An Omaha food plant owner says he followed the rules for hiring
immigrants. It was raided anyway.
[June 12, 2025] By
MARGERY A. BECK
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The owner of an Omaha food packaging company says his
business has been unfairly hamstrung by federal immigration officials,
who raided the plant and arrested more than half its workforce.
The raid took place despite the company meticulously following the
government's own system for verifying the workers were in the country
legally, owner Gary Rohwer said Wednesday.
Glenn Valley Foods now is operating at about 30% of capacity as the
business scrambles to hire more workers, Rohwer said as he stood outside
the plant.
Asked how upsetting the raid was, Rohwer replied, “I was very upset,
ma’am, because we were told to e-verify, and we e-verified all these
years, so I was shocked.”
“We did everything we could possibly do," he said.
E-Verify is an online U.S. Department of Homeland Security system
launched in the late 1990s that allows employers to quickly check if
potential employees can work legally in the U.S., often by using Social
Security numbers.
Some of America’s largest employers use it, including Starbucks and
Walmart, but the vast majority of employers do not. Critics say the
system is fairly easy to cheat, particularly with false documents.
Rohwer noted that federal officials have said his company was a victim
of those using stolen identities or fake IDs to get around the E-Verify
system, which lead agents conducting the raid described as “broken” and
“flawed” to Glenn Valley executives.

But that does nothing to repair the company’s bottom line, Rohwer said.
“I’d like to see the United States government ... come up with a program
that they can communicate to the companies as to how to hire legitimate
help. Period,” he said.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement confirmed that more than 70
people were arrested during the Glenn Valley Foods raid on Tuesday. It
also said one of the workers, described as a Honduras national,
assaulted federal agents as he was being detained.
The Omaha raid comes amid an immigration crackdown under President
Donald Trump. The administration has been intensifying its efforts in
recent weeks, and Trump deployed more than 4,000 National Guard troops
and 700 Marines this week to respond to ongoing protests in Los Angeles
over his immigration policies.
The raid, in the southeastern section of Omaha where nearly a quarter of
residents are foreign born according to the 2020 census, led to hundreds
of people turning out to protest Tuesday evening. But it also had a
chilling effect on the south Omaha community.
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Brila Adauto of Omaha waves a Mexican flag as hundreds gather in
after U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement conducted a raid
earlier in the day in Omaha, Neb. on Tuesday, June 10, 2025. (Nikos
Frazier/Omaha World-Herald via AP)
 The Metropolitan Community College’s
South Omaha campus and an Omaha library branch in the area closed
Tuesday afternoon, and several businesses along south Omaha's
normally bustling 24th Street closed as news of the raid spread.
Several of them remained closed Wednesday, said Douglas County Board
of Commissioners Chairman Roger Garcia, whose district covers south
Omaha.
“Everybody’s still on alert, waiting to see what happens today and
in the coming days,” Garcia said. “So there’s still a lot of anxiety
and fear out there.”
That fear will show up in the form of a weakened economy in Omaha,
he added.
“You know, when products are not being sold, taxes are not being
collected, and people are not able to get their goods as well. So it
affects all of us,” he said.
An aunt of Garcia's wife was among those taken away by ICE during
the Omaha raid, he said. They have been unable to determine where
she is being held.
The raid came on the same day of the inauguration of newly elected
Omaha Mayor John Ewing, a Democrat who unseated three-term
Republican Jean Stothert last month.
During a news conference Wednesday to address the raid, Ewing
declined to speculate on whether the timing of it was intended to
distract from his swearing-in. But he denounced the action by
federal authorities, saying, “My message to the public is that we
are with them.”
Omaha Police Chief Todd Schmaderer also declared that his department
will play no part in checking immigration or the legal status of
residents in the community.
“That is not our mission. Our mission is public safety,” the chief
said. “I need victims to come forward. They will not come forward if
they’re fearful of Omaha Police Department being immigration
officers.”
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