‘My boss shot me’
A Chinese immigrant took a job on an Oklahoma pot farm. He barely escaped with his life.
Garrett Yalch October 21, 2024
A Chinese immigrant took a job on an Oklahoma pot farm. He barely escaped with his life.
Garrett Yalch and Clifton Adcock, The Frontier, Sebastian Rotella, ProPublica August 16, 2024
Menacing guards, threats at gunpoint, workers held against their will and never paid — a Chinese immigrant describes the harsh and violent conditions on an illegal pot farm. Three years after he escaped, he still lives in fear.
Garrett Yalch and Clifton Adcock, The Frontier, Sebastian Rotella, Kirsten Berg, ProPublica July 17, 2024
Thousands of Chinese immigrant laborers suffer abuse and exploitation in a U.S. marijuana underworld dominated by Chinese mafias. A human rights advocate says: “They have not escaped the darkness of China.”
Garrett Yalch and Clifton Adcock, The Frontier, Sebastian Rotella, Kirsten Berg, ProPublica March 22, 2024
A year after authorities arrested Qiu He, the Chinese immigrant has yet to be charged with a crime. She and others say anti-Asian bias plays a role in the state’s crackdown on the pot industry: “I don’t feel secure here.”
Garrett Yalch and Clifton Adcock, The Frontier, Sebastian Rotella, Kirsten Berg, ProPublica March 22, 2024
After a mass murder at a marijuana farm, a Chinese diplomat visited an organization that has been the subject of investigations. The meetings reflect an international pattern of contacts between Chinese officials and suspected criminal networks.
Garrett Yalch and Clifton Adcock, The Frontier, Sebastian Rotella, Kirsten Berg, ProPublica March 19, 2024
奥克拉荷马州的一起谋杀案导致四人丧生,同时为外界揭示了美国蓬勃发展的非法大麻生意如何被华人黑帮主宰,并帮助被指与中国威权政府有联系的帮派成为全球有组织犯罪体系中的强者。
Garrett Yalch and Clifton Adcock, The Frontier, Sebastian Rotella, Kirsten Berg, ProPublica March 14, 2024
A quadruple murder in Oklahoma shows how the Chinese underworld has come to dominate the booming illicit trade, fortifying its rise as a global powerhouse with alleged ties to China’s authoritarian regime.
Garrett Yalch August 9, 2023
Oklahoma cannabis fetches higher prices out of state, attracting organized crime. With lax regulation and not enough funding, officials say the state is still catching up on enforcement.
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