Lodi News-Sentinel

Mystery among the vines: Why is the FBI probing some of Napa Valley’s fanciest wineries?

- Jessica Garrison

ST. HELENA — Highway 29 winds along the floor of the Napa Valley through Yountville and St. Helena and up into Calistoga, passing by vineyards that produce some of the most celebrated and expensive wines in the world.

The road, lined with rows of grapevines planted along sun-dappled hills, is justly famous for its stunning beauty — and the stunning number of Michelin-rated restaurant­s, spas and boutique inns that have popped up among the vineyards.

And lately, for locals anyway, it is also the source of a pressing mystery: Why have so many of the fancy wineries along this road — and their rich and powerful owners — been named in federal subpoenas that were served late last year on Napa County?

“Please provide any and all documents relating to the following individual­s, entities, and/or projects,” one subpoena says, before unspooling a roster that reads more like a high-end tourist brochure than what is normally found in a court docket.

Among the glittering names whose county records are being sought are Hall Wines, known for its bold Cabernets and luxe St. Helena winery with a towering statue of a silver rabbit. Kathryn Hall, a former U.S. ambassador to Austria, is also named, as is her husband, Craig Hall, a former part-owner of the Dallas Cowboys whose art collection is so revered that portions went on loan to the Jeu de Paume arts center in Paris.

Caymus Vineyards, whose Cabernet is a frequent favorite of Wine Spectator, and owner Charles J. “Chuck” Wagner are listed in the records request, as are Wagner’s son, Charlie Wagner, and his vineyard, Mer Soleil.

The inventory of luminaries rolls on: Robin Baggett, a former general counsel for the Golden State Warriors, and his Alpha Omega Winery. Dave Phinney, whose “Prisoner” label changed the industry. Grant Long Jr. and his wineries Aonair and Reverie II. Jayson Woodbridge and Hundred Acre. Darioush Khaledi and his namesake winery. And on it goes — 40 people and businesses in total, including Napa’s exclusive Meritage Resort and Spa.

The subpoena seeking records on the wineries and their owners, dated Dec. 14, 2023, is filed under the name of Patrick Robbins, first assistant U.S. attorney for the Northern District of California. It also references an FBI agent, Katherine Ferrato, who has experience working on complex financial crimes.

Separately, a trial attorney working in the Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division filed a subpoena, dated Dec. 7, requesting records pertaining to the Upper Valley Waste Management Agency, a joint powers authority that manages trash and recycling services for Calistoga, St. Helena and Yountville. A third subpoena seeks records on the Napa County Airport, which local officials are seeking to modernize. A fourth was served on the county’s farm bureau, which in recent years has become a powerful political voice on behalf of wineries.

If Napa County officials have any idea what’s going on, they aren’t saying. “Napa County is not being investigat­ed,” county spokespers­on Holly Dawson said. “We were issued a subpoena for records. We know nothing more.”

The U.S. attorney’s office in San Francisco declined to comment, as did the FBI’s San Francisco office.

Some of those named in the probe did not respond to interview requests. Some who did respond said they are stumped.

Craig and Kathryn Hall released a statement through their director of public relations: “We are aware that there is an ongoing investigat­ion. However, we do not know the scope or the details and it would be inappropri­ate for us to speculate,” the couple said.

Baggett, of Alpha Omega, said his operations had “nothing pending” before the county and therefore “zero” documents that would have been turned over. He said it has been “a big waste of time daily explaining that we have done nothing wrong.”

Baggett dismissed the probe as a “fishing expedition” or worse, adding: “I hope it’s not a political witch hunt.”

Like several people interviewe­d, Baggett speculated that one person of interest could be Napa County Supervisor Alfredo Pedroza, who has generated ire among local environmen­tal activists because he is perceived as pro-agricultur­e, which in Napa Valley almost always means pro-winery.

Some of the entities whose records were subpoenaed have donated to

Pedroza’s political campaigns. A small number were involved in a controvers­ial land deal involving Pedroza’s family that is adjacent to property the Halls sought to develop in Napa Valley’s eastern hills.

For years, Craig and Kathryn Hall had sought to construct a 208-acre vineyard on Walt Ranch, 2,300 acres of oak woodland they owned in Napa’s Atlas Peak appellatio­n, prized for its elevation and rich volcanic soil. The property was undevelope­d when the Halls bought it in 2005, but zoned for agricultur­e. Their efforts to clear space for a vineyard drew fierce opposition from environmen­tal groups that said it would endanger oak trees and animal habitat, deplete limited water supplies and boost fire risk.

After years of regulatory and legal wrangling, the developmen­t was tentativel­y approved by the Board of Supervisor­s in late 2021. Pedroza voted in favor of the project.

His vote set off a new controvers­y when a local activist, documentar­y filmmaker Beth Nelsen, discovered that Pedroza’s father-in-law had bought property adjacent to the proposed vineyard. The San Francisco Chronicle followed with reports that Pedroza and his wife helped secure a loan for the purchase, using his Napa home as collateral. Critics said the Walt Ranch developmen­t would no doubt raise property values in the area — including the property Pedroza’s father-in-law had purchased — and that Pedroza should have publicly disclosed his involvemen­t as a conflict of interest.

Pedroza denied he had a financial interest in the property, but recused himself from subsequent votes on Walt Ranch.

In late 2022, the Halls gave up on the idea of developing the vineyard, and worked out a deal to preserve the land through the county land trust.

The FBI searched Pedroza’s home in December, according to the Napa Valley Register. He opted not to run for another term on the Board of Supervisor­s and will end his tenure later this year.

Pedroza did not respond to calls and emails seeking comment from The Times. Earlier this month, he sent an emailed statement to the Santa Rosa Press Democrat: “I believe everyone should cooperate fully with all branches of federal and state government and I have always encouraged citizens in Napa and all Napa public authoritie­s to do so. There is no reason to do otherwise.”

Adding to the intrigue — and the grief — a key figure in Napa County, Ryan Klobas, died in an apparent suicide in January, weeks after the Department of Justice served a subpoena on the Napa County Farm Bureau, which Klobas headed. Klobas joined the farm bureau in 2017 as policy director and was named chief executive in 2018. Under his leadership, the bureau doubled its membership and formed a political action committee to work on behalf of the bureau that raised funds to successful­ly defeat a county initiative that would have limited the growth of wineries.

The bureau’s interim CEO, Tawny Tesconi, confirmed the bureau had received a subpoena but declined any additional comment.

As the mystery swirls, one thing is clear: The federal probe comes amid a bitter divide among longtime vintners and residents over Napa Valley’s future. Should the valley keep adding vineyards? Or has the proliferat­ion of wineries and tourists and traffic reached a tipping point that threatens to erode its natural environmen­t and rural charm — no matter how pretty the rows of grapes in the slanting afternoon light?

“Our entire economy depends on the success of our agricultur­e, and our wine and hospitalit­y,” said former Yountville Mayor John Dunbar, a supporter of the wine industry. But the fight over land use has grown “toxic,” he said. “People are being attacked because they are for or against a winery permit.”

 ?? JAY L. CLENDENIN/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS ?? A welcome sign greets visitors along St. Helena Highway, outside Napa, California, in the storied Napa Valley on Thursday, Feb. 4, 2021.
JAY L. CLENDENIN/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS A welcome sign greets visitors along St. Helena Highway, outside Napa, California, in the storied Napa Valley on Thursday, Feb. 4, 2021.

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