Riverside County District Attorney Mike Hestrin Tuesday joined the father of a college student who died from fentanyl poisoning, along with a federal law enforcement official, in calling on the state Legislature to pass laws that would mandate warnings to drug suppliers that they could face murder charges if what they sell kills someone.
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A man who sold fentanyl pills that killed a 20-year- old college student in Temecula, prompting her father to initiate a nationwide campaign calling for action to break the fentanyl supply chain and bust the dealers, was sentenced Monday to nine years in federal prison.
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A Temecula dad whose 20-year-old daughter died from fentanyl poisoning will begin a roughly 60-mile trek Friday that, over the course of three days, will take him from his home to the federal courthouse in Riverside, where the dealer who sold his child the deadly pills will be sentenced.
