San Diego Union-Tribune

DAD PLANS TREK TO RAISE AWARENESS OF FENTANYL

Matt Capelouto’s daughter Alexandra killed by drug; dealer to be sentenced

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A Temecula man whose 20-yearold daughter died from fentanyl poisoning will begin a roughly 60-mile trek today that, over the course of three days, takes him from his home to the federal courthouse in Riverside, where the dealer who sold his child the deadly pills will be sentenced.

Today, Matt Capelouto will initiate his “Walk for Justice” in memory of Alexandra Capelouto, who died in December 2019 after she consumed what she believed to be oxycodone capsules but were actually tablets containing fentanyl.

Brandon Michael McDowell, 24, pleaded guilty in August to possession with intent to distribute fentanyl for causing Alexandra’s death. McDowell, who is facing a maximum of 20 years in federal prison, is slated for sentencing on Monday.

“Since that fateful night three years ago, Matt has been on the front lines of a fight to hold drug dealers criminally responsibl­e for knowingly causing the deaths of thousands of Americans by disguising lethal doses of fentanyl as common prescripti­on and recreation­al drugs, and then selling those counterfei­ts to unsuspecti­ng victims for profit,” according to DrugInduce­dHomicide.org, which Capelouto founded. “Matt will attend the sentencing hearing by walking nearly 60 miles to raise funds and promote awareness of this nonprofit organizati­on.”

The trek will be inaugurate­d at Morgan Hill Park in Temecula this morning. It will cover 20 miles the first day, with an overnight stay in Menifee, from which Capelouto, his friends and supporters will depart Saturday morning at Fairfield Inn & Suites, traveling another 20 miles to the Hampton Inn on Van Buren Boulevard in Riverside. On Sunday, the group will leave the hotel and make the final leg of the journey, ending at the Mission Inn Hotel & Spa in downtown Riverside, less than a half-mile from U.S. District Court on 14th Street.

McDowell’s sentencing is set for 2 p.m. Monday.

“On the night of Dec. 22, 2019, Alexandra asked the defendant if he could sell her Percocet pills, a prescripti­on painkiller,” according to the plea agreement. “The defendant agreed and sold her what turned out to be approximat­ely 11 counterfei­t Oxycodone pills that he later described as ‘M30s.’ The defendant knew it was illegal for him to sell the pills and that they contained fentanyl.”

The narrative states that Alexandra Capelouto “ingested half of one of the pills” just prior to turning in for bed.

“The fentanyl entered her system, poisoning her body and causing her death,” according to the prosecutio­n.

Prosecutor­s said Capelouto was a student at Arizona State University

and had returned home for the holidays, during which time she contacted the defendant via Snapchat.

Matt Capelouto said his daughter did not realize she was ingesting fentanyl-laced pills.

“My daughter didn’t want to die,” he said during a news briefing in January 2022. “She took one pill, and it was not a wise choice. Everybody in the supply chain needs to be held accountabl­e. The drug dealers, the cartels in Mexico, right back to China. This war is not fought with bullets. They’re poisoning us from within.”

Figures published by the CDC and other agencies show that fentanyl is now the leading cause of death for Americans between the ages of 18 and 45 years old.

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