The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Feds: Man sold rapper Mac Miller drugs before overdose death

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LOS ANGELES >> A Los Angeles man was arrested Wednesday on charges that he sold counterfei­t opioid pills to Mac Miller two days before the rapper died of an overdose.

Cameron James Pettit, 23, who lives in the Hollywood Hills, is expected to appear in court later Wednesday, federal prosecutor­s said in a statement.

The 26-year-old Miller was found dead by his assistant at his San Fernando Valley home on Sept. 7, 2018.

A Drug Enforcemen­t Agency affidavit alleges that Miller asked Pettit for oxycodone and other drugs, but on Sept. 5, 2018, Pettit gave Miller counterfei­t oxycodone pills laced with the powerful opioid fentanyl.

An autopsy found that Miller died from an accidental overdose, via a combinatio­n of fentanyl, cocaine and alcohol.

Authoritie­s found drugs they believe were from Pettit in Miller’s home, and evidence that Miller had crushed and sniffed oxycodone provided by Pettit.

Pettit has only been charged with providing the drugs, however, and not with having a direct role in Miller’s death.

After reports of Miller’s death circulated, Pettit sent an Instagram message to a friend saying, “Most likely I will die in jail,” according to the affidavit.

Investigat­ors also obtained text messages between Miller and Pettit before the sale, in which Miller proclaims his love for oxycodone, or “percs” for the brand name Percocet, and also asks for “bars” of Xanax and a “ball” of cocaine.

“When can u get em?” Miller asks, according to a transcript of the exchange contained in court filings.

“Probably in an hour or 2. They are 30 ea,” Pettit replies.

“Any chance I can get 10 of those, 10 bars and a ball?” Miller asks. “Yeah for sure,” Pettit replies. The rapper, a Pittsburgh native whose work brought him wide respect

in the hip-hop community, was in a two-year relationsh­ip with Ariana Grande that ended earlier in 2018.

He is the latest musician whose death has been linked in recent years to a national wave of opioid abuse and overdoses. Prince died in 2016 when he took counterfei­t pills laced with fentanyl that looked like a generic version of the painkiller Vicodin.

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