He Was Building a Weed Empire. Then He Was Executed

February 1, 2026


In California, weed is more than a business, more than merely a recreational intoxicant that was finally turned into a legal industry in 2016. It’s a culture unto itself, a way of life, with its own folklore and folk heroes, as deeply intertwined with California’s local histories as music or surfing or showbiz or tech. I first heard about the murder at the center of A Killing in Cannabis about a year after the alleged perpetrators were arrested. What interested me from the very start was a certain fundamental clash of cultures that the crime seemed to have exposed.

With legalization in California, whole waves of MBA-wielding Silicon Valley players, dollar-signs in their eyes, were moving in on territory that had once been the sole domain of hippie do-gooders and professional outlaws. One kind of viciously efficient profit motive was seeking the destruction of a somewhat different business mode. It turns out that the two cultures share many zones of overlap; both practice their own forms of ruthlessness, for example. And the physical and personal links between weed and tech run very deep indeed. A Killing in Cannabis explores both the conflicts and the unexpected bonds. What appears below is an excerpt from the book’s first chapter. 

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Just after 10:00 a.m. on the first day of October 2019, on a deeply forested tract of private land almost exactly equidistant between the surf breaks of Santa Cruz, California, to the south and the megalopolitan sprawl of Silicon Valley on the plain to the north, a posse of sheriff’s deputies began their approach. Each had a sidearm clasped in both hands. Their movements were cautious, painstaking. They crouched low behind a two-tone bulletproof Ford Interceptor, green and white, the words Santa Cruz County Sheriff decal’d on the doors, which crept forward inch by inch at the slowest pace. The day was otherwise cheerful; sunshine dappled through evergreen boughs. Against the possibility of gunfire, the cops were using the Ford as a shield.