Conservative News & Right Wing News | Gun Laws & Rights News Site

Texas SWAT team destroys organic farm during raid

texas-police-hits-organic-farm-with-massive-swat-raid_si

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Texas SWAT team destroys organic farm during raid

A Texas SWAT team raided an organic farm, allegedly searching for marijuana. After conducting a 10-hour raid, destroying many of the plants and vegetables in the process, police failed to find any drug evidence.

Authorities last week raided a 3.5-acre Arlington-based organic  farm business called the Garden of Eden, which advocates for  sustainable lifestyles. Police said they were searching for  marijuana in the gardens, after photos taken of the property from  a Texas Department of Public Safety manned aircraft allegedly  showed plants that resemble marijuana.

When the SWAT team arrived at the farm, the six adults who live  there were held at gunpoint and handcuffed. For 10 hours, SWAT  officers searched the property, destroying parts of the farm in  the process.

City Code Enforcement officers also showed up at the property,  despite the fact that their mission is unrelated to drug  enforcement. City Enforcement offices are responsible for  maintaining safe and attractive neighborhoods, and residents of  the Garden of Eden believe the raid was simply an excuse to allow  them to change the farm’s unconventional appearance.

They came here under the guise that we were doing a drug  trafficking, marijuana growing operation. They destroyed  everything,” property owner Shellie Smith told ABC affiliate  WFAA-TV.

The Garden of Eden had recently been cited for code violations,  including “grass that was too tall, bushes growing too close  to the street, a couch and piano in the yard, chopped wood that  was not properly stacked, a piece of siding that was missing from  the side of the house and generally unclean premises,” Smith  said in a statement.

While the SWAT team was searching for drugs, code compliance  officers mowed the grass and removed wild, cultivated plants and  equipment, which Smith said was a shock to everyone who lived on  the farm. Arlington police claim that the operation lasted only  45 minutes, but residents of the Garden of Eden continue to  insist that it took 10 hours.

We had mass amounts of materials taken,” Quinn Eaker, a  30-year-old resident of the farm, told NBC. “If you saw the  list, it’s pages and pages of materials taken. That wasn’t junk.  That wasn’t trash.”

The police seized and destroyed 17 blackberry bushes, 15 okra  plants, 14 tomatillo plants and sunflowers. Eaker believes that  when police looked at surveillance photos of the farm, they  mistakenly identified tomato plants as marijuana plants.

They can’t even tell the difference between tomato plants and  a marijuana drug cartel; that’s just really bad intel,” Eaker  said.

Police found no drugs or criminal wrongdoing on the property, but  they arrested Eaker on an unrelated warrant for an outstanding  unpaid parking ticket.

Residents of the organic farm are demanding an apology. They  claim they have never done anything wrong, and remain upset about  the damages to their farm.

We’ve never hurt anybody. This is our land,” Eaker told  KXAS-TV. “We have the right to be secure in our person and our  property. Period. That’s undebatable.”

http://rt.com/usa/texas-swat-organic-rad-587/

Exit mobile version