Cannabis dispensary owner and manager convicted in student's murder - Los Angeles Times
Advertisement

Cannabis dispensary owner and manager convicted in student’s murder

A billboard posted in memory of Juan Carlos Hernandez in Los Angeles in February 2021.
A billboard posted in memory of Juan Carlos Hernandez in February 2021 in Los Angeles a few blocks away from the marijuana dispensary where he worked.
(Gary Coronado/Los Angeles Times)
Share via

A Los Angeles jury convicted a marijuana dispensary owner and manager of murder Monday in the killing of a 21-year-old college student who was an employee inside the shop.

Video recovered by police showed the dispensary’s manager, Ethan Kedar Astaphan, choking employee Juan Carlos Hernandez inside the dispensary on the night of Sept. 22, 2020. Weijia Peng, the dispensary owner, could be seen closing the back door of the shop, then watching as Hernandez’s body went still.

On Monday, a jury in Los Angeles County Superior Court convicted Astaphan and Peng of first-degree murder.

Advertisement

Attorneys for Astaphan and Peng did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A student at El Camino College at the time, Hernandez worked at the dispensary, VIP Collective LA, for six months under the table to help pay for his tuition and cover the cost of potentially transferring to USC. But the 21-year-old disappeared on Sept. 23, 2020, prompting a frantic search by his family that spanned most of Southern California.

Two months after his disappearance, police located his body buried in the Mojave Desert.

When a 21-year-old student went missing, his mother searched for him until LAPD detectives pieced together what happened.

Jurors deliberated for less than three hours Monday, the Los Angeles Daily News reported.

The marijuana dispensary was located in the 8100 block of Western Avenue; Hernandez had worked there for about six months before his murder.

Advertisement

During the trial, prosecutors asserted that Peng and Astaphan suspected that Hernandez was stealing money and marijuana from the dispensary, citing WhatsApp messages between the two defendants.

Then late on Sept. 22, 2020, prosecutors alleged, video showed Astaphan attacking Hernandez and Peng injecting the 21-year-old with a fatal dose of ketamine.

The two then took his body to the desert. They were arrested two months later, after law enforcement recovered deleted surveillance video from the dispensary showing the attack.

Advertisement

A sentencing hearing has been scheduled for April 25, according to court records.

Advertisement