Public Service Announcements (PSAs) highlight public safety issues that affect the community at large, by providing relevant and important information on how to keep our families safe and healthy.
The Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office presents A Message to the Peddlers of Poison, created and produced by our office, in partnership with the Folsom Police Department, and featuring cinematography by Storyline Media Group.
This fast-paced PSA offers a behind-the-scenes look at enforcement efforts made possible through the dedication and professionalism of the Folsom Police Department, whose work allowed us to document key moments from the Folsom Blues operations.
The piece reflects the impact of three coordinated operations this year, resulting in approximately:
• 70,000 counterfeit fentanyl pills seized
• 14 fentanyl-related homicide cases filed
• Significant seizures of methamphetamine and other narcotics
Participating Agencies (Folsom Blues Operations):
Folsom Police Department Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office West Sacramento Police Department Sacramento Police Department Placer County District Attorney’s Office Placer County Sheriff’s Office Yolo County Sheriff’s Office Yuba County Sheriff’s Department Drug Enforcement Administration – DEA Department of Homeland Security U.S. Postal Inspection Service Citrus Heights PD Elk Grove Police Department Rancho Cordova PDCalifornia Highway Patrol CACorrections Sacramento County Probation Department City of Roseville, California Police Department
As part of our ongoing commitment to public safety, this message makes clear that those who profit from poison will be held accountable.
Our office is proud to present Invisible No More, a short film co-produced by the Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office and Storyline Media Group, in partnership with the Wilton Rancheria and the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office.
This five-minute piece highlights the creation of the MMIP Task Force and the work already underway to address the crisis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous People (MMIP), while emphasizing the continued collaboration and accountability needed to move this work forward.
As Wilton Rancheria Chairman Jesus G. Tarango, Jr. reminds us, “This is a human issue — not just my people’s issue. But it’s my people who suffer.” That truth underscores why this work matters and why it continues.