Californian True Crime: A Killing in Cannabis
"The black market exists only because we decided that this form of trade should be illegal." — Scott Eden
In October 2019, tech executive Tushar Atre was abducted from his oceanfront home in Santa Cruz and found murdered on his own property in the redwoods — shot execution-style, hands bound. He had spent barely three years in the cannabis business. Scott Eden's new book traces how a charismatic Silicon Valley entrepreneur, seeking to "disrupt" the newly legal weed industry, found himself entangled with an array of colorful and dangerous characters — hippie do-gooders, black-market operators, and stone-cold killers. We discuss the permeable divide between legal and illegal cannabis, why the industry has been an economic disaster for most founders, and whether America's half-pregnant approach to legalization created the conditions for Tushar's death. A California story about ambition, love, and the darker edges of the American dream.
About the Guest
Scott Eden is an award-winning investigative journalist whose work has appeared in ESPN The Magazine, GQ, Wired, Inc., and The Atavist. His story "The Prosecution of Thabo Sefolosha" won a 2017 New York Press Club Award and a National Association of Black Journalists award for investigative reporting. He is the author of Touchdown Jesus (Simon & Schuster, 2005) and the new A Killing in Cannabis.
References:
People discussed:
- Tushar Atre — tech executive and cannabis entrepreneur; murdered October 1, 2019
- Rachael Lynch — cannabis grower from the Emerald Triangle; Atre's business partner and lover
- Ken Kesey — author of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest; Merry Pranksters; La Honda cabin in the Santa Cruz Mountains
- Sean Parker — Napster founder, early Facebook investor; bankrolled Proposition 64
- Travis Kalanick — Uber founder; comparison to Atre's brash, edge-seeking style
- Tony Hsieh — Zappos founder; tragic death; Silicon Valley hipster executive archetype
Places:
- Pleasure Point, Santa Cruz — oceanfront neighborhood; famous surf break; Atre's home
- Emerald Triangle — Humboldt, Mendocino, Trinity counties; America's cannabis heartland
Legal and historical:
- Proposition 64 (2016) — California ballot initiative legalizing recreational cannabis
- Proposition 215 (1996) — earlier medical marijuana law; the "215 era"
About Keen On America
Nobody asks more awkward questions than the Anglo-American writer and filmmaker Andrew Keen. In Keen On America, Andrew brings his pointed Transatlantic wit to making sense of the United States—hosting daily interviews about the history and future of this now venerable Republic. With nearly 2,800 episodes since the show launched on TechCrunch in 2010, Keen On America is the most prolific intellectual interview show in the history of podcasting.
Chapters:
- (00:13) - America's war on drugs
- (02:03) - The victim: Tushar Atre
- (05:27) - Prop 64 and the gold rush
- (08:15) - The counterculture connection
- (11:13) - The permeable divide
- (14:43) - Tech bros living on the edge
- (17:10) - Steve Jobs, Burning Man, and weed money
- (18:07) - The murder
- (20:06) - Rachael Lynch
- (22:39) - Economic collapse
- (25:31) - Half-pregnant prohibition
- (31:45) - The paranoia problem
Modern Britain and all that caper: Jonathan Coe on British chocolate, the Royal Family and its decision to marry the wrong Super Power
An Old Story Told Differently: Bethanne Patrick on 8 books reimagining the experience of first generation immigrants
Against the Romance of Transformation: Leon Weiseltier on America's love affair with the promise of personal and social change
Normalizing China: Gilles Guiheux on China's very ordinary history between 1949 and today
Against Green Capitalism: Charles Derber on how big money fuels extinction and what we can do about it
No, Men aren't Angels: Peter Slen on why the Federalist Papers is one of the ten books that has most shaped America
Dumb devices, dumb bureaucrats and dumb entrepreneurs: Keith Teare on FTC chair Lina Khan, FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried and why the iPhone is on the brink of becoming radically more intelligent
Why Disorder may be the New Order: Jason Pack on how the global system itself has gone rogue and no longer conforms with the textbooks
Why Artificial Intelligence will make us smarter: W. Russell Neuman presents AI as a progressive moment in human evolution
An Afterword to Words Themselves? Bethanne Patrick on six speculative novels which imagine a world saturated by AI
Should we punish innovation? Keith Teare on public and private investment markets, breaking up Google and paying to use X
The 10 books that have most shaped America: Peter Slen on Thomas Paine's COMMON SENSE
The White Man's version of Democracy in America? Brook Manville on the "Civic Bargain" that defines the history of democracy in western civilization