Federal prosecutors say a pair of Inland Empire residents helped funnel pills from Southern California into Texas, with a grand jury now tying that alleged pipeline to fatal overdoses hundreds of miles away. The case, built around an April indictment, stretches from Del Rio, Texas, to arrest locations in California as it moves through the federal courts.
Details of the indictment
According to MyTexasDaily, a federal grand jury on April 22, 2026, indicted 30-year-old Bertha Alisia Romo of Colton and 25-year-old Rhemi Raymond Hernandez of Fontana. Prosecutors allege that, starting in February 2023, the two conspired to possess and distribute controlled substances that federal authorities say were linked to deadly overdoses.
The indictment charges Romo and Hernandez with conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute alprazolam (Xanax) resulting in death, conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute oxycodone resulting in death, conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute methamphetamine, and possession of methamphetamine with intent to distribute. Prosecutors say the pair handled roughly 1 kilogram of Xanax, at least 50 grams of oxycodone, and 500 grams or more of methamphetamine.
Both defendants were arrested in California on April 30 and first appeared in the Central District of California before being transferred to the Western District of Texas, according to the outlet. Assistant U.S. Attorney Warsame Galaydh is prosecuting the case, and the Drug Enforcement Administration is leading the investigation, MyTexasDaily reports.
Federal penalties and precedent
When federal prosecutors connect drug distribution to a death, the stakes rise quickly. Those counts can bring decades-long prison terms and, in some cases, life sentences. A Justice Department press release in a separate overdose case notes that distribution-resulting-in-death charges often carry mandatory minimums and can expose defendants to very long terms, depending on the substances involved and the specific charges. Prosecutors have leaned on those counts in other high-profile overdose prosecutions, and The Justice Department has outlined those potential penalties in past filings.
Why it matters locally
Cases like this are part of a broader playbook: charge dealers not just for trafficking, but for the deaths that follow. Prosecutors and public health officials say that strategy is aimed squarely at the supply of counterfeit and diverted pills that has flooded communities in recent years…