Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Sunday, May 10, 2026

George Retes woke up on July 10, 2025, hoping the day would change his life for the better. Retes, an Army veteran, worked as a security contractor for a legal cannabis farm in Ventura County, California. After seven months on the graveyard shift, working from midnight to 8 a.m., Retes was eager to move to a daytime schedule and spend more waking hours with his family.

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... "I do everything for my kids," says the 25-year-old father. "That's what it's all for." When he finally got the new schedule, he saw it as a perfect opportunity.

Things seemed normal that Thursday as he drove along the back roads to work his first day shift. But as Retes pulled up to the entrance to his workplace, he saw pandemonium: cars everywhere blocking the road, cars without drivers, drivers zigzagging around other cars. Along with other federal agencies, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) was out in force, and so were people protesting.

President Donald Trump had started to roll out his mass deportation campaign in early 2025. By June, workplace raids were happening across Southern California as agents tried to reach a goal of 3,000 arrests a day, inciting widespread panic and disorder. After protests erupted in Los Angeles, Trump sent in roughly 4,000 National Guard members to quell the turmoil.

But without a call from work warning him not to come in, Retes pressed on. "I still got to go to work like normal," he says. "I need to get paid. I still need to keep a roof over my kids' heads." ...

Making his way through parked cars and protesters, Retes eventually reached a line of agents blocking him in the middle of the road. Still hoping to make it in on time, he pulled up and asked to pass. "I was a good distance away, and I put my car in park," he says. "I got out, stood by my car."

The agents started yelling, Retes says. "Get the fuck out of here!" "Leave!" "Get back in your car!" "Pull over to the side!" "You're not going to work." "Work is closed." Retes asked for a badge number that he could give to his boss when he didn't show up on time. But that made the agents madder.

Roughly three out of four ICE detainees have no criminal record, according to a November 2025 Cato Institute report, and are otherwise law-abiding undocumented immigrants -- but some of the people arrested are, like Retes, U.S. citizens.

"Literally the first words out of my mouth was that I was a U.S. citizen, that I'm just trying to get work ... and they just didn't care," Retes says. "They were immediately hostile from the get-go."

Rather than escalate any further, Retes got back into his car to follow the agents' directions and leave. But the agents unexpectedly moved forward, surrounded the car, and started banging on its windows and pulling on its door handles, telling him to get out. Another agent yelled at him to reverse, and another told him to pull over to the side of the road. "They're all yelling contradictory things when all I was already trying to do was leave like they were asking me to do," says Retes. "Like, what am I supposed to do?" ...

[emphasis mine]


#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-05-10 04:34 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1


... After seven months on the graveyard shift, working from midnight to 8 a.m., Retes was eager to move to a daytime schedule and spend more waking hours with his family. ...

Pres Trump says he is deporting only the most violent and criminal undocumented immigrants.

More from the article ...

... Retes isn't sure how long he was held down before someone zip-tied his hands. Agents picked him up and walked him to the farm where he works. Officers began asking who would be responsible for Retes. "The entire time they were walking me back, they were passing me off to other agents, asking, 'Who's going to take responsibility for what happened to him?'" he says.

Confused as to what had just happened and why, Retes waited for an opportunity to prove he was a citizen. "I mean, I didn't do anything wrong," he says. "I just figured they were going to finish doing whatever they were doing and they were going to let me go." Retes sat zip-tied in the dirt for four hours. "The entire time I was sitting there, they only asked for my ID once," he says. He told them it was in his car"the one with the disabled veterans license plate. "I don't know if they ever went to go check my ID."

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) had been adamant that its immigration raids were focused on the "worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens."

So it was reasonable for Retes, who was perhaps racially profiled by officers, to think he'd be free to leave after proving his citizenship. ...




#2 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-05-10 06:10 PM | Reply

"Retes sat zip-tied in the dirt for four hours."

This is what I voted for.
--Boaz

#3 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-05-10 06:11 PM | Reply

@#3 ... Retes sat zip-tied in the dirt for four hours. "The entire time I was sitting there, they only asked for my ID once," he says. He told them it was in his car -- the one with the disabled veterans license plate. "I don't know if they ever went to go check my ID."...

"He told them [his ID] was in his car -- the one with the disabled Veterans license plate"

!!!



#4 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-05-10 08:30 PM | Reply

FALSE CLAIM: George Retes was wrongly arrested and held by ICE.

THE FACTS: As U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and ICE agents were executing criminal search warrants on July 10 at the marijuana sites in Camarillo, CA, George Retes"a U.S. citizen"became violent and refused to comply with law enforcement. He challenged agents and blocked their route by refusing to move his vehicle out of the road. CBP arrested Retes for assault.

www.dhs.gov

He rolled up on that immigration raid and decided to interfere. And the "San Fransisco Chronicle" Just happened to print his op-ed.

#5 | Posted by lfthndthrds at 2026-05-11 07:53 PM | Reply

VENTURA COUNTY, Calif. (KEYT) " The Department of Homeland Security is now accusing George Retes, a U.S. citizen taken into custody during federal raids at two marijuana grow locations on July 10 of this year, of assaulting federal agents after he shared his experience of being detained for three days before being released without any charges publicly.

The government's claim was made via a social media post on Sep. 17, more than two months after the 25-year-old U.S. Army veteran's detention, but just one day after he penned an op-ed for the San Francisco Chronicle.
...
Where and when that assault charge was filed was not provided in the Sep. 17 statement, never shared with Retes during his three-day detention, and has not been filed by any law enforcement agency in any jurisdiction
keyt.com

^
Republicans thinks it's good policy to not charge people with a crime when it allegedly occurred, but rather wait until they speak out against the administration, and then publicly threaten to make an example of them.

The intimidation is obvious, and it's how Republicans intend to govern. It's what LftHndThrds and Boaz and BillJohnson voted for:

"We are in the process of the second American Revolution, which will remain bloodless if the left allows it to be."
--Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts

#6 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-05-11 08:22 PM | Reply

FALSE CLAIM:
THE FACTS:

FACTS not even responsive to the CLAIM. Refusal to comply isn't assault. Challenging agents isn't a crime. Facts are a word salad.

The fact that no assault charges were filed, on the other hand, tends to substantiate the claim.

#7 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-05-11 08:29 PM | Reply

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