Farm Watch is a county-wide electronic neighborhood watch initiative reaching hundreds of farms, ranches, nurseries, and supply houses. It informs ranchers about agriculture crime trends and guides them to preserve potential evidence at crime scenes.
The avocadoes were returned to the farm. But it’s not the first time the popular fruit has been stolen from local farms.
“Four guys, three guys in the middle of the night will pull up on the side of the road at 2 o’clock in the morning when everyone is asleep and pick a few hundred pounds and sell it on the cash market for $500, $600 bucks,” Hayden McIntyre, whose family owns Sierra Pacific Farm, told abc7.
Avocado crops bring about $250 million annually to Ventura County. However, California isn’t the only place suffering from avocado thefts.
Mexico’s Attorney General’s Office has begun investigating the theft of 40,000 tonnes of avocados in Michoacan, Mexico. During two separate robberies last month, thieves stole the avocados in highway heists.