Agricultural worker who fell with a greenhouse roof during chaotic ice this week on a California The cannabis plant died on Saturdays injuries.
Jaime Alanis (57) is the first person who died in one of the anti-immigration operations of the Trump Administration. Yeenia Duran, Alanis’ niece, confirmed his death to the associated press.
Duran posted on the construction site for fundraising Gofundme To say that her uncle was just his family service provider and returned to a wife and daughter in Mexico. The united food workers said Alanis worked on the farm for 10 years.
“These violent and cruel federal actions terrorize American communities, the American food supply chain, are threatened by lives and separate families,” the Union was said recently in the Social Platform Statement X.
UFW reported Alanis’ deaths prematurely Friday, but Ventura County Center later issued a statement that the family approved says that he is still on life support.
The Department of Homeland It was said that he had a criminal search on Thursday on the glass hosts in Camarill and Carpinteria on Thursday.
Garcia called on a family to say that he was hiding and possibly fleeing the agents before he fell about 30 feet (9 meters) from the roof and broke his neck, to the family, hospital and source of government.
The agents arrested about 200 people suspected that in the country they illegally and identified at least 10 immigrant children in sites, DHS said in the statement. Alanis was not among them, the Agency said.
“This man was not inside and was not in the CBP or icy custody,” said the Assistant DHS for Public Affairs Tricia McLaughlin in the statement. “Although he was not persecuted by law, this individual climbed to the roof of the greenhouse and fell 30 feet. The CBP immediately called the media on the scene to worry as quickly as possible.”
Four citizens were arrested during the incident on alleged “attack or resistor officers”, according to DHS, and authorities offered a $ 50,000 reward for information that led to the arrest of the gun firing in federal agents.
During the raid of the piles, they gathered outside the facility in Camarill to seek information about their relatives and protest immigration implementation. Authorities are trained in military helmets and uniforms faced with protesters, and people eventually retreated in the middle of sharp green and white smoke.
The glass house, defended the licensed California Canabis, said in a statement that immigration agents had valid warrants. The company said that workers were detained and helps them give them legal representation. The farm also grows tomatoes and cucumbers.
“The glass house has never been consciously violated the applicable employment practices and did not and never hired juveniles,” he said.
The business is owned by Graham Farrar, a generous donor to California democrats, including the government. Gavin NewsVocal critic Republican president Donald Trump.