We trust our local shops to protect our kids, but some just sold them drugs and beer
Police sent underage decoys into 23 Camarillo shops, catching three stores selling tobacco, alcohol, and illegal gas to minors.
When we send our kids to the corner store, we expect the adults behind the counter to keep them safe. Instead, some local clerks are handing over dangerous substances for a quick buck.
What Happened
On June 4, 2026, police and city inspectors in Camarillo sent underage decoys into 23 local businesses. They wanted to see who would follow the law and who would sell to kids.
Most shops did the right thing. But three well-known spots failed the test.
Inspectors handed out four misdemeanor tickets. One clerk sold a tobacco product, another sold alcohol, and two store owners had illegal laughing gas ready for buyers to inhale.
What the money/evidence shows
- 23: The total number of local stores tested by police during the sting.
- 1: A clerk at Chevron Gas on Carmen Drive sold tobacco to a minor.
- 1: A clerk at CVS on Mission Oaks Boulevard sold alcohol to a minor who even showed real ID.
- 2: Co-owners at West End Smoke and Vape had flavored nitrous oxide ready for people to inhale.
- $500: The starting fine for a worker caught selling tobacco to someone under 21.
The Bigger Question
Why is it so easy for kids to get things that can hurt them? When a giant store chain like CVS fails to stop an alcohol sale—even when the clerk sees proof of age—it shows a system breakdown.
We have to ask if these stores care more about quick sales than the health of our neighborhood kids.
The Other Side
We do not yet have statements from the workers or store owners. In cases like this, defense teams often argue that clerks are busy, distracted, or made an honest mistake during a rushed shift.
The defense arguments appear weak here, as the sales happened directly to police decoys, and CVS clerks reportedly checked the ID first.
What Happens Now
The workers and owners face misdemeanor charges in court. The stores could also lose their licenses to sell tobacco, which would hurt their business.
State agencies will decide on these suspensions soon. Police plan to keep running these surprise checks to keep stores on their toes.
What We Still Don't Know
- How long had these shops been selling banned items to underage buyers before the sting?
- What training do these stores give their workers to prevent underage sales?
- Will the state actually take away the tobacco license for CVS and Chevron, or will they just pay a small fine?
Source Note
This story is based on reports from the Camarillo Police Department. All charges are allegations - those accused are presumed innocent until proven guilty.
Transparency notes
Published: Jun 24, 2026. No major post-publication update has been logged.
Spot an error or missing context? Email hi@kindjoe.com and we will review and correct if needed.
Sources
External source links were not provided in this article body. Our editors reference publicly available materials and update stories as new verified information arrives.
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