
Two masked men with guns entered bedrooms in Newport Beach, California, just after midnight on October 2, 2012. Within minutes, they had taped mouths, blindfolded eyes, and zip-tied the hands and ankles of two residents: Michael, owner of a medical marijuana dispensary, and his female companion, referred to as Barnes. Both were forced into a white van and driven into the remote Mojave Desert.
The kidnappers' demand was brutal and immediate: $1 million in cash. Michael negotiated, offering $100,000 instead. But his attempt to minimize the ransom would not spare him from what came next.
In a gully deep in the desert, Michael became the target of systematic torture. He was beaten, shocked repeatedly with a stun gun, and burned with a blowtorch. One of his captors stood on his chest. A black zip tie was placed around the base of his penis, which was then cut off. Bleach was poured over his open wounds, leaving seared footprints across his body. His muffled grunts of pain echoed in the desert silence.
Barnes, by contrast, was not tortured. Her captors threw a knife near her, apparently expecting—or hoping—that she would use it to cut herself loose.
The break in the case came when Sergeant Steve Williams, a senior deputy with the Kern County Sheriff's Office, heard Barnes crying for help in the desert. She led officers to Michael, who, despite catastrophic injuries, had survived.
Three men were identified as responsible for the kidnapping and torture. Hossein Nayeri emerged as the mastermind, described as a figure with ties to California's medical marijuana industry. Kyle Handley was named as his co-conspirator. A third man, Ryan Kevorkian, became known as the "elusive third man" in the case—a figure who would evade capture for years, fueling a cat-and-mouse investigation that would eventually inspire an entire podcast series.
The pursuit of these men would stretch across a decade. The case took an even more dramatic turn when Nayeri and two others escaped from prison, commandeering a taxi driven at gunpoint by its driver before fleeing through Los Angeles.
When the cases finally reached trial, juries saw crime scene photographs of Barnes zip-tied and covered in desert dust, and Michael's devastating injuries. Both victims testified. The evidence was overwhelming.


