By JENNIE TAER
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Hundreds of people who’ve lost their loved ones to illicit fentanyl marched to the White House Saturday to demand action from the Biden administration, asking officials to better warn and educate the public and to stop its flow across the U.S.-Mexico border.
April Babcock, the founder of Lost Voices of Fentanyl, the organization leading the march, lost her son Austen in 2019 to the illicit substance. In order for this to not happen to any other kid, Babcock told the Daily Caller News Foundation that the Biden administration must step in to educate the public and to tackle the sources of the issue: China and the Mexican cartels…