Share and Follow
Left inset: Joshua Camps (Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office). Right inset: Tushar Atre (Santa Cruz Sentinel/obituary). Background: Surveillance footage showing Tushar Atre’s killers entering his California home (KSBW/YouTube).
A California jury has reached a verdict in the case of a man charged with the murder of a prominent marijuana and tech entrepreneur. The case involved allegations of a toxic workplace environment where employees were subjected to degrading tasks, such as doing pushups to receive their paychecks.
Joshua Camps, 29, was convicted of first-degree murder, kidnapping, and burglary in the 2019 killing of Santa Cruz tech CEO Tushar Atre. The verdict was announced on Wednesday, as reported by local news source KRON. According to the prosecution, Camps collaborated with three accomplices to murder Atre, following a reported incident where two of the accomplices were humiliated by being forced to perform pushups by Atre.
Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Detective Ethan Rumrill provided testimony during the October 2025 trial of Kaleb Charters, one of the accused. He described how Kaleb Charters and Stephen Lindsay, who worked at Atre’s cannabis farm, were subjected to public humiliation, as reported by KRON.
Sam Borghese, a former employee of Atre, also testified, describing Atre as a demanding employer who “pushed his employees very hard.” During the trial, Charters’ defense attorney, Thomas Brewer, questioned Borghese about whether Atre’s management style instilled fear in employees to enhance their work performance.
“Did Mr. Atre invoke fear in his employees? (So) people would work harder for him?” Charters’ defense attorney, Thomas Brewer, asked Borghese during his trial.
“Yes,” Borghese replied.
Charters, who was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison, recruited Camps and his own brother, Kurtis Charters, to take part in a planned robbery of $1 million at Atre’s home. Things went wrong, though, after Atre managed to escape, according to prosecutors.
“Camps … started stabbing him over, and over, and over,” a prosecutor explained during Kaleb Charters’ trial, while showing jurors photos of an SUV with Atre’s blood smeared all over it. “Kurtis grabbed [Atre] and threw him in this car.”
The men drove Atre to a Santa Cruz cannabis property to finish him off, with Lindsay yelling at him during the drive. “Why are you so mean to people?” Lindsay shouted, according to a confession that police say Camps gave after his arrest.
According to KRON, employees came forward and accused Atre of creating a toxic work environment to the point where staffers often “joked” behind his back about robbing or hurting him before Atre’s murder. They said he yelled at workers repeatedly, withheld and bounced their paychecks, and fired employees if he felt disrespected by them.
Prosecutors said the four men killed the multimillionaire CEO at the very same location where the work abuse unfolded.
“It’s fitting where they chose to take him to,” Santa Cruz County Assistant District Attorney Michael McKinney told jurors during closing arguments of Kaleb Charters’ trial, according to the Los Gatan newspaper, in reference to his marijuana farm.
Kaleb Charters, a former U.S. Army National Guard member, testified during his trial about Atre’s paycheck ultimatum.
“You guys are in the Army. Do 500 pushups,” Kaleb Charters recounted Atre telling him and Lindsay, another former National Guard member, according to KRON.
Kaleb Charters claimed that he and Lindsay — who was also convicted of first-degree murder, along with Kurtis Charters — had lost keys to a farm vehicle nicknamed the “Monster Truck” and Atre was livid. This was just two months before the Santa Cruz-based boss was kidnapped, robbed, stabbed and shot to death, according to prosecutors.
“Tushar was flipping out,” Kaleb Charters testified, noting how he and Lindsay had just planted hundreds of cannabis plants in the Santa Cruz Mountains, allegedly working 10 days straight from dawn until dusk for $200 a day. “He was going to cancel the checks.”
Video of the alleged confession that Camps gave to police after his arrest was played in court during Kaleb Charters’ trial, in which he described how the group allegedly murdered Atre.
“We zip-tied his hands, shoved a sock in his mouth,” Camps said. “I told him no one wants to hurt you, we are just here for your stuff. He kept saying, ‘Who are you guys?’ He didn’t know what was going on. … He was covered in blood. He was saying, ‘Please let me go.’”
Camps allegedly admitted to stabbing Atre in the neck after he tried to escape. He confessed to shooting him with an AR-15 rifle several times in the jaw and the back of the head afterward to put him out of his misery, according to police.
“He wasn’t going to last much longer,” Camps said. “I knew he was going to die.”
Lindsay and Kurtis Charters were both sentenced to life in prison without parole, along with Kaleb Charters. Camps is due to be sentenced on March 19.