
A Vancouver woman has been ordered to serve 100 months in federal prison after selling counterfeit pills containing fentanyl that investigators linked to the deaths of two brothers in Woodburn in July 2020. Court records say the men were pronounced dead on July 12, 2020, after their mother and first responders tried but were unable to revive them. The sentence, announced in early June, also includes a restitution order.
According to KPTV, court documents state that 34-year-old Alondra Stephanie Trujillo sold the brothers counterfeit pills containing fentanyl the day before they died. The outlet reports that Trujillo was indicted by a federal grand jury in Portland on Oct. 17, 2023, and pleaded guilty on May 13, 2025.
Federal Case and Court Calendar
The U.S. District Court calendar lists the case as USA v. Trujillo, case no. 3:23-cr-00335-MO, and shows a sentencing hearing scheduled in early June, confirming the matter moved through the federal docket. The schedule is publicly posted on the U.S. District Court calendar.
Fentanyl’s Grip on Oregon
The sentencing lands at a time when fentanyl has become a leading driver of overdose deaths in Oregon. A 2025 report from the Oregon Health Authority documents fentanyl’s growing role in fatalities statewide. Federal prosecutors in Portland have also recently announced several fentanyl-related sentences, reflecting an intensified enforcement push by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Oregon.
Sentence Details
Per KPTV, Trujillo was sentenced on June 2 to 100 months in federal prison, ordered to pay $6,349 in restitution, and given three years of probation. The station reports that Trujillo’s guilty plea and supporting court documents formed the backbone of the federal prosecution.
The case highlights the lethal risk of counterfeit pills laced with fentanyl and the federal focus on pursuing those who distribute them. Local public-health officials continue to warn that pills bought outside a pharmacy can be deadly.









