AGs in both Carolinas target Chinese app linked to international fentanyl trade

Read the original article on the SC Daily Gazette website.

The Chinese messaging app WeChat has more than a billion users globally

Attorney General Alan Wilson speaks at a news conference on Monday, May 12, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C., about an effort to hold WeChat, a Chinese messaging app, accountable for its role in the fentanyl trade. Heโ€™s accompanied by North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson and Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Lt. Robert Sprague. (Photo courtesy of Attorney General Alan Wilsonโ€™s Office)

Attorneys general from six states, including both Carolinas, say theyโ€™re demanding accountability from WeChat, a Chinese messaging and payment platform being used by fentanyl traffickers.

The bipartisan group is giving WeChat, whatโ€™s become known as a super app, a month to detail what steps itโ€™s taking, if any, to combat its use as a money launderer for the international drug trade.

โ€œWe need answers; we need them now,โ€ Republican Alan Wilson, South Carolinaโ€™s attorney general since 2011, said at a news conference Monday in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Standing beside him was North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson, a Democrat.

Continue reading “AGs in both Carolinas target Chinese app linked to international fentanyl trade”

Chinese app sits at the center of fentanyl epidemic, NC attorney general says

Read the original article on the Charlotte Observer website.

North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson speaks to the crowd following a press briefing on President Trumpโ€™s executive orders on Friday, January 31, 2025 at the State Capitol in Raleigh, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

At the center of the fentanyl crisis sits a Chinese messaging app, six attorneys general said in a letter to the encrypted platform Monday.

WeChat could face criminal charges for allowing dealers and money launderers to seamlessly funnel billions between Mexican cartels, Chinese money laundering organizations and U.S. dealers, said North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson in Charlotte Monday.

Jackson and five other attorneys general in a published letter are demanding the company by June 11 describe โ€œwhat steps, if any, WeChat has taken in response to (evidence) of WeChat being used to facilitate money laundering by fentanyl traffickers.โ€

Jackson posted the letter on his officeโ€™s website following the Charlotte news conference Monday. It also was signed by attorneys general from as far away as Colorado to as close as South Carolina.

The China-based app used by billions of people in China and nearly 20 million in the United States could face criminal charges under North Carolinaโ€™s new anti-money laundering law, public nuisance law or federal law, Jackson said.

Read the rest of the article on the Charlotte Observer website.

RCSO charges woman with death by distribution in overdose death

Read the original article on the Richmond Observer website.

ROCKINGHAM โ€” Investigators have charged a woman in a late 2024 overdose death.

Sarah Alexis McCumbee, 27, was arrested late Thursday on charges of death by distribution and selling or delivering a Schedule II controlled substance.

McCumbee is accused of delivering an unspecified quantity of fentanyl to Sean McDonald on or around Nov. 14, 2024. The ingestion of the fentanyl, according to the arrest warrant, โ€œproximately causedโ€ McDonaldโ€™s death.

The warrant, taken out by the Richmond County Sheriffโ€™s Office, was issued April 21 and McCumbee was arrested April 24.

She is being held without bond in the Richmond County Jail and is scheduled to appear in court  May 8.

North Carolinaโ€™s death by distribution law was signed into law in 2019, with support from both of the countyโ€™s legislative representatives in the General Assembly at the time.

The RCSO charged Regina Collins with death by distribution in January of 2020. State records show Collins was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in August of that year and she served seven months in prison. Her parole ended Feb. 14, 2022.

In 2022, the Hamlet Police Department issued a BOLO for a suspect in a death by distribution case. However, police told the RO on Friday that the charge was dismissed by the district attorneyโ€™s office based on further investigation.

Earlier this week, a woman in Greensboro was convicted of death by distribution and other drug charges from a 2022 case.

All defendants facing criminal charges are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

Gloucester man sentenced over 8 years for fentanyl distribution in girlfriend’s death

Read the original article on the WCTI News12 website.

After a four-day trial in Carteret County Superior Court, District Attorney Scott Thomas and Carteret County Sheriff Asa Buck announced that Hugh Crandall Willis, Jr. of Gloucester, was convicted by a jury for his role in the death of his girlfriend, Bethany JoAlison Styron, 25 of Davis.

Willis was convicted of the following:

  • Death by Distribution of Fentanyl
  • Sale and Delivery of Fentanyl
  • Felonious Possession of Fentanyl

Willis was sentenced to an active sentence of 78-106 months in the North Carolina Department of Adult Correction, followed by a 6-8 month suspended sentence for 36 months of supervised probation, according to officials.

The following is a release from the State of North Carolina General Court of Justice, Prosecutorial District Four:

During the early evening hours of July 30, 2022, Styron, who was with a friend at the time, pulled into a gas station at the corner of Highway 101 and Steel Tank Road in Carteret County.

After more than an hour sitting at the pump, Styron stopped breathing. Her friend called 911 and EMS pronounced Styron dead. Her cause of death was later confirmed to be from acute Fentanyl toxicity. After a thorough investigation into Styronโ€™s death, Detectives uncovered that late in the day on July 28, 2022, Willis came to the Styron residence and delivered a quantity of Fentanyl to Styron and her friend that was with her during the time when she overdosed. The pair mixed the drugs purchased from Willis into a bag of drugs they had purchased earlier in Kinston. Styron purchased those narcotics on the way home from a weeklong medical inpatient stay at UNCChapel Hill hospital where she was treated for pneumonia, cardiac problems and complications of Hyper IGE Syndrome. Styron used and overdosed on the last amounts of the drugs in that mixture.

In October of 2022, Detectives reached a point in their investigation to charge Willis with the Sale and Distribution of Fentanyl and received an arrest warrant for that charge. When Deputies arrived at Willisโ€™ home to serve him with that warrant and arrest him, Willis was found in possession of more of what was confirmed by the state lab as Fentanyl.

The case was prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney David L. Spence, the lead detective in the case was Joseph (Cory) Bishop of the Carteret County Sheriffโ€™s Office. The State presented 14 witnesses and 37 exhibits of evidence. The Defendant did not present any evidence. Resident Superior Court Judge Augustus Willis presided over the trial.

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