The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 05, 2025
Today: April 05, 2025

Chinese immigrant workers sue over forced labor at illegal marijuana operation on Navajo land

Navajo Marijuana Forced Labor
September 27, 2023

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) โ€” Chinese immigrant workers allege they were lured to northern New Mexico under false pretenses and forced to work 14 hours a day trimming marijuana on the Navajo Nation where cultivating the plant is illegal, according to a lawsuit filed Wednesday in state court.

Job advertisements for the operation in Shiprock promised $200 per day, housing and food in exchange for โ€œgardeningโ€ and โ€œflower cutting.โ€ But when the workers arrived in New Mexico, the complaint says, their phones and car keys were taken away, they were barred from leaving and, in some instances, family members were separated.

In a statement Wednesday, lawyers for the 15 workers said their clients were treated like animals and commended their bravery for coming forward.

โ€œEnding forced labor requires that the perpetrators of forced labor and those who seek to benefit from such schemes face serious consequences," attorney Aaron Halegua said. "We hope that this lawsuit will demonstrate that such abusive practices do not pay.โ€

The lawsuit names as defendants Navajo businessman Dineh Benally and Irving Lin, a Taiwanese entrepreneur based in Los Angeles. It also names associates of Benally and Lin, as well as businesses linked to the farming operation, which authorities say ballooned to nearly two dozen farms and more than 1,100 greenhouses spread across 400 acres (162 hectares).

At least 19 rooms at a motel in nearby Farmington supported the operation, the complaint alleges. Workers were treated like prisoners at the motel, which was under watch by armed security guards, and like machines while toiling in the fields, according to the complaint.

Farmington police busted the operation in October 2020 after they were called to the motel to investigate a โ€œstrong odorโ€ of marijuana. They found 2,000 pounds of marijuana, worth $3 million to $10 million, according to the lawsuit. Workers who were there at the time were arrested, but drug charges later were dropped.

In late 2020, federal, state and tribal authorities also raided the Shiprock-area farms, destroying a quarter-million plants.

The Navajo Nation Department of Justice sued Benally, leading to a court order halting the operation that the lawsuit says Benally and his associates ignored.

Benally didn't respond to phone and emailed requests for comment. David Jordan, who represented Benally in the Navajo case, declined to comment on the lawsuit, although he denied that Benally ignored the tribal judge's order to halt farming.

Lin couldn't immediately be reached for comment Wednesday. It wasn't clear from court records whether he has an attorney who could comment on his behalf, and a lawyer in New Mexico who represented Lin previously wasn't available Wednesday evening.

But in a March 2021 affidavit detailed in the lawsuit, Lin stated there was โ€œno violence and human trafficking" and no โ€œhuman rights" violated by the farming operation.

The lawsuit filed in Santa Fe seeks a jury trial and unspecified damages.

Benally, a former Navajo Nation presidential candidate who campaigned on growing hemp to boost the economy, is accused in the lawsuit of turning a blind eye to federal and tribal laws that make it illegal to grow marijuana on the reservation. The complaint says he instructed his associates and the workers to refer to the marijuana as โ€œhempโ€ to avoid law enforcement scrutiny.

The lawsuit claims that Benally and Lin intentionally targeted Chinese immigrants in California who were out of work in 2020 at the height of the coronavirus pandemic.

Phillip Francisco, then-chief of police for the Navajo Nation, previously estimated there were 1,000 people working for the operation, mostly foreign workers brought to New Mexico from Los Angeles. Other law enforcement officials estimated the number of workers surpassed 2,000.

Navajo residents described seeing the workers sleeping in the fields and ditches, โ€œshivering through the night,โ€ the lawsuit states. One worker said he slept on the floors of greenhouses and was never paid any of the roughly $12,000 in wages he was promised. Workers did not get adequate rest, or enough food and water throughout the day, according to the lawsuit.

The workers were monitored by cameras and security guards, some of whom were armed, the complaint states. When they sought to leave or just rest, the lawsuit alleges they were forced to continue working.

Photos included in the lawsuit show cannabis plants blanketing the floor of one motel room, with the room's mattress leaning on its side against a wall.

___

This story has been updated to correct the spelling of Francisco's first name. It is Phillip, not Philip.

___

Yamat reported from Las Vegas, Nevada. Associated Press journalist Felicia Fonseca in Flagstaff, Arizona, contributed.

Related Articles

Objections flow in on NCAA settlement over 'unnecessarily harsh' impact of roster limits Hearing on Nippon Steel's lawsuit over U.S. Steel bid set for Feb-March, Kyodo says US Steel and Nippon sue Biden administration, Steelworkers union and Cleveland-Cliffs over their blocked merger Qualcomm secures key win in chips trial against Arm
Share This

Popular

Americas|Crime|Political|World

Costa Rica looks to El Salvador's gang crackdown for path to stopping violence

Costa Rica looks to El Salvador's gang crackdown for path to stopping violence
Americas|Sports|US

Soto at home in Polar Bear's house: Big bats power Mets in `storybook' Citi Field opener

Soto at home in Polar Bear's house: Big bats power Mets in `storybook' Citi Field opener
Americas|Health|US

A Venezuelan man who wants to donate a kidney to his brother faced deportation. ICE granted him one-year humanitarian parole

A Venezuelan man who wants to donate a kidney to his brother faced deportation. ICE granted him one-year humanitarian parole
Americas|Health|World

Mexico reports first human case of H5N1 bird flu

Mexico reports first human case of H5N1 bird flu

Crime

Arts|Celebrity|Crime|Entertainment|US

Ex-assistant says filmmaker Paul Schrader sexually assaulted her and backed out of settlement deal

Ex-assistant says filmmaker Paul Schrader sexually assaulted her and backed out of settlement deal
Crime|Political|US

Georgia bill would compensate the wrongfully convicted and let Trump recover costs of election case

Georgia bill would compensate the wrongfully convicted and let Trump recover costs of election case
Celebrity|Crime|Health|US

Jeffrey Epstein accuser ends 'sex slave' lawsuit against prominent psychiatrist

Jeffrey Epstein accuser ends 'sex slave' lawsuit against prominent psychiatrist
Crime|Economy|US

Los Angeles County to settle over 6,800 sex abuse claims for $4 billion

Los Angeles County to settle over 6,800 sex abuse claims for $4 billion

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In