top of page
tokers-guide-find-the-best-weed-in-dc-lo
NEW 1 to 1 photo editing 122024 (17).png
Jason R. Steiner, a Gresham, Oregon man, was found not guilty of double murder charges after fatally shooting two individuals who attempted to rob the La Mota cannabis dispensary where he worked. Steiner claimed he acted out of fear for his safety, returning to the dispensary and firing through a window after initially leaving. Prosecutors argued he made a conscious choice to kill the men, but a Multnomah County jury acquitted him.

Portland Dispensary Employee Found Not Guilty After Deadly Robbery Encounter

Oct 13, 2025

Graham Abbott

Ganjapreneur



A Gresham, Oregon, man facing double murder charges for the fatal shooting
of two would-be cannabis dispensary robbers last October has been found not
guilty, The Oregonian reports.

Jason R. Steiner, who turned himself in to the police several days after
the encounter, was working alone at the La Mota dispensary in North
Portland the evening of October 2, 2024, when three people entered and
brandished guns at him. He told investigators that he got his bag and left
the shop, telling the robbers he was leaving, but that he returned and shot
at them through a walk-up window, killing two of the individuals,
18-year-old King Lawrence and 20-year-old Tahir Burley. The third person,
later identified as 21-year-old Jalen Hudson, escaped on foot.

Surveillance footage shows Steiner leaving the premises, then returning and
firing multiple rounds through the window.

Prosecutors pursuing two counts of first-degree murder argued that Steiner
had made the conscious choice to return and kill the young men, shooting
them while they were unaware, when he could have easily escaped without
further escalation. But Steiner, who said he was worried they would come
after him and acted out of fear for his own safety, was found not guilty by
a Multnomah County jury.

Defense attorney Thalia Sady, who represented Steiner in the case, said,
“The jury made the right decision.”

Multnomah County Chief Deputy District Attorney Todd Jackson said in the
report, “We believe a crime was committed, but we respect the jury’s
decision in the case.”

Recent Reviews

bottom of page