South Bay Examiner
  • Local news
  • News
  • Business
  • Education
  • Elections
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Things to Do
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Facebook Twitter Instagram
South Bay Examiner
Button
  • Local news
  • News
  • Business
  • Education
  • Elections
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Things to Do
South Bay Examiner
Home » Long Beach man sentenced to prison for causing co-workers death

Long Beach man sentenced to prison for causing co-workers death

0
By Emilie St. John on June 14, 2023 Crime & Public Safety
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

LOS ANGELES (SBE) – A former first responder who worked at a Long Beach hospital was sentenced today to 352 months in federal prison for selling fentanyl to two of his co-workers who thought they were buying cocaine, one of whom later died of an overdose after ingesting the powerful opioid. 

Cruz Noel Quintero, 43, of Long Beach, was sentenced by United States District Judge Christina A. Snyder, who scheduled a September 6 restitution hearing in this case.

At the conclusion of a six-day trial in September 2022, a jury found Quintero guilty of one count of distributing fentanyl resulting in death, one count of possessing machine guns, two counts of possessing unregistered firearms, one count of maintaining a drug-involved premises, and one count of possessing firearms in furtherance of a drug-trafficking crime.

According to evidence presented at trial, beginning no later than February 2018, Quintero – who was employed as an emergency medical technician at a Long Beach hospital – shipped cocaine, methamphetamine, and other drugs across the country, and he distributed them locally out of a Long Beach residence.

In May 2019, in the parking lot outside the hospital’s emergency room, Quintero sold a white powder he claimed was cocaine for $100 to a hospital coworker who was planning to go on a weekend trip to Las Vegas with her partner, a former nurse at the Long Beach hospital and volunteer firefighter. The following morning, the couple sampled the white powder – not knowing that it in fact was fentanyl – and both of them passed out. One of the victims – identified in court documents as “S.F.” – later was pronounced dead.

Two toxicologists testified that the only drug they found in S.F.’s blood was fentanyl, and two doctors – a medical examiner and a medical toxicologist – testified that the victim died because of fentanyl toxicity.

After learning that Quintero sold the fatal dose, law enforcement searched two residences in Long Beach and discovered Quintero’s illicit drug-trafficking operation. Across both residences, they found 13 firearms that included two machine guns, two short-barreled assault rifles, and nine other guns, some of which were loaded. One of the residences, which Quintero used as his base of operations, was littered with drug-trafficking paraphernalia, including over ten pounds of cutting agents used to dilute the quality of the drugs he sold and a hydraulic press used to manufacture kilogram bricks of cocaine.

According to trial testimony, Quintero also shipped kilogram-quantities of cocaine and pound-quantities of methamphetamine to drug traffickers in Minnesota, which prompted frequent complaints about the poor quality of his product.

Quintero has been in custody since his arrest shortly after the fatal overdose in May 2019.

“Quintero operated a reckless and callous drug trafficking business that repeatedly endangered people’s lives and ultimately killed [the victim],” prosecutors argued in a sentencing memorandum. “For at least a year, [Quintero] shipped kilos of cocaine and pounds of methamphetamine out of state, and sold poor-quality, adulterated drugs to unsuspecting buyers, all while guarding his drug-distribution outpost in Long Beach with machine guns and short-barreled rifles.”

Judge Snyder sentenced Quintero to 292 months in prison for the fentanyl death count, 120 months in prison for the firearms counts, 240 months in federal prison for the maintaining a drug premises count – all of which are to run concurrent to each other. Finally, she sentenced Quintero to 60 months in prison for possessing firearms in furtherance of a drug-trafficking crime, a term which will run consecutive to the other counts.

Photo source: Depositphotos

Share this:

  • Post

Like this:

Like Loading...
fentanyl overdose press release
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

San Francisco County leads the nation in hit-and-runs, study shows 

June 2, 2025

California’s most dangerous time to drive, and how it compares to America’s other biggest states

June 2, 2025

LAPD reports the most police violence, new study reveals 

May 19, 2025

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Arts & Culture

Echo Theater Company announces winners of 2024 New Play Competition

May 17, 2025

Latino Theater Company celebrates 40 yearsof theater and community with ambitious 2025 season

March 1, 2025

Review: ‘Alabaster’

February 25, 2025

PJ Morton, Will Downing to headline Dymally International Jazz & Arts Festival April 26

February 6, 2025
Entertainment

Evolving on My Own Terms: Embracing My Journey as an Artist, Entrepreneur, Innovator, and Creator

February 24, 2025

FireAid Concert On-Demand for a Year, Steve Ballmer will Continue to Match Donations

February 7, 2025

Hasbro Enhances the MONOPOLY Play Experience With Evolution of the Classic Game and New Ways to Play

January 7, 2025

Lil Wayne, Chris Brown and Marshmello Allegedly Misused Pandemic Grants to Pay Themselves or Throw Lavish Parties

December 18, 2024
Real Estate

Developer enters exclusive negotiation agreement with City to bring workforce housing to downtown Inglewood

May 17, 2025

Apartments being converted from office buildings reaches record high

February 18, 2025
Travel

SPIRIT AIRLINES CARRY-ON FEE CLASS ACTION SETTLEMENT: CLAIM SUBMISSION NOW OPEN

November 14, 2023

Auburn University’s The Laurel Hotel & Spa receives coveted AAA Five Diamond Award for 2023

November 10, 2023

Amtrak Pacific Surfliner offering special service to San Diego

July 13, 2023

Things to Do: Bahamas is the perfect destination for your summer vacation!

July 3, 2023
Lifestyle

Starbucks beats McDonald’s as California’s most-searched fast-food chain

June 2, 2025

New data reveals that cigarettes cost $11.71 a pack in California

May 21, 2025

Alliance for Pharmacy Compounding responds to Hims & Hers Super Bowl Ad

February 7, 2025

Pepsi® kicks off iconic Pepsi Challenge with Pepsi Zero Sugar during Super Bowl weekend

February 6, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
© 2025 South Bay Examiner | Site by The Web Lab

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

%d