Fentanyl dealer gets 6 years for death of SoCal teen. Parents say it’s not enough

Fentanyl dealer gets 6 years for death of SoCal teen. Parents say it’s not enough

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2025-03-12/fentanyl-dealer-gets-6-years-for-death-of-socal-teen-parents-say-its-not-enough

By Clara Harter

Staff WriterFollow

March 12, 2025 3 AM PT

Daisy Markley found her child’s limp body slumped over at the end of their bed. One pill was all it took to kill Jax Markley, a transgender teen from Santa Clarita who overdosed on fentanyl just months after graduating from high school.

“I’ll never forget the sound of my wife’s scream calling me upstairs,” Matt Markley said, recalling his child’s death in November 2022. “I dropped everything and came running. It was my worst nightmare.”

It’s a nightmare the Markleys wake up to every morning. But on Monday, the grieving parents received some measure of relief when U.S. District Judge Stephen V. Wilson sentenced the drug dealer responsible for Jax’s death to six years in prison.

The sentence triggered fiercely mixed emotions for the couple.

On one hand, they were grateful to be among the few parents who have lost a loved one to fentanyl and been able to see the dealer put behind bars.

On the other, they were furious that Wilson sliced the government’s recommended 12-year sentence in half. The shorter sentence caught the parents off guard after the dealer’s own attorney recommended 10 years, but Wilson said less time was reasonable because the defendant was a low-level dealer with a tough upbringing and a history of addiction.

“We are absolutely disappointed,” Daisy said. “We were expecting more, but I know that there are so many other parents that did not get justice.”

Justice was “minimally served” for Jax, said Matt, who stormed out of the court, suspending the room in silence as the door slammed behind him.

A man and a woman stand together with solemn expressions.

“It was almost more of a disservice because we failed to send a message to other dealers,” he said later that day.

The successful prosecution of a drug dealer for an overdose death is relatively rare, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Lt. Bobby Dean said.

But it has become more common in Los Angeles since the Sheriff’s Department launched its Opioid Overdose Response Task Force in 2022 and began investigating these deaths with the same rigor as a homicide investigation.

“Historically, for many departments, overdose deaths were just treated as accidental; it’s sad, but it is what it is,” said Dean, who heads the task force and assisted with Jax’s case. “We take a different approach where we try to identify the person who furnished the lethal dose and hold them accountable.”

The goal is to get justice for families and disrupt narcotics networks by securing lengthy prison sentences that serve as a deterrent to other dealers, he said. His team currently has about 35 cases in various stages of criminal prosecution.

Jax’s dealer, Skylar Lynn Mitchell, admitted to knowingly selling the counterfeit fentanyl-laced Percocet pill that killed Jax in 2022. At the time, Jax was 18 and Mitchell was 23.

According to court documents, Mitchell began selling drugs to the Santa Clarita teen when they were 16. She also admitted to witnessing a friend overdose and almost die from fentanyl before selling the fatal pill.

In July, she entered a plea deal for one count of possession with intent to distribute fentanyl.

The prosecutor, U.S. Atty. Kedar Bhatia, recommended a 12-year sentence, saying that her “craven crime” prioritized profit over life.

A close-up of a necklace with a red and black ladybug charm.

“A lengthy term of imprisonment is critical to sending a message of general deterrence: Those who sell fentanyl will face meaningful punishment,” he wrote in his sentencing recommendation.

But Wilson saw the situation differently, citing a series of factors about Mitchell’s traumatic upbringing in the foster-care system, history of addiction and “believable remorse” as justification for a shorter sentence.

“The defendant was a low-level dealer selling drugs to supply her own addiction,” Wilson said. “If the victim had not tragically overdosed and died, we probably wouldn’t be here.”

Mitchell said she takes “full responsibility” for her crime and called her time in custody “a blessing” that helped her become sober and set her on a better path in life.

“Not a day goes by where I don’t think about what happened,” she said in court. “If I could give my life to bring the victim’s back, I would do it in a heartbeat.” Her six-year sentence will be followed by three years of supervised release.

Wilson questioned why a low-level fentanyl dealer should serve a 12-year sentence when there are many high-level dealers, who are likely responsible for a greater number of deaths, whom the U.S. attorney’s office does not pursue.

Dean told The Times that the Sheriff’s Department does not care whether the dealer is considered high level or low level, and investigates any case that results in death.

“If you furnish a lethal dose, I don’t care if it’s one pill or 1 million pills, we will absolutely put together a case, present that to prosecution and put you in prison,” he said.

He views the sentence against Mitchell as a victory, and said his team had seen evidence that sentences against dealers, even small ones, spread fear through regional drug-dealing networks.

A culture shift around the handling of overdose deaths also appears to be underway in the L.A. County district attorney’s office, where new Dist. Atty. Nathan Hochman has vowed to prosecute fentanyl dealers more aggressively than his predecessor, George Gascón. During his campaign, Hochman advocated for charging fentanyl dealers with voluntary manslaughter or murder if someone dies as a result of the drugs they are selling.

Matt said the Sheriff’s Department presented Jax’s case to the U.S. attorney’s office after learning that Gascón’s office probably would pursue only a charge of involuntary manslaughter, which carries a two- to four-year sentence.

Matt said he was grateful for the “heroic efforts” of the Sheriff’s Department, without which there would have been no hope of justice for Jax. Most of the other people in their support group of parents who lost loved ones to fentanyl have to live with the knowledge that their child’s killer is still out there, he said.

Someone holds a poster board with four photos of a young person.

Among those parents is Amber Royer of Hemet, whose son Richard died — just like Jax — from a fentanyl-laced fake Percocet pill in 2020. He was 18 years old.

“The police department didn’t do an investigation, they did not seize his phone, they didn’t look into see where the product came from,” she said. “There was nothing, and I feel that the system failed my son.”

Sam Chapman, whose 16-year-old son, Sammy Berman Chapman, overdosed in 2021, said there were no charges filed against the dealer who brought the fentanyl-laced pill to their Santa Monica home “like delivering a pizza.” Now, Chapman and his wife must grapple with the fact that “Sammy’s killer still walks the streets of Los Angeles” while their son will never walk again.

Jax, Sammy and Richard purchased the pills that killed them on social media, as is often the case in teen overdose deaths.

Sixty-four families who lost loved ones to fentanyl are suing Snap Inc., arguing that the Santa Monica company is responsible for drug sales to teens that are facilitated through its app Snapchat.

Los Angeles, CA - May 29: Jaime Puerta opens a box of Naloxone in his home office where he stores hundreds of doses of the opioid overdose medicine he gives away. His son Daniel died in 2020 after ingesting a pill he thought was oxycodone, was actually laced with fentanyl. Photographed on Wednesday, May 29, 2024 in Los Angeles, CA. (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

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In court, Daisy said Jax’s death serves as a warning that “children can be taken advantage of, that social media is not safe, and that experimenting with drugs, even once, can be deadly.”

She described Jax as a “magical, unique and colorful” human being who was empathetic, deeply emotional and generous to a fault.

In their early teens, Jax told their parents that the gender assigned to them at birth didn’t feel right. Daisy and Matt supported Jax embracing a nonbinary gender identity but said the outside world was not as accepting.

Jax struggled to find their place in the world as a transgender teenager, suffering from anxiety and depression that was exacerbated during the isolation of the pandemic. Jax’s parents knew they were struggling but did not realize the extent of their drug use and continue to battle feelings of guilt on a daily basis.

“The thought that I am a failure as a mother, as a physician and as a human is never far away,” said Daisy, who works as a family doctor. “I know that I will mourn Jax until my last dying breath.”

Jax was adored by animals and was “a butterfly magnet,” said Daisy, who carries around a small plush butterfly with Jax’s ashes. Whenever she sees the polka-dotted insect flying by, she knows it’s Jax’s way of saying hi.

A woman holds a stuffed animal with a small tube or container.

Clara Harter

Clara Harter is a breaking news reporter at the Los Angeles Times. Previously, she covered politics and education for the L.A. Daily News. She majored in political science and Middle Eastern studies at Columbia University.

Woman sentenced to 6 years in fentanyl death

A six-year prison sentence was handed down after an emotional sentencing hearing Monday in which a Santa Clarita Valley family gave victim-impact statements about a loved one who died from a fentanyl overdose. 

Skyler Mitchell, 26, who’s been in federal custody since her November 2022 arrest on drug charges, was given a sentence well below the prosecutor’s recommendation.

She pleaded guilty to selling 18-year-old Jax Markley five “Percs,” a street name for the fentanyl-laced pills, despite having previously acknowledged witnessing a fentanyl overdose, according to the prosecution’s sentencing report. 

However, federal prosecutors sought less than the maximum for Mitchell, citing “important mitigating circumstances” that included a “particularly devastating childhood.” 

Judge Stephen V. Wilson was asked to consider the statements of profound loss shared by the Markley family weighed against Mitchell’s history of experiencing physical, sexual and emotional abuse while she was in and out of protective custody as a child, introduced to drug use at age 12 by her mother’s boyfriend and a drug addiction so severe she was briefly in a coma after her arrest. 

The maximum sentence was 20 years, and the federal probation report called for a 13-year sentence. Mitchell agreed not to seek a sentence of less than 10 years as part of her plea agreement. 

“A sentence of 144 months’ imprisonment accounts for the mitigating circumstances in this case and is sufficient, but not greater than necessary, to achieve the purposes set forth in (federal law),” wrote Joseph T. McNally, acting United States attorney, in a March 4 sentencing report from the prosecution, who also was asking for 10 years of supervised release.  

Victim statements  

Wilson received statements from both Matt and Gabrielle Markley, Jax’s father and older sister respectively, ahead of Mitchell’s sentencing. 

Gabrielle Markley wrote that she felt a host of what federal officials refer to as “normal reactions to a traumatic event” in a questionnaire about her loss. 

Anger, anxiety, fear, grief, guilt, numbness, repeated memory of crime, sleep loss, nightmares, appetite change, unsafe, chronic fatigue, trouble concentrating, easily startled, forgetfulness, depression and uncontrolled crying were all checked off on impacts that Gabrielle Markley said she was feeling due to her loss. 

“We were nine years apart in age, and in a lot of ways I felt like their third parent,” she wrote on her victim impact statement, adding she knew Jax wasn’t “a perfect person,” she wrote, “but our family was always centered around making sure Jax was cared for and loved. Having that center ripped away has destroyed my family, and I will never get it back.” 

Matt Markley wrote about how Jax Markley was self-medicating, unbeknownst to the family, in part to deal with what he described as “debilitating depression and anxiety,” due in part to Jax’s challenging journey as a transgender binary teenager. 

“The fentanyl that took Jax’s life was disguised as legitimate medication that, for whatever reason, Jax had been convinced to believe might help with their condition,” Matt Markley wrote. 

Jax was barely 16 when Mitchell first sold narcotics to Jax after they met online, he added Monday.  

Matt Markley, who also became involved in advocacy around fentanyl concerns after Jax’s death, asked for a lengthier sentence.  

“The callous disregard of anyone who knowingly and willingly places another person in mortal danger for personal profit can simply not be trusted in the community,” Matt Markley wrote in his statement. “One who targets minors as the defendant did, simply cannot be allowed to walk among us in any community.” 

Sentencing factors 

The “defendant’s crime was craven and reflected her valuing her own personal profit and drug use over the health, well-being, and the life of victim (Jax Markley),” McNally wrote in his recommendation. “A lengthy term of imprisonment is critical to sending a message of general deterrence: Those who sell fentanyl will face meaningful punishment.” 

The case was investigated by the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department’s Overdose Response Task Force, an investigation that was started locally by Sgt. Jason Viger, a former narcotics investigator who was later promoted to the Homicide Bureau, before dying in a fatal car crash last year. 

The task force brought the case federal because, at the time, the L.A. County District Attorney’s Office was not seeking murder charges for overdose-related drug deaths, according to officials at the time.  

One of the first cases they took on was a pair of overdose deaths in Santa Clarita within about 10 days of each other: Cameron Kouleyan and Alyssa Dies. 

In May, Judge John Walter sentenced Dominick Alvarado to 15 years in prison for his role in both deaths, going above the prosecution’s request and the terms of Alvarado’s plea deal. 

However, in this case, the U.S. Attorney’s Office also noted a number of different circumstances. 

The severity of addiction for Mitchell was noted in the court documents for her sentencing, and prosecutors stated they did not believe she had profited significantly from her drug trade.  

Federal prosecutors wrote Mitchell was living with her mother at the time of her arrest and selling narcotics to support a 7-gram-per-day drug habit, which would normally be a lethal amount

Mitchell’s physical health was so compromised from her drug use that she ended up going into seizures and then a coma when her sobriety was forced in custody, according to a counselor who evaluated her. 

However, in court documents, Mitchell acknowledged the experience was her “rock bottom,” a term addicts often use to describe an event that represents a turning point. 

Mitchell grew up in a household in which both parents battled addiction, according to the sentencing report from an interview with a social worker. From the ages of 2 to 14, her custody was referred to social services at least 16 times, per the report. 

In 2020, she became addicted to Percocet as the result of a car crash that left her injured, and her drug problem spiraled out of control from that point, according to the statement from her attorney. Within three years, she was smoking and snorting fentanyl daily. 

Reactions 

Lt. Robert Dean of the Overdose Response Task Force declined to comment on Mitchell’s sentence Monday, but he said he was proud of the task force’s work and the resulting conviction, which came from months and months of work. 

“We’re happy with the conviction, with the process,” he said in a phone conversation Monday. “We’re happy that we were able to take Jax Markley’s case up, and detectives did a phenomenal job investigating it. We were able to identify the suspect who ultimately pled out in this case and was convicted.” 

Matt Markley said he was extremely appreciative of the work of the LASD Overdose Response Task Force, and also that they stood by him in court Monday. It was a stark contrast to his disappointment with Wilson and the U.S. Attorney’s Office, which he felt had “blindsided” him at sentencing. 

“All accounts were that the baseline we were looking at was 10 to 12 years,” he said, referring to Mitchell’s potential sentence.  

“We had agreed to a plea deal with the defense at a minimum of 10 years, they signed off on it,” Markley said in a phone interview after the hearing. “Nowhere did anybody mention that it could come out to be less right. And this is a problem.” 

Matt Markley wants to continue to be an advocate regarding fentanyl, the dangers it poses and how the drug is discussed. He also thought there should be legislation, or at least stiffer consequences for dealing in counterfeit pharmaceuticals, which is how Jax Markley and so many others are killed each year from fentanyl

“We had a strong case for second-degree murder, but for political reasons, (former District Attorney) George Gascén wanted to reduce it to involuntary manslaughter,” Matt Markley said, sharing part of what got him involved in advocacy in the first place.  

“We thought we were doing the right thing, by us, by Jax and by other victims, to take this to the AUSA. I thought we had everything we needed to go after a charge that would have resulted in a mandatory minimum of 20 years. We thought it was well understood that, in spite of the evidence being very strong, we were willing to compromise somewhat with the defense.”  

Perry Smith