When the 16-year-old girl became unconscious, instead of calling 911, Mark Anthony Rodgers Jr. called multiple friends, asking them to bring Narcan to reverse the overdose, according to court documents. One of those friends came with Narcan and administered it, and told Rodgers to call 911 but Rodgers refused and fled, court documents said.
When the 16-year-old girl became unconscious, instead of calling 911, Mark Anthony Rodgers Jr. called multiple friends, asking them to bring Narcan to reverse the overdose, according to court documents. One of those friends came with Narcan and administered it, and told Rodgers to call 911 but Rodgers refused and fled, court documents said.
When the 16-year-old girl became unconscious, instead of calling 911, Mark Anthony Rodgers Jr. called multiple friends, asking them to bring Narcan to reverse the overdose, according to court documents. One of those friends came with Narcan and administered it, and told Rodgers to call 911 but Rodgers refused and fled, court documents said.
When the 16-year-old girl became unconscious, instead of calling 911, Mark Anthony Rodgers Jr. called multiple friends, asking them to bring Narcan to reverse the overdose, according to court documents. One of those friends came with Narcan and administered it, and told Rodgers to call 911 but Rodgers refused and fled, court documents said.
ajohnson@minotdailynews.com
Mark Anthony Rodgers Jr., 32, has been charged with Class AA felony murder in the drug overdose death of a 16-year-old girl at a Minot hotel on Dec. 14, according to Minot police.
Police did not release the name of the girl who died and court records in the case have been sealed but, according to statements made in court by Ward County Assistant State’s Attorney Tiffany Sorgen on Monday, Rodgers allegedly rented the room for the girl. He is also accused of injecting her with the drug himself. Sorgen told Judge Stacy Louser that Rodgers has allegedly been associated with several overdose deaths across North Dakota.