Authorities mistook man with same last name as supplier, but never followed up after their error
A Candler womanโs overdose death three years ago led investigators to a North Carolina dealer peddling illegal drugs through the mail to addicts nationwide.
Rachel Scillitani, 29, died of a fentanyl overdose in her Candler apartment in May 2021. Seven months later, Danny Birch Jr, of Dubuque, Iowa, was dead of drugs from the same supplier suspected in Scillitaniโs death. // Photos provided by the Scillitani and Birch families
But the Buncombe County Sheriffโs Office investigated the wrong man and failed to pursue leads that could have put James Adam Earwood out of business, according to federal court testimony. Seven months later, in December 2021, an Iowa man died from fentanyl and heroin he bought from Earwood, who boasted of his โfirst confirmed killโ as evidence of his drugsโ potency.
Earwood of Rutherfordton had been identified as a likely supplier of the fentanyl that killed Rachel Scillitani, 29, in her Candler apartment in May 2021. But Buncombe sheriffโs detectives interviewed and cleared another man with the same last name, Special Agent Bryce Husak of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service testified at an April federal court hearing.
โIt is your testimony today that they were actually investigating the wrong Adam Earwood?โ a prosecutor asked.
โCorrect,โ Husak responded.
There was no follow-up investigation of the right Earwood or effort to determine his whereabouts around the time Scillitani bought the fentanyl and died, nor were records on a payment app she used to buy drugs subpoenaed, the agent testified.
Members of Moms on a Mission and the Fentanyl Victims Network of North Carolina gather outside the Wilson County Courthouse to show support for families who have lost loved ones to fentanyl overdose.ย Drew C. Wilson | Times
Two organizations for families who have lost children to fentanyl overdose came together in a show of solidarity Tuesday as a defendant charged with death by distribution made a brief appearance in Wilson County Criminal Superior Court.
Members of Wilsonโs Moms on a Mission and the Fentanyl Victims Network of North Carolina sat in the courtroom as defendant Albert Green, 23, of Wilson, appeared with his attorney, Will Farris.
Green is charged with felony death by distribution in the fatal overdose of 17-year-old Jacob Puente Castro, who died Sept. 25.
Green faces additional charges including felony selling and delivering a Schedule II controlled substance, felony possession of a Schedule II controlled substance, felony maintaining a vehicle, dwelling or place for the purpose of controlled substances and felony possession with intent to manufacture, sell, deliver a Schedule II controlled substance.
RALEIGH, N.C. (WNCN) โ Officials said Monday that a North Carolina man was sentenced in a fentanyl operation that continued even after his arrest in a 120 mph car chase with two children that led to a fiery crash.
Daquan Wainwright along with some of the illegal items found in the home he shared with co-defendant London Kebe, deputies say. Onslow County Sheriffโs Office photos
Daquan Wainwright, 26, of Onslow County was eventually busted on drug charges when deputies responded to his home for a domestic dispute, according to the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina.
Even after his eventual arrest, Wainwright ordered others to collect the drug debts owed to him and give the money to his mother, officials said.
Wainwright was first busted in March 2022 and authorities ended his fentanyl trafficking six months later โ thanks to a search of a house in which the woman he lived lied about children being home, officials said.
Fentanyl was found in a pitcher (top left) during a search of Wainwrightโs home, located about 7 miles from the beaches of Onslow County, deputies said. Onslow County Sheriffโs Office photo
Wainwright, with London Kebe, as a co-defendant, was sentenced to 15 years in prison after he pleaded guilty to trafficking fentanyl while armed with firearms, a Monday U.S. Attorneyโs Office news release said.
A 2021 Audi luxury car was seized during his eventual arrest, deputies said.
Officials first began looking into Wainwright after police and deputies received around 15 complaints about him selling drugs in Onslow County, the news release said.
On March 1, 2022, Wainwright โ with two children in his car โ led cops on a 120 mph chase before crashing into a ditch. The car erupted in flames, but no one was injured, officials said.
Some of the 40 pounds of marijuana found in a search of Wainwright and London Kebeโs home, deputies said. Onslow County Sheriffโs Office photo
But from the charred car wreckage deputies found 681 grams of marijuana in the car, officials said.
After that, an investigation into Wainwrightโs criminal activities continued with a sting buy of two ounces of fentanyl from Wainwright, officials said.
But, Wainwrightโs criminal enterprise only came to an end with a lie about children during a domestic dispute on Sept. 29, 2022, the news release said.
After being called about the domestic matter, deputies arrived at the Eider Loop Road home of Kebe and Wainwright. Kebe opened the door, and deputies immediately smelled the odor of marijuana in the house, located south of Jacksonville, officials said.
Deputies tried to take Kebe into custody on an active warrant but she claimed there were children in the home. Authorities searched the house but found no children.
However, officials said they did find:
2+ kilograms of fentanyl
40 pounds of marijuana
drug paraphernalia
a loaded Highpoint handgun
a loaded AR-15 rifle
a stolen 9mm handgun
a rifle with an obliterated serial number
another 9mm loaded handgun
several rounds of ammunition
nearly $15,000 in cash
As deputies were at the house, Wainwright drove by the home several times and was eventually arrested there.
He tried to destroy his phone as he was being handcuffed but officials said they were able to locate pictures and other evidence in the phone of drug trafficking and firearm possession.
โAfter he was in custody, Wainwright continued to direct others to collect debts owed to him for drugs and provide the payment to his mother,โ the news release said.
The Onslow County Sheriffโs Office, Jacksonville Police Department, and the DEA investigated the case and Assistant U.S. Attorney Tyler Lemons prosecuted the case. U.S. District Judge Louise W. Flanagan oversaw the guilty plea agreement.
BEAUFORT COUNTY, N.C. (WNCT) โ Students in Beaufort County Schools were welcomed back this week with help from the sheriffโs office.
Deputies served as School Resource Officers throughout schools in the district. Theyโre replacing a third party police force used for the past three years.
There are 13 deputies, meaning each school in the district gets one. On the first day of school, SROs were seen greeting students at car rider lines, giving them high fives and tying their shoes in the hallways.
Having the local sheriffโs office provide school security has been a work in progress since winter.
โTo be honest, thereโs nothing better than your local sheriffโs department being able to provide school resource officers into our schools each and every day,โ Beaufort County Schools Superintendent Dr. Matthew Cheeseman said. โAnd through that, youโll see them out at our athletic contests, extracurricular activities and so letโs celebrate them as they celebrate and protect our students and staff. Perfect.โ
In order to become a SRO, a 40-hour SRO certification programs has to be completed. During that training, school security is practiced in addition to courses on ethics and leadership.
Each SRO is a sworn police officer and is armed. Theyโll be making sure buildings are secure, alarm systems are working, doors are not propped and students and staff feel safe.
Jerimiah Hargrove, 20, of Selma, is charged with death by distribution and selling a Schedule II controlled substance.
Carrboro police arrested a man Wednesday and charged him in connection with another manโs overdose death.
Jerimiah Hargrove, 20, of Selma, is charged with death by distribution and selling a Schedule II controlled substance.
Carrboro police said Hargrove sold a controlled substance to Serguei Ndinga Momo, who died of an overdose on June 27, 2023, at the age of 21.
Police said the substance was the cause of Momoโs death.
Authorities are holding Hargrove at the Wayne County Jail on an $80,000 bond.
Police urged people to call 911 if someone is overdosing.
North Carolinaโs Good Samaritan Law allows for people to report an overdose โ their own or someone elseโs โ without fear of criminal prosecution.
A high-capacity pill press sits on a washing machine in a Fayetteville home. (Courtesy USDOJ)
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (WNCN) โ What began as a Fayetteville police investigation ended in federal charges, a 27-year prison sentence, and more than six pounds of fentanyl taken out of circulation.
Quavion Maurice Pickett, 30, became the focus of an investigation after a โconfidential informantโ tipped off Fayetteville police in April 2022 to his role involvement in distributing drugs, according to an announcement from U.S. Attorney Michael F. Easley, Jr. on Wednesday.
Pickett, a.k.a. โQ,โ is a resident of Rock Hill, S.C., and has a residence in Fayetteville where police began surveilling after the tip. After observing what appeared to be multiple drug transactions, a search warrant was issued.
While in the home, officers discovered the laundry room was being used as a โsecret fentanyl labโ, the USDOJ release said. The makeshift lab was described as being used as a counterfeit pill-making operation. The fentanyl pills seized were pressed with markings of โA215โ, which was to give the appearance of being 30-milligram doses of oxycodone hydrochloride, Easley said.
Wake County will work with 13 community organizations specializing in naloxone distribution, recovery support, housing services and more to combat the effects of the opioid epidemic. Durham County Sheriff’s Dept.
Lindsey Humphreys has been recovering from opioid addiction for the last five years, she said.
Sheโs known people in Wake County who have died from opioids because they didnโt have access to naloxone, a life-saving drug that reverses the effects of opioid overdose.
โI decided to be part of the solution and just started to distribute this,โ she said. โI have been doing it for the last couple of years in the memory of some of my friends who passed.โ
Humphreys is the executive director of Illuminate NC, an organization that helps distribute naloxone in Wake and Vance counties. Illuminate distributes about 300 naloxone units a month, she said.
GREENSBORO, N.C. โ Pictures of a Greensboro lady who died from a fentanyl overdose are being seen from The Gate City to The Big Apple, due to efforts from her grandmother.
When traveling along Lawndale Dr. Greensboro drivers may notice the face of Ashley Whaby. The shot is only up for a couple of seconds, but that is everything drivers need to get the point.
“She’ll never say yes to the dress. Abby 16 she’ll never graduate high school. Christian left a little boy behind,” said Whaby’s grandmother, Debbie Peeden.
Forever 23, October marks three years since Whaby’s death. Aside from memories, pictures are all that’s left. Wednesday those images are being seen all across the east coast.
“Today in Time Square in New York City Facing Fentanyl is doing a huge event. They’re taking over Time Square. They’ll be pictures and billboards of all the victims across the country who have died from fentanyl poisoning,” Peeden continued, “I’m not going to have her death be in vain, I loved her and raised her like a daughter. She called me Nana, Nana Banana.”
National Fentanyl Prevention and Awareness Day warns people of the drug’s dangers.
“She thought she was getting cocaine, but when we got the toxicology report she had enough fentanyl in her system to kill eight people. She didn’t stand a chance,” said Peeden.
Since Ashley’s death, her grandmother’s mission has changed. She fights to make sure young people have the chance Whaby didn’t.
“Apps like Snapchat make it so simple for a child to go online and get what they think is an adderall or a xanax or a percocet really what they’re going to get is a fentanyl pill that can kill them,” Peeden warned.
Peeden’s advises parents to talk to their kids and know what they are doing online.
“Don’t make the mistake of thinking that it can’t happen to your child because it can, and it does,” exclaimed Peeden.
Pictured are Robby Lemons and Stefanie Duck, holding up a picture of her son Timothy โTJโ Cothron Jr., who died in February 2022 from fentanyl poisoning.
Stefanie Duck will always remember her son, Timothy โTJโ Cothron Jr., as hard working, kind and compassionate.
โHe never met a stranger. He was always willing to help anyone who asked and brought light to everyoneโs world he entered,โ she said.
In February of 2022, about eight months after graduating from South Iredell High School, TJ died from fentanyl poisoning. He was 18.
His mother hopes that by sharing his story she can help prevent other young people from accidentally overdosing.