Oklahoma City

Sulphur Pot Farm Busted As Oklahoma Agents Rip Up 1,392 Plants

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Published on February 19, 2026
Sulphur Pot Farm Busted As Oklahoma Agents Rip Up 1,392 PlantsSource: Google Street View

Oklahoma narcotics agents descended on a Sulphur marijuana grow operation on Wednesday, hauling away 1,392 plants and about 214 pounds of processed product from a site they say was not legally allowed to operate. The Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics (OBN) identified the business as Fortune Family Inc. and said it had no state registration or OMMA license. Investigators are still combing through evidence at the scene, and arrests are expected.

According to MyTexasDaily, OBN's Marijuana Enforcement Team (MET) led the raid after securing a search warrant for the property. Homeland Security Investigations, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, the Murray County Sheriff's Office and the Murray County Commissioner's Office all assisted. Officials said the plants and processed marijuana were seized for destruction, and the case remains active.

OBN Crackdown Continues

Wednesday's operation is the latest in a series of MET crackdowns across southern Oklahoma. Earlier this month, agents served a search warrant in Devol and seized 5,304 marijuana plants as part of an investigation into growers suspected of using registrations obtained by fraud, according to reporting from KSWO.

What Officials Said

"Arrests are anticipated as the investigation progresses," OBN said in a press release cited by MyTexasDaily. The agency's statement named Fortune Family Inc. as the target of the search warrant and said the business had neither an OBN registration nor an OMMA license.

Local History And How To Report Tips

OBN has repeatedly gone after what officials describe as "straw ownership" schemes in the region, in which licenses are allegedly used to divert marijuana into the black market. A July 2025 raid in Sulphur resulted in the seizure of more than 21,000 plants and about 800 pounds of processed marijuana. In coverage of that operation, and in OBN guidance, the agency has urged anyone with information about suspected illegal grows to call its tip line at 800-522-8031, as reported by KXII.

With federal and state partners again in the mix, investigators say additional arrests and charges could follow as they review evidence from the Sulphur site. We will continue to track court filings and agency updates as the case moves forward.