Baltimore, MD – Feb. 9, 2025 "It seems like no one cares until they've lost someone they love," April Babcock told WMAR-2 News.

Babcock lost her son Austen to fentanyl poisoning when he was 25. But today, she fights for the livinng.

"If we were losing 22 students a week from anything else, there would be like public service announcements, it would be on the news every day," she said, pointing to 2022 research that found an average of 22 high school-aged teens were being killed by fentanyl every week.

The Dundalk mother founded a nonprofit called "Lost Voices of Fentanyl" to raise awareness about the dangers of the man-made drug.... Read More: WMAR2NEWS