

In the end, he amassed an empire he valued at $30 million. Over the past 15 years, Dayspring wrote, he focused all his considerable energy and talent “on building a business that was too big to fail.”

Psychologically seared by his early abandonment, Dayspring wrote, he learned at an early age not to trust anyone whose loyalty couldn’t be bought and paid for. Not a good student, he dropped out of high school in the 10th grade. Dayspring wrote that he learned to fish using a line tethered to a coat hanger, killed birds for food, and learned the value of hard work at an early age. Dayspring described himself as a poor child, the youngest of six kids and child of a single mom who never knew his father. Helios Dayspring, pictured here at a Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors cannabis hearing in 2017.ĭayspring’s supporters - friends, family members, employees, business partners - submitted many testimonials on his behalf, painting him as kind, courageous, and generous when it comes to animals and the less fortunate. But all that would happen only after the bribery scandal had been exposed. Ultimately, the county supervisors would lower the boom on Dayspring’s Santa Barbara operations and county inspectors would levy $35,000 in fines. It was Dayspring who mobilized the residents of his valley into continuous agitation in front of the Santa Barbara County supervisors, demanding relief and action. Residents there had been complaining of Dayspring’s aggressive scofflaw methods - large trucks driving back and forth, night lights and night generators blaring forth, illegal grading, creek degradation, and cultivating in excess of permits - since 2015. County, Dayspring was well-known in northern Santa Barbara County, where he operated several industrial-scale cannabis operations off the steep and winding road that wends through the bucolic paradise of Tepusquet Canyon. While all the offenses for which he was sentenced occurred in S.L.O. In addition, Dayspring was sentenced for underreporting his income to the tune of $9 million to the IRS and shorting the government $3.4 million in tax payments. Sign up for Indy Today to receive fresh news from, in your inbox, every morning.Īccording to court records, Dayspring also confessed to trying to bribe John Shoals, then mayor of Grover Beach, for his support in helping Dayspring secure two dispensary licenses. A few months later, he tried again and succeeded just three days after being sued for sexual misconduct by his administrative assistant. Shortly after federal agents raided Supervisor Hill’s home in March 2020, Hill attempted suicide.

In addition, Hill - who once worked for former New Jersey Senator Bill Bradley - voted to keep new operations that might compete with Dayspring’s from gaining a toehold in San Luis Obispo. Supervisor Adam Hill - a passionate if abrasively outspoken champion of the underdog on the dais - $29,000 in cash and $3,000 in money order payments in exchange for Hill’s vote to keep Dayspring’s operations exempt from a county moratorium on new cultivation permits. Last summer, Dayspring pleaded guilty to one count of bribery and one count of income tax evasion. The toughest option at Birotte’s discretion was 13 years. sentenced Dayspring - a larger-than-life cannabis grower who owned hundreds of acres throughout Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties and ran three dispensaries in San Luis Obispo County - to 22 months, the lowest sentence of the options available to him. But after being sentenced to 22 months behind bars last week by a federal judge for paying $32,000 in bribes to a San Luis Obispo County Supervisor over a period of three years, it would seem Dayspring should have been named instead after Icarus, another character out of Greek mythology, who plummeted to earth after flying too close to the sun. Central Coast cannabis kingpin Helios Raphael Dayspring - better known as “Bobby” - was named after the sun god of Greek mythology.
