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RALEIGH, N.C. (WNCN) โ Wake County prosecutors allege a Garner woman sold a fatal dose of purple fentanyl โ which began appearing on local streets earlier this year โ in March, according to the Wake County Sheriffโs Office.
Prosecutors said 39-year-old Matthew Godboldโs father called 911 on March 29 after finding his son unresponsive at home.
โThey found the victim, Matthew Godbold, deceased in the living room. He was kneeling on the floor. His upper body was slumped over the couch. He had blue lips and was cold to the touch. Additionally, there was drug paraphernalia nearby the deceased,โ Wake County prosecutors said Tuesday during a court hearing.
Investigators determined Godbold died from overdosing on purple fentanyl. Fentanyl is 50 to 100 times stronger than morphine, according to the NC Department of Health and Human Services. Just two milligrams, the size of a few grains of salt, can be fatal.
Drug dealers dye fentanyl purple and other colors as a way to distinguish themselves, according to Raleigh police and the Wake County Sheriffโs Office. Itโs often laced with other drugs, like tranquilizers, making it even more lethal.
โItโs just a coloring agent thatโs added to regular fentanyl for marketing purposes, for drug dealers to make their product look better. However, the most common thing that weโre seeing are the small blue fentanyl pills,โ said Lt. David Bradford with Wake County Sheriffโs Office.
Prosecutors believe Godboldโs fatal dose came from Lauren Olsen, who has a long history of drug charges. She appeared in court Tuesday to face charges of aggravated death by distribution and selling a Schedule II controlled substance.
โThe death by distribution charge here is an aggravated charge that is due to the defendantโs previous conviction for attempted trafficking of opioids,โ prosecutors said.
Court records show Olsen was convicted of that attempted trafficking charge in 2017. Prosecutors also said Olsen has a history of failing to appear for court dates.









