September 15, 2023 at 5:45 a.m.
Not guilty plea entered in overdose death case
The La Crosse County woman charged in connection with the overdose death of a Rhinelander man in late January has entered a not guilty plea to one count of first-degree reckless homicide-drug delivery.
An attorney for Andrea Jean Walker, 42, of Bangor, entered the plea Monday afternoon during an appearance in Oneida County Circuit Court.
Walker is a free on a combination signature and surety bond in the amount of $10,000.
She is on supervised electronic monitoring until November in connection with a sentence handed down in La Crosse County.
Walker is accused of being “the middleman” in a drug transaction wherein the Rhinelander man purchased heroin and methamphetamine.
According to the criminal complaint, the man was found dead in his Rhinelander home days after the alleged transaction took place in western Wisconsin.
The state crime lab later determined his cause of death was mixed drug toxicity/overdose (fentanyl and methamphetamine).
The criminal complaint details the police investigation that took place after a family member found the man deceased.
“A large pile of white crystalline substance” was located on a dresser and a bed in the room where he was found, and other drug paraphernalia was located elsewhere in the residence, the complaint states.
A family member who had been living with the deceased told police the man had been “acting weird” and “bumping into things” the night before his death. The family member also told police the man had recently traveled to the Tomah area and was acting “very hyper” since he returned.
The complaint also details investigators’ application for and use of search warrants to obtain Facebook and phone records tying Walker to the deceased, including references to a meeting between the two in La Crosse County days before the man was found dead.
In mid-May, Rhinelander officers interviewed Walker while she was being held in the La Crosse County jail, the complaint notes. During the interview, she admitted to being involved in a transaction between the deceased and individuals in La Crosse County in late January.
“I guess it’s my fault if I’m the middleman,” she said, according to the complaint.
A pretrial conference in this case is set for 2 p.m. Nov. 21.
The Class C felony carries a maximum sentence of 40 years in prison upon conviction.
Heather Schaefer may be reached at [email protected].
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