CANNABIS INVESTOR DUE DILIGENCE & SECURED INVESTMENT
Investing in a California cannabis business is not the same as investing in any other private company. Every investor who holds an ownership interest, provides a loan, or is entitled to receive 10% or more of the profits of a licensed cannabis business is a “financial interest holder” under 4 CCR §15004 and must be disclosed to the Department of Cannabis Control. Investors who will hold 20% or more — or who will participate in directing, controlling, or managing the business — become “owners” under 4 CCR §15003 and are subject to background checks and regulatory approval before their investment closes.
The Law Office of Shay Aaron Gilmore provides investor-side legal counsel for individuals, family offices, and structured funds investing in California cannabis businesses — including transaction structuring, investor due diligence, disclosure compliance, and creditor-side representation in secured investments and financial restructurings. Named among the Top 20 California Cannabis Lawyers by the Daily Journal, this firm has represented investors entering California’s cannabis market for the first time as well as secured creditors taking control positions in financially distressed cannabis businesses.
Recognized By

Top 20 California Cannabis Lawyers
The Daily Journal

Global Top 200 Cannabis Lawyer
Cannabis Law Journal
The California Regulatory Framework for Cannabis Investors
California separates cannabis investors into two regulatory tiers under the DCC’s consolidated regulations:
Tier 1 — Financial Interest Holders (4 CCR §15004): Any person with an aggregate ownership interest of less than 20%, any person providing a loan to the cannabis business, or any person entitled to receive 10% or more of the cannabis business’s profits must be disclosed to the DCC. The disclosure obligation applies at initial licensing and at each annual renewal via Form DCC LIC-027. Financial interest holders are not subject to background checks unless the DCC requests additional review.
Tier 2 — Owners (4 CCR §15003): Any person acquiring 20% or more aggregate ownership, or any person who will participate in the direction, control, or management of the licensed business, is an “owner” and must undergo a background check and obtain DCC approval before the investment closes. The DCC’s definition of “participating in direction, control, or management” extends to general partners of partnerships, managing members of LLCs, and officers and directors of corporations — meaning management rights provisions in an investor agreement can inadvertently trigger owner status and background check obligations.
Why NVCA Document Modifications Matter: The NVCA Investors’ Rights Agreement (updated October 2025) provides standard pre-emptive rights, information rights, and registration rights — but does not account for the California cannabis regulatory framework. Provisions giving investors the right to receive detailed financial information or to observe board meetings may constitute “direction, control, or management” in the DCC’s view, triggering owner-level disclosure obligations. The NVCA Voting Agreement (updated October 2025) board composition provisions require careful drafting to avoid inadvertently elevating investors from financial interest holder status to owner status. The NVCA Management Rights Letter (updated July 2020) — used by certain VC funds with ERISA-governed pension investors — similarly requires cannabis-specific review before use.
Secured Investment Structuring
Secured investments in cannabis businesses — where the investor takes a lien or security interest in the licensed operator’s assets — are a common alternative to equity investments, particularly for investors who want downside protection without triggering owner-level regulatory obligations. A secured loan to a cannabis business does not automatically make the lender an “owner” under 4 CCR §15003, but a loan paired with the right to receive 10% or more of profits is a financial interest requiring FIH disclosure under §15004.
Creditor-side representation in a secured cannabis investment covers:
- Negotiation and drafting of promissory notes, security agreements, and pledge agreements
- UCC fixture filing and lien priority analysis
- Review of existing encumbrances on licensed assets
- Drafting of a Management Rights Letter where appropriate (adapted for cannabis regulatory context)
- Regulatory disclosure compliance — DCC FIH disclosure and, where the investment constitutes an ownership change, ownership change notification under §15023
- Restructuring and enforcement protocols — including creditor takeover strategy where the cannabis business is in financial distress, given that federal bankruptcy protection is unavailable to cannabis businesses due to federal Schedule I classification
Federal Bankruptcy Bar: Cannabis businesses cannot file for bankruptcy protection under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code while cannabis remains a Schedule I controlled substance. This means secured creditors cannot rely on the bankruptcy process to enforce their rights — there is no automatic stay, no trustee, and no federal court reorganization. Creditors must instead pursue state court remedies, negotiate creditor takeover agreements, or work cooperatively with state cannabis regulators to effect a change of control of the licensed operator. This is a fundamental structural difference between cannabis and conventional secured lending.
Cannabis vs. Hemp Investor Comparison
| Issue | Cannabis Investment (Licensed) | Hemp Investment (CDFA/Farm Bill) |
|---|---|---|
| Regulatory disclosure | FIH disclosure to DCC required (4 CCR §15004) | No state investor disclosure obligation |
| Owner background check | Required if ≥20% ownership or management role (4 CCR §15003) | Not required |
| Federal bankruptcy protection | Not available — Schedule I bars Bankruptcy Code access | Available — hemp is Farm Bill compliant |
| NVCA document compatibility | NVCA docs require cannabis-specific modifications | NVCA docs usable as-is with standard VC modifications |
| Secured lending complexity | High — state court enforcement only; lien on licensed assets requires DCC coordination | Standard commercial secured lending |
| SAFE note suitability | Cannabis SAFEs require regulatory modification (see SP4) | Standard Y Combinator SAFE broadly suitable |
Representative Matters
Secured Investment in Cannabis Retail Development: Represented a secured creditor investor making a $500,000 secured investment in a company developing cannabis retail stores in California. The client was an entrepreneur from outside California making an investment in a complex multi-location retail development with regulatory approval obligations across multiple jurisdictions.
Investor-Side with Unwinding: Represented the investor in a ~$500,000 investment in a licensed commercial cannabis manufacturer in Santa Cruz (Central Coast region). The firm led all aspects of the investment transaction including due diligence and documentation. Following repeated criminal break-ins against the cannabis operator after closing, the investment was unwound and this firm handled all aspects of the unwinding.
A Santa Barbara County Cannabis Creditor Restructuring: As regulatory counsel for a secured creditor, provided advice on the state commercial licensing aspects of a controlled takeover and financial restructuring of a commercial cannabis cultivation business in Santa Barbara County (Central Coast region). The engagement included advising on how to accomplish a transfer of control over state DCC licenses from prior ownership to the creditor, navigating regulatory uncertainty in the absence of any federal bankruptcy protection.

