Los Angeles Times

Sentence for drug dealer in rapper’s death

- By Hyeyoon Alyssa Choi

A man who pleaded guilty to distributi­ng narcotics that led to the death of rapper Mac Miller was sentenced to 17 years in prison Monday.

Stephen Andrew Walter, who is about 50, had agreed to a plea agreement last year to serve 17 years. But U.S. District Judge Otis D. Wright II rejected it and added to the sentence, saying that Walter continued to distribute dangerous substances even after Miller’s death.

In the plea agreement Walter struck with federal prosecutor­s last October, Walter pleaded guilty to one charge of distributi­on of fentanyl, reducing the charge from distributi­on of fentanyl resulting in death.

During the sentencing hearing Monday, Walter apologized to Miller’s family. He claimed he was not aware that the narcotics he provided resulted in Miller’s death until the time of his arrest in September 2019, according to Rolling Stone.

A distributi­on charge carries a maximum sentence of 20 years. Prosecutor­s had recommende­d a sentence of 17 years to the judge in May when they submitted a memorandum asking him to consider Walter’s age, health issues and long battle with addiction.

Walter was indicted in 2019 along with Ryan Reavis and Cameron Pettit for distributi­ng Schedule II controlled substances, specifical­ly fentanyl, which resulted in the death of the rapper, who was born Malcolm McCormick.

In April, Reavis was sentenced to nearly 11 years in prison for distributi­ng fentanyl. Pettit is still awaiting trial after prosecutor­s recommende­d last October to postpone it.

According to the indictment, Walter provided pills containing fentanyl to Reavis and Pettit for distributi­on. Pettit sold cocaine, Xanax and 10 “blues” — counterfei­t oxycodone pills laced with fentanyl — to McCormick in 2018.

The Los Angeles County coroner’s office ruled that a fatal mixture of fentanyl, cocaine and alcohol led to McCormick’s death on Sept. 7, 2018.

 ?? Scott Roth Invision/Associated Press ?? RAPPER Mac Miller died in 2018 from a mixture of fentanyl, cocaine and alcohol, the coroner ruled.
Scott Roth Invision/Associated Press RAPPER Mac Miller died in 2018 from a mixture of fentanyl, cocaine and alcohol, the coroner ruled.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States