Lemoore NHC cannabis dispensary founder Helios Dayspring agrees to plead guilty to bribing San Luis Obispo County supervisor

By The Leader Staff
According to federal prosecutors, Helios Dayspring, the owner of Lemoore's Natural Healing Center, shown here in Lemoore's dispensary, has agreed to plead guilty of bribery in a San Luis Obispo case.
According to federal prosecutors, Helios Dayspring, the owner of Lemoore's Natural Healing Center, shown here in Lemoore's dispensary, has agreed to plead guilty of bribery in a San Luis Obispo case.

Federal prosecutors, on Wednesday, July 28,  filed criminal information charges against a San Luis Obispo man, Helios Raphael Dayspring, charging him with bribery for paying a San Luis Obispo County supervisor approximately $32,000 – most of that in cash – in exchange for the supervisor’s votes and influence on other votes affecting his cannabis business interests.

Dayspring owns or has a controlling interest in Lemoore’s Natural Healing Center (NHC), a cannabis dispensary that opened in downtown Lemoore in July of 2020.

Prosecutors charged Dayspring, a.k.a. “Bobby Dayspring,” 35, in federal court with one count of bribery and one count of subscribing to a false 2018 income tax return that deliberately failed to report millions of dollars in income to the IRS. 

Federal prosecutors also filed a plea agreement in which Dayspring agreed to plead guilty to both felony offenses, pay $3.4 million in restitution to the IRS, and cooperate in the government’s ongoing investigation.

According to the court documents, Dayspring owned, operated, and/or had a controlling interest in multiple farms that grew cannabis in San Luis Obispo County. He also had ownership interests in businesses that sold marijuana to the public, including in Grover Beach and Morro Bay.

The Natural Healing Center and Lemoore’s other cannabis dispensary, Valley Pure, thanks to taxes, have contributed somewhere in the range of $400,000 to the city’s finances since they opened last year.

To further his interests in the farms that grew cannabis in San Luis Obispo County, prosecutors say that Dayspring began paying bribes to San Luis Obispo County Supervisor Adam Hill in the fall of 2016 and continued doing so through November 2019.

In total, Dayspring was accused of paying the late Third District supervisor multiple bribes in cash and money orders totaling $32,000. In exchange, the supervisor voted on matters affecting Dayspring’s farms, including voting multiple times in favor of legislation that permitted Dayspring’s farms to operate before it had obtained final permitting approvals.

Supervisor Hall took his own life in August 2020.

In addition to the allegations of bribing the San Luis Obispo County supervisor, Dayspring admitted in his plea agreement that he and his business associate attempted to bribe the then-mayor of Grover Beach in exchange for two dispensary licenses in that city. The attempted $100,000 bribe took place during a dinner meeting in September 2017. The mayor did not respond to the offer, and Dayspring did not pay the bribe.

Dayspring also admitted that he substantially underreported his personal income on his federal tax returns for the years 2014 through 2018, which resulted in the IRS losing more than $3.4 million in tax revenue. 

Dayspring has agreed to surrender in this case and make his first appearance in United States District Court in Los Angeles on August 25. Once he pleads guilty to the bribery and tax charges, Dayspring will face a statutory maximum penalty of 13 years in federal prison.

The FBI and IRS Criminal Investigation Division investigated this matter, which is part of an ongoing public corruption investigation in San Luis Obispo County.  

Furthermore, any member of the public who has information related to this case is encouraged to send information to the FBI’s email tip line at pctips-losangeles@fbi.gov or to contact the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office at (310) 477-6565.      

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