California Prosecutors Charge Fentanyl Suppliers with Murder Amid Crisis
Using a legal strategy borrowed from drunk driving cases, officials aim to combat the deadly drug's impact.
- California prosecutors are increasingly charging fentanyl suppliers with murder, reflecting public outcry over the drug's lethal impact.
- The legal strategy involves using the Watson murder rule, historically applied to drunk driving cases, to prosecute fentanyl-related deaths.
- Critics argue this approach is unconstitutional and a return to failed drug policies of the 1990s, while supporters see it as a necessary response to the fentanyl crisis.
- In Riverside County alone, 34 fentanyl suppliers have been charged with murder, with one conviction already secured.
- San Francisco and other California cities are preparing to investigate fentanyl deaths as homicides, signaling a shift in drug crime prosecution.