Jonathan Ibarra, Hector Fernando Garcia and Anna Baker were charged with fentanyl possession with intent to distribute.
Fentanyl is a Schedule II controlled substance and is 50 times stronger than heroin. A lethal dose can be 3 milligrams or less, depending on the tolerance of the user.
"The opioid crisis the country is facing right now makes this indictment all the more important," said San Diego DEA Special Agent in Charge William R. Sherman, announcing the indictments on Monday.Last November, the defendants discussed having Baker smuggle the drugs over three consecutive days, according to court documents.
"44.14 kilograms (100 pounds) of fentanyl represents more than 44 million fraudulent pills on the street which could be fatal for users. These dealers are trafficking in death and the DEA will continue to hunt them down."
Based on that information, authorities pulled over a rental vehicle Baker was driving. Agents seized about 33 pounds of fentanyl. Roughly 66 pounds of the drug were then found in her home when agents served a search warrant, the US attorney's office said.
Fentanyl is a key ingredient in the lollipops given to terminally ill patients for "breakthrough pain" because it is fast-acting and has short-term effects, according to Courthouse News.
Mexican drug cartels produce the drug in labs using precursor chemicals from China, authorities said.
Drug traffickers use the pure fentanyl powder to increase the potency of heroin or to manufacture counterfeit opioid painkillers that resemble oxycodone.
Due to fentanyl's extreme potency, deaths from fentanyl-laced heroin and counterfeit pills have become an epidemic in the United States.
The defendants were arraigned Monday before a US magistrate in San Diego, California.
Reader Comments
I don't believe that the only way this drug is made available is, "Mexican drug cartels produce the drug in labs using precursor chemicals from China..." Yet you would get that impression reading this article.