Journal of Alta California

PLIGHT OF THE HONEYBEES

REVEAL/THE CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING

The crime scene was a mess of boxes, some half-assembled, others scattered across patches of dried grass and partially gouged to raw wood. The victims scrambled about looking for food and water. There were thousands of them. Maybe millions.

Detective Isaac Torres watched the action from the air-conditioned safety of his unmarked truck. In five years investigating rural agricultural crime, he’s seen a lot: Stolen construction equipment and copper wire. Hay thieves. Cargo heists.

“You name it, we pretty much cover it, if there’s any type of ag nexus to it,” he said.

But what he was looking at now, in this scrubby field 10 miles southeast of downtown Fresno, was something else entirely.

“What we had here was a chop shop, but of beehives,” Torres said. “You had some beehives that were alive, and you had some hives that were dead. You had hives that were basically cut up: Tops of boxes were over here on this side of the field, and the other parts of the box are on the other side.”

As a member of the Agricultural Crimes Task Force for the Fresno County Sheriff’s Office, Torres knew that bees have become big business in California — that they are an essential ingredient in the state’s yearly almond harvest; that three-quarters of America’s domesticated bees are trucked into the state each winter and rented out. He knew how valuable the insects have become — to farmers, yes, but especially to thieves, who in recent years have grown bolder, greedier.

On this hot

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Journal of Alta California

Journal of Alta California15 min read
‘Look Out or You’ll Be Poisoned’
The attempted murder happened on an ordinary spring day at the Carmel artist colony in 1914. The novelist Alice MacGowan went to get something to eat from the cooler on the back porch of her home overlooking the bay. When she took a bite of leftover
Journal of Alta California16 min read
Imperial Dreamer
The Barbara Worth Country Club is a par-71, 6,500-yard golf course that spreads out on the fringes of Holtville, in California’s Imperial Valley. Like many desert golf courses, it has an apparitional quality: a square of deep green gleams against a s
Journal of Alta California8 min read
The California Gaze
California is both a state of mind and a physical place, its sensibility shaped by geography, conflict, and experience. It was the Left Coast even before the Europeans arrived. This slender edge of the continent was the place human beings came after

Related Books & Audiobooks