Law enforcement officers gathered June 10, 2025, outside the Glenn Valley Foods plant in Omaha, where federal officials executed the largest immigration enforcement operation in Nebraska since 2018. “We’ve done everything we’re supposed to do as a company,” Glenn Valley Foods President Chad Hartmann said at the time.
Abiola Kosoko, Flatwater Free Press
People who were detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers during the June 10, 2025, enforcement operation at the Glenn Valley Foods plant in Omaha were initially taken by bus to the Department of Homeland Security’s Enforcement and Removal Operations office near Eppley Airfield for processing.
In the hours after federal immigration officers descended on Glenn Valley Foods, company officials and elected leaders made one point clear: Glenn Valley had worked to avoid the exact situation it found itself in.
Law enforcement officers gathered June 10, 2025, outside the Glenn Valley Foods plant in Omaha, where federal officials executed the largest immigration enforcement operation in Nebraska since 2018. “We’ve done everything we’re supposed to do as a company,” Glenn Valley Foods President Chad Hartmann said at the time.
People who were detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers during the June 10, 2025, enforcement operation at the Glenn Valley Foods plant in Omaha were initially taken by bus to the Department of Homeland Security’s Enforcement and Removal Operations office near Eppley Airfield for processing.