glass House Farms greenhouse facility in Carpinteria on July 10, according to the Santa Barbara news site Noozhawk. Protesters there faced off with agents in a similar situation to the one near Camarillo.

Glass House officials confirmed the raids on the social media platform X, noting that ICE agents provided search warrants.

Teresa Romero, the president of United Farm Workers, said union members at the farm had been in contact with staff during the incident, but details on the operation are still unclear.

"All we know is that it's happening," Romero said. "There's no good reason to do this to agricultural areas, to the agricultural industry. These workers are working very hard, and they are just living in panic."

Steve Auclair, president of the Ventura County Democratic Party, described the situation at Glass House Farms as "totally outrageous."

His mother, who is in her mid-60s, was hit by the gas and struck by a projectile. He called it "a military attack on our community."

"First they came for the farmworker, and now, they're taking all of us."

Glass House Farms were visited today by ICE Officials.



The company fully complied with agent search warrants and will provide further updates if necessary. — Glass House Brands Inc. (@GlassHouseBR) July 10, 2025

As raid unfolds, family members hold vigil

It was unclear what agents were doing on the farm 100 yards on the other side of the tape, but a line of people, possibly farmworkers, walked along one edge of the farm. An email left with the Department of Homeland Security was not immediately returned.

Some of the gathered crowd were protesters. Others were family members of farmworkers.

Jessica Lopez was leaning against a vehicle. She said she got a call from her husband at about 9:30 a.m. saying ICE was in the facility. Lopez, a U.S. citizen, said her undocumented husband worked at Glass House.

"Last time I talked to him, he said he was hiding somewhere," she said. "They're taking hardworking people who have had no problems with the law."

Dalia Perez, 30, of Oxnard, said she last heard her mother was in a room at the facility with ICE agents and that her phone was taken away.

"Upset. Helpless," Perez said of how she was feeling. "(Her mom) hasn't done anything wrong. She just worked for us to have a better life here."

Perez said her mother, who is undocumented, has lived in Oxnard for more than 30 years.

"We just want to know if our family is OK," she said.

Clashes break out

Shortly after 2 p.m., a large white bus rolled down Laguna Road from the facility accompanied by what appeared to be a National Guard vehicle.

Gas and pellets were used on the waning crowd. Small puddles of milk dotted the road where protesters treated their eyes from the gas.

Federal agents had moved the line of protesters back, but demonstrators also hurled objects at their vehicles.

Oxnard Police Chief Jason Benites said the initial operation appeared to be entirely composed of federal agents. The Ventura County Fire Department responded to a medical emergency there shortly before noon.

First responders declared a mass casualty incident for the injured as the Oxnard Fire Department and county fire arrived. By declaring the incident, crews ensured they had ambulances and the proper workers ready if needed.

County fire spokesman Andrew Dowd said five patients had been transported to area hospitals as of 6:45 p.m. An additional four people were assessed and may have been treated at the scene. Dowd did not have information about the injuries or conditions.

Fire crews were on site to help with injuries, not to provide federal aid, Dowd said.

Adrian Garcia, a 25-year-old from Oxnard, previously worked at the farm. He held a sign handed to him by another protester that read “We are essential” in Spanish. Garcia, like others who gathered in the crowd, said he rushed to the scene after hearing from family inside the facility.

'This is not the way'

Congresswoman Julia Brownley described the day's raid as "unfair, and it's unAmerican."

"It just breaks my heart that hard-working people are being rounded up and detained and taken to places unknown," she said.

Brownley, D-Westlake Village, said she had not received any information from federal officials about any actions or detentions.

"That has been (the case) since the very beginning of the Trump administration," said Brownley, as she drove to the site.

Brownley called the recent immigration enforcement actions egregious and immoral.

"It is not who we are as Americans," she said. "I think there is a way to do it. This is not the way."

Assemblymember Jacqui Irwin, who represents California’s 42nd Assembly District, wrote in a statement posted to social media platform X that she was heartbroken by images of what she called “senseless” raids at local farms. Her district covers a swath of Ventura County, including Camarillo where the raid took place, and portions of Los Angeles County.

"Deporting our field workers does nothing to strengthen the safety of our community but rather, serves to instill fear in immigrant communities and make them less likely to involve law enforcement when crimes do occur,” said Irwin, a Democrat.

Flurries of action throughout the afternoon

Dozens of protesters remained on Laguna Road and flurries of action continued throughout the afternoon.

At about 3:45 p.m., authorities made an announcement on a loud speaker: “This is the police, please make way for emergency vehicles or chemical agents will be deployed."

A military truck and several SUVs made their way along the road with a siren blaring. Gas was used, sending people scurrying for protection behind a farm fence. Some protesters threw rocks at the vehicles.

Farther down the road at the corner of Laguna and Wood, Oxnard City Councilman Gabe Teran surveyed a line of what appeared to be National Guard trucks and talked about the federal immigration raid.

“They’re terrorizing and targeting people who are foundational to our community,” he said.

Kiara Sosa, 18, of Santa Paula, sat in her vehicle, waiting for word from her mother, an undocumented worker at Glass House. Earlier, her mother, like many workers, had been hiding from federal agents, sparking Sousa’s hopes she would be OK.

The teen was afraid and worried but another emotion was even stronger.

“I’m very angry,” she said. “My parents deserve better.”

Clearing out the demonstrators

At about 4:30 p.m., Ventura County Sheriff’s deputies marched down Laguna Road and cleared the intersection of demonstrators. A department official said the agency role was traffic control and keeping the peace.

Farther up Laguna Road, a smaller group of protesters stood across from a line of federal immigration agents. Among them were sisters Ysennia and Cynthia Martinez of Oxnard.

The sisters said they arrived in the morning and saw gas and pellet guns deployed on the crowd of demonstrators.

“It is intense. There are no words, it is just pretty sad,” Cynthia Martinez said.

The father of Cynthia’s 11-year-old daughter, Juan, was rounded up in the raid, she said.

“How do you explain to your daughter that her dad just got taken away?” Cynthia Martinez asked.

Staff writers Tony Biasotti and Makena Huey contributed to this report.

Reach Tom Kisken at [email protected], Ernesto Centeno Araujo at [email protected], Isaiah Murtaugh at [email protected], Cheri Carlson at [email protected] and Dominic Massimino at [email protected].

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[1] Url: https://www.vcstar.com/story/news/local/2025/07/10/immigration-raid-near-camarillo-sets-up-clash-with-ice-protesters/84540242007/

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