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    Justice Unserved

    Months after failed drug raid, Garden of Eden owners still seek answers

    Claire St. Amant
    Sep 27, 2013 | 2:00 pm

    It’s been nearly two months since Arlington police raided a sustainable farm called the Garden of Eden looking for an extensive marijuana enterprise. They didn’t find any weed, but the city still won’t release documents explaining why it erroneously believed the property was a drug empire.

    In a warrant to search the premises, Arlington police cite a host of tips that the 3-and-a-half-acre farm was harvesting marijuana. That intelligence was unreliable, however, and Arlington police aren’t disclosing the reports that led to the warrant and August 2 raid at 7325 Mansfield Cardinal Rd.

    The city claims those documents are privileged and not subject to a Freedom of Information Act request. CultureMap is awaiting a ruling from the Texas Attorney General to obtain those documents.

    “They think I’m a lazy dope-smoking hippie, and they are completely wrong. We will destroy them in court. Everything is on our side.” — Garden of Eden founder Quinn Eaker

    In the meantime, the city did provide 68 pages of correspondence and citations with the Garden of Eden dating back to February 2013. (Inexplicably, the city also handed over an audio recording of a public hearing on code violations at the garden that was titled “Lady VIP: Dare to be rich.”)

    Property owner Shellie Smith vigorously denied many of the minor code violations, saying what she did on her property was none of the city’s business — provided no one was harmed by her actions.

    On August 2, code compliance officers took matters into their own hands, aggressively remedying high weeds and grass, improper outside storage of materials, hazardous wiring, and “the misuse of an extension cord.” Smith was also cited for running a home business without a permit.

    It’s a laundry list of violations to be sure, but it hardly calls for tactical and narcotics detectives to be on scene.

    In the process of hauling away scrap wood, furniture and other items, Garden of Eden founder Quinn Eaker says authorities destroyed 17 blackberry bushes, 15 okra plants, 14 tomatillo plants, and numerous native grasses and sunflowers.

    “The primary inhabitants at the Garden of Eden have spent hundreds of dollars and thousands of hours of attention to the matters brought upon them by the City of Arlington, none of which have been honorable in any way,” Eaker says. “It has been a very heavy burden and has slowed down the progress of community and sustainability growth in many ways.”

    For now, the issue appears to be at a bit of a standstill. Eaker says the city is attempting to recoup around $20,000 in fines, but the garden has no plans to pay up. In fact, Eaker has submitted his own bill to the city in the form of an affidavit of damages.

    “They have no idea what they are getting into,” Eaker says. “They think I’m a lazy dope-smoking hippie, and they are completely wrong. We will destroy them in court. Everything is on our side.”

    Eaker says he’s spent thousands of hours studying the law since the ordeal began, and he’s prepared to defend the rights of himself and his family, who also live on the farm.

    “The issue is that we have been following due process of law since February,” Eaker says. “We have established that they have no jurisdiction. They have no authority to tell us what we can and can’t do with our land.”

    Arlington police say they had reason to believe Garden of Eden was growing marijuana.

    police, Garden of Eden in Arlington
    Garden of Eden Facebook
    Arlington police say they had reason to believe Garden of Eden was growing marijuana.
    unspecified
    news/city-life

    SAFE SPACE

    5 Dallas neighbors dominate 2026 list of safest cities in Texas

    Brandon Watson
    Feb 16, 2026 | 3:43 pm
    Trophy Club police
    Facebook/TrophyClubPublicSafety
    Who wouldn't feel safe in Trophy Club with this guy around?

    A new report says the Dallas suburbs are home to some of the safest cities in Texas. Home security review site SafeWise has ranked Trophy Club, Parker, Melissa, Murphy, and Colleyville on its recent top-10 list of towns unburdened by crime worries.

    Trophy Club bests every other city, topping the charts at No. 1. Parker follows right behind at No. 2, Melissa is No. 4, Murphy ranks No. 7, and Colleyville comes in at No. 9.

    For its 2026 report, SafeWise factored in FBI-reported property and violent crime data for 343 cities, then adjusted it for population to fairly compare metros to rural and suburban towns. (Data for the Texas cities can be found here.)

    Although the rankings do provide a snapshot, the site says “a number of factors, including local agency reporting practices, community resources, prevention efforts, and lived experience all influence how safe a place is (or is perceived to be).”

    North Texas cities have tended to do well in "safe city" surveys in recent years. Arlington and Fort Worth scored top-10 spots on a ranking of America's safest large cities last fall. SmartAsset ranked Frisco and McKinney among the nation's safest suburbs in a 2025 list.
    The Safewise rankings were released with its State of Safety survey, which found that perception didn’t always gel with reality. Although the statewide property crime rate of 23.4 incidents per 1,000 people is slightly higher than the national rate, Texas’ violent crime rate of 4.44 incidents per 1,000 people is consistent with the national average.

    Still, Texans feel less safe than the average American. Only 49 percent of the survey’s respondents say they feel safe in the state compared to the national norm of 52 percent. 55 percent said they worry about their safety on a daily basis, a year-over-year increase from 52 percent. The data contrasts with first-hand reporting. For the second year in a row, Lone Star State participants said they have had few personal experiences with property crime and package theft.

    The Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington metropolitan statistical area had the most ranked cities on the SafeWise list. The full top 10 includes:

    • No. 1 — Trophy Club (Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington)
    • No. 2 — Parker (Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington)
    • No. 3 — Memorial Villages (Houston–The Woodlands–Sugar Land)
    • No. 4 — Melissa (Dallas-Fort Worth)
    • No. 5 — Fair Oaks Ranch (San Antonio-New Braunfels)
    • No. 6 — Whitehouse (Tyler)
    • No. 7 — Murphy (Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington)
    • No. 8 — Fulshear (Houston–The Woodlands–Sugar Land)
    • No. 9 — Colleyville (Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington)
    • No. 10 — Lumberton (Beaumont-Port Arthur)
    safetysuburbscrimerankingstrophy clubdallas suburbs
    news/city-life

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