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From YouTube: Kankakee County Criminal Justice Meeting 3/11/2020
Description
Kankakee County Criminal Justice Meeting 3/11/2020 7:30 AM
A
B
B
C
C
Anyway,
we'll
figure
out
how
to
get
we'll
get
the
February
report
in
next
month
with
March
on
that
one.
It's
collection
season
right
now,
with
tax
season
and
everyone's
bringing
in
their
money
by
the
boatloads
someone
brought
their
they
paid
for
a
ticket
and
quarters
or
something
the
other
day.
So
we
had,
you
know
100
or
200
dollars
worth
of
quarters
to
to
load
up,
so
that
was
kind
of
fun.
C
So
then
for
the
Harrison
Harris
collection,
we're
kind
of
still
right
in
where
we
were
last
year
were
a
couple
thousand
dollars
behind
but,
like
I
said,
March
is
going
to
be
big.
We
people
come
in
and
they
pay
their
money.
The
local
debt
recovery
program
is
still
working
for
us
through
the
cap
troller.
C
So
for
those
of
you
that
are
new
to
this
committee,
we,
the
courts,
decide
what
cases
are
they
just
if
if
people
don't
show
up
or
if
they
have
money
that
they
still
owe
it
gets
referred
to
the
state's
attorney
for
collection.
Then
our
office
loads
up
electronic
files
and
sends
it
to
our
outside
collection
agency,
which
is
Harris
and
Harris.
They
then
start
working.
The
collections,
but
then
in
January
we
upload
a
an
electronic
file
that
they've
gone
through
and
they've
decided,
which
ones
they
want
to
send
off
to
the
cap.
C
Troller
then
I
send
that
off
to
the
kapt
roller
and
then
there
they
have
the
ability
to
go
after
their
state
taxes
or
if
they've
won,
lotto
winnings,
they
can
collect
from
those
or
if
they
are
a
state
employee,
then
their
way
just
can
be
garnished
to
help
pay
some
of
their
fees
and
assessments
that
they
owe
it's
a
busy
program.
We
have.
We
have
a
lot
of
calls.
A
lot
of
people
coming
in
people
are
happy
to
get
the
you
know
the
numbers
off
they're
off
their
record
and
get
moving
on
their
payments.
C
B
C
Then
computerization
and
we're
still
working
on
the
mapping
and
for
the
e-file
it's
a
very
long
and
arduous
process.
I've
been
on
different
conference
calls
with
Tyler
technologies
court
view
the
administrative
office
of
Illinois
courts,
they're
kind
of
keeping
everybody
in
line
and
kind
of
keeping
everybody
honest
so
that
we
can
keep
moving
forward.
The
I
have
one
employee
that
is
doing
the
mapping
and
working
with
both
companies,
so
they're
testing
files
when
they
send
them
back
and
forth,
and
they
find
the
errors
and
they're
remapping
and
trying
to
figure
that
out
so
we're.
B
C
B
D
B
D
Other
thing
you
hear
a
lot
of
talk
recently
in
the
news
about
eliminating
cash
bail,
about
people
being
in
jail
held
in
custody
pending
trial.
That
shouldn't
be
just
the
other
day.
Trent
Bukowski
sent
me
a
list
of
every
inmate,
every
local
inmate,
that's
in
custody,
with
their
charges,
as
well
as
what
their
bond
amounts
are
and
I
went
through
that
list
and
I
can
tell
you
out
of
close
to
300
people
you're,
looking
at
probably
three
or
four
who
are
in
there
for
a
legitimate,
nonviolent
offense
right.
D
Everyone
else
is
in
there
for
violent
crimes
are
so
in
heroin
in
the
community
gun
offenses,
the
AG
domestic
battery
strangulation,
child
molestation,
failure
to
report
as
a
sex
offender
I
mean
think
people
that
deserve
to
be
in
custody
and
the
ones
that
you
look
at
those
four
or
five.
They
have
six
pending
felonies.
They
may
all
be
retail
thefts,
but
they
have
six
of
them
and
they
were
released
on
a
recognizance
bond,
which
is
basically
where
you
just
sign
yourself
out,
and
then
they
didn't
appear
at
the
next
court
date.
D
So
then
the
issue
a
warrant
and
they
get
them
in
custody
and
then
that
warrant
gets
quashed
or
they
find
out
on
that
and
they
don't
appear
at
the
next
court
date.
So
then
they
get
back
into
custody,
so
the
bonds
are
naturally
going
to
be
higher
for
them
because
they
continue
to
not
appear
when
they
don't
appear
the
county.
The
taxpayers
have
to
invest
resources
and
locating
them
processing
them
again.
D
So
I
don't
think
that
that
is
anywhere
near
the
situation.
What
you're
hearing
in
the
press
that
is
not
what's
happening
in
Kankakee
County
and
just
in
the
last
year,
or
so
about
a
year
and
a
half.
Now
when
Illinois
passed
its
bail
reform
where
they
split
the
offenses,
we've
talked
about
it
before
category
a
offenses
where
a
bond
is
presumed
in
category
B,
where
they're
presumed
to
be
released
on
a
recognizance.
D
That
means
that
the
more
violent
crimes
more
serious,
offenses
they're
going
to
get
a
bond
under
that
Reform
Act,
but
the
less
serious
offenses
that
presumed
not
to
they're
released
pending
trial.
That's
a
pretty
I
think
it's
worked.
Okay,
I!
Wasn't
a
fan
of
it
in
the
beginning,
I
was
afraid
that
there
were
some
offenses
that
maybe
should
have
been
A's
that
are
that
ended
up
in
the
B
category.
The
legislature
did
correct
that
a
little
bit
but
I
say
that
to
say
it
is
really
hard
to
get
someone
held
pending
trial.
D
It's
a
really
difficult
thing
these
days
because
of
that
bail
Reform.
So
this
idea
that
we
might
go
even
further
and
allow
some
of
the
people
that
are
currently
in
custody
back
out
on
the
streets.
It
that's
concerning
to
me.
I,
don't
have
I
just
got
the
list
yesterday,
so
I
went
through
I
looked
at
every
single
one
of
those
cases.
I'm
gonna
put
a
better
report
for
you
together
next
month,
so
you
can
see
just
who
what
offenders
are
in
our
jail?
What
are
they
charged
with?
D
B
B
E
Thinking
don't
think
mr.
row
for
that,
but
help
me
segue
to
make
it
a
full
25,
as
opposed
to
there
being
a
gap
which
I
will
always
appreciate
to
some
degree
good
morning,
everybody
just
a
kind
of
bootstrap
or
or
dovetail
with
what
mr.
row
was
talking
about.
The
judges
have
been
following
to
let
the
bail,
Reform,
Act
I
believe
they've
been
applying
the
bonds
correctly.
E
I
left
my
phone
I,
have
it
on
my
phone,
but
on
the
top
15
people
I
think
only
three
of
them,
but
only
three
of
them
are
public
defender
clients.
All
the
other
clients
are
private,
that
private
attorneys,
so
they're,
paying
someone,
thousands
and
thousands
of
dollars
to
have
them
languish
in
jail
for
literally
over
a
thousand
days.
So
I
found
that
to
be
very
interesting,
a
lot
of
them
are
still
pending
trial.
Some
are
pending
sentencing,
but
at
the
end
of
the
day,
the
large
majority
of
the
longest
incarcerated
people
are
have
private
counsel.
E
I
agree
with
mr.
Roe.
As
far
as
you
know,
there's
now
a
jail
vivitrol
program
that
we
have,
but
the
people
have
to
be
in
jail
in
order
to
get
evaluated
for
vivitrol
to
see
if
they're
eligible
and
to
receive
the
shot
you
have
to
be
clean
before
you
can
receive
vivitrol.
So
if
they
got
bonded
out
and
they
go
out
and
use
again,
that
program
is
useless.
So
it
is
a
very
complicated
situation.
E
B
B
B
F
Which
is
on
the
screen
here,
and
it's
also
in
your
packet
before
we
get
into
the
numbers
just
to
give
some
of
the
board
members
that
a
little
bit
of
background
party
to
be
under
this
agreement
in
1999
with
rule
county
to
125
percent
of
their
facility
for
25
percent.
It's
so
25
of
Andhra
beds
or
2600
two
beds
actually.
F
So
the
idea
behind
it
was,
we
had
25
beds,
we
paid
25
percent
of
the
operational
cost,
the
facility
and
25
percent
of
many
salaries
that
were
reimbursed
by
the
state
detention
centers.
Juvenile
detention
centers
are
operated
just
like
probation
departments
under
the
authority
of
the
chief
judge
and
they
receive
state
reimbursement
for
their
salaries.
Like
I
do
so.
F
We
entered
into
that
agreement.
The
big
reason
was
his
dream:
80s
and
early
90s
or
throughout
the
90s.
Juvenile
detention
numbers
and
Juvenal
numbers
overall
were
very
high
and
we
were
using
different
facilities
around
the
state
to
detain
these
into
minors.
They
didn't
give
it
time,
I
think
at
one
point
we
had
minors
and
ten
different
facilities
around
the
state
and
transporting
those
individuals
back.
It
was
at
the
time
it
made
sense
to
do
what
they
did
and
that
was
entered
to
an
agreement.
F
We
had
25
beds
waiting
for
us
and
is
Right
Oakland,
County,
okay,
but
then,
after
some
years
in
the
do,
while
in
the
agreement,
things
just
changed
with
the
state,
a
lot
of
different
initiatives
to
reduce
juvenile
populations,
annals
in
custody,
get
him
out
of
custody
quicker.
Similar
to
what
we're
seeing
with
the
adult
world
now
with
the
bail
Reform
Act,
they
were
just
talking
about
it.
It's
to
get
people
out
of
custody
and
get
them.
You
know
reduce
the
jail
population.
So
with
that
I
hope
that
made
sense.
F
Okay,
this
this
right
here
is
a
simple
graph
that
shows
the
difference
in
I.
Think
it's
yellow
is
what
we
paid
and
remember
we
pay
25%.
Most
of
that
cost
was
fixed.
There
was
medical
contracts
and
differents
like
that,
so
the
orange
line
is
what
we
would
have
paid
if
we
would
have
paid
the
daily
rate
of
$140.
We
didn't
have
this
Agreement,
where
we
were
part
of
this,
like
a
lot
of
counties,
aren't
we
to
paid
140?
F
That's
when
we'd
have
paid
every
year
compared
to
what
we
did
pay,
so
you
can
see
it's
a
big
difference
now.
The
next
slide
breaks
that
number
down.
Let
me
explain
this
a
little
bit
as
you
can
see
looking
at
fiscal
year
2010,
and
this
would
be
the
same
for
the
next
two
pages
for
every
year,
you
can
see
our
total
cost.
Here
was
a
little
over
1.2
million
we
paid
about
103
thousand
on
average
read
every
month
that
broke
down.
We
had
three
thousand
seven
hundred
seventy
three
detention
days.
F
They
here,
which,
when
you
break
that
down,
means
them
pay
the
deadly
rate.
If
you
broke
it
down
that
way
of
$330
$329
a
day,
okay
and
they
underneath
that
now
to
go
back
to
the
left
under
that
1.2
million,
you
see
five
hundred,
twenty-eight
thousand
four
hundred
forty
eight
thousand
that's
the
five
hundred
twenty
thousand
is
what
we
would
have
paid
at
$140
a
day
rate,
so
you
can
see
a
huge
difference.
There
I
put
120
in
there
just
because
that's
the
state
average,
but
will
County
charges
out
at
County
juveniles
$140
a
day.
F
So
that's
why
we
use
that
number
and
that
just
goes.
You
can
see
fiscal
year
lovin
to
go
back
over
to
the
right.
Our
daily
rate
was
by
50,
because
you
remember
every
time
we
detained
less
juveniles
that
year,
our
cost
per
Juvenal
per
day
increased
because
again,
most
of
us
cost
were
fixed.
So
you
can
go
through
this
page.
F
Before
we
looked
into
getting
out
of
this
Agreement,
the
average
annual
cost
is
about
one
point,
just
under
1.2
million
dollars
a
year
during
that
same
time
period
at
$140.
Today
we
paid
about
a
four
hundred,
forty
five
thousand,
so
you
can
see.
We've
made
the
major
difference
in
the
end,
the
cost
to
that
our
highest
tension
date
was
five.
Fifty
our
lowest
is
264
so
and
the
reason
we
went
back
to
2010
is
one.
F
It
was
a
good
number
of
years
to
go
back,
but
that's
also
one
that
they
change
the
juvenile
age
prior
to
that
anybody
under
the
age
of
17
was
a
juvenile.
They
change
the
law
to
make
anybody
under
the
age
of
18.
There's
now
the
juvenile,
and
we
had
this
conversation
89.
It
was
just
to
compare
apples
to
apples,
so
we
didn't
go
past,
2010
and
bored
with
that,
so
we're
looking
at
the
same
population
on
this.
That
would
be
looking
back
going
forward.
F
The
Chairman
went
make
the
move
to
end
this
agreement
cuz.
Obviously
we
could
see
the
financial
cost
of
that.
So
may
1st
of
2018
we
entered
that.
We
we
had
a
buyout
wilkani
bought
us
out
of
that,
like
5.5
million
dollars,
2.5
million
of
that
went
to
credit
for
bed
rental
for
the
next
few
years.
Okay,
so
we
I
could
break
that
down.
F
Twenty
one,
sorry
with
six
hundred
fifty
thousand,
and
then
we
have
money
going
into
fiscal
year.
22
we
just
don't
know
what
that
amount
is
right
now
we're
tracking
that
that's
what
part
of
the
point
of
this
is
yes,
so
we
know
what
the
budget
for
in
2022
okay,
so
you
can
see,
there's
like
I,
said:
there's
a
lot
of
different
initiatives
that
change
this.
All
the
juvenile
JD
AI
Juvenal
attention,
alternative
initiatives
that
changed
the
direction
of
detaining
juveniles.
F
Good
things
swing
back,
maybe
but
I,
don't
think
if
I
sit
in
this
room,
getting
reports
from
anyone
about
Springfield
and
where
they're
going
sees
that
happening
anytime
soon,
I
mean
right
now,
they're
doing
it
with
the
adult
population
with
bail
or
gone
so
they're
still
working
on
their
to
go
in
that
other
direction
of
reducing
jail
populations,
so
I
think
it.
Then
you
can
see
with
the
amount
of
money
per
year
that
cost
us
that
even
another
two
three
or
four
years
in
the
future.
F
F
I
think
will
swell
we'll
see
with
this
new
with
how
we're
doing
it
now
and
after
we
get
out
of
this,
where
we're
using
credit
and
we
go
to
just
a
daily
rate,
when
we
detain
less
juveniles
any
particular
year,
we
would
we're
gonna
see
the
benefit
of
that.
Obviously
we're
just
you
know
we
detained
less
less
cost
and
I
think
during
the
same
time
period
we're
in
this
Agreement
that
we're
talking
about
here.
We
had
an
average
detention
days
every
year
about
3100
attention
days
beams.
F
We
would
have
had
to
have
over
9000
detention
days
to
start
bringing
that
daily
cost
down
to
140,
and
it's
really
not
that
simple,
because
I
know
that
many
more
people
be
entertained,
costs
are
gonna,
go
I
mean
it's,
but
we
would
have
had
to
teen
over
9000
or
have
detention
days
over
9,000
on
average
to
bring
that
down
to
where
it's
around
140
so
we're.
We
were
way
off.
B
G
Spoke
of
the
other
cost.
We
win
the
agreement
when
the
bonded
was
the
time
that
we
could
have
this
discussion
about
a
new
agreement
and
it
took
about
a
year
and
a
half
but
negotiated.
Obviously
the
first
offer
wasn't
what
we
ended
up
with,
but
we
also
pay
25%
of
the
maintenance
of
the
building
and
for
the
staff
of
the
building,
and
for
so
that
was
I.
That's
not
even
here.
That's
on
top,
you
know,
and
it's
this
was
a
good
deal,
not
because
I
did
it.
G
It
was
one
that
had
to
be
done
and
it
was
good
that
will
count
he
stepped
up
and
they
realized
that
they
still
wanted
to
work
with
us
after
this
was
all
over
with,
because
obviously
they
don't
have
a
lot
of
partners
and
filling
those
beds
up
there.
So
it's
all
way
and
it
costs
to
those
guys
so
in
going
forward,
I,
believe
I,
really
120
or
140
right
now,
I
think
they
gave
us
120
I
have
to
look
back
at
the
paper
yeah,
their
daily
rate
is
set
at
140,
further
counties
right.
F
G
Other
counties
I
think
we
just
have
to
look
back
again,
I
think
we
were
120.
They
gave
us,
but
I
look
back,
but
regardless
there's
other
options
too.
So
if
we
find
somebody
that
may
be
going
a
little
bit
longer,
we
may
look
at
other
facilities,
but
this
one's
closed.
If
it's,
you
know
up
there,
they
gotta
be
back
here.
It's
like
what
the
next
day
for
now
juveniles
have
to
be
back
the
next
day,
where
I
can
go
to
danville.
We're
not
gonna,
go
down
to
southern
Illinois
who
got
wool
County
as
a
partner.
G
But
if
someone
who
might
be
there
for
a
little
bit
of
time,
then
maybe
we'll
look
another
option.
So
we
there
is
flexibility
built
in
this
for
the
future,
but
I
just
last
time
to
do
this.
So
we
do
this
committee
would
know
and
Finance
when
we
need
to
build
this
into
the
budget.
We
just
don't
react
to
what
happens
today.
We
kind
of
need
to
know
that
and
for
FY
22
we're
gonna
have
to
cover
off
that
difference,
to
keep
it
high
early,
but
it's
half
of
what
it
used
to
be.
G
F
G
Enough
that
was
part
of
the
issue
as
well.
When
we
didn't
have
money
back
with
us.
You
know
three
years
ago
which
we
we
had
less
than
no
money.
Actually
we
had
what
was
that
about
two
billion
dollars.
We
owe
them
oh
yeah
yeah.
It
was
that
we
just
couldn't
pay
the
bill,
and
so
that
was
part
of
this
deal
was
the
wife
away
our
debt.
Our
accounts
receivable
was
reduced
as
well.
So
to
that
point
we
would
just
get
an
extra
bill
because
of
hey.
G
F
The
allocation
shortfall
I
mean
it's
Steven.
Carty
would
call
me
right
away
because
you
get
me
to
get
this
bill
for
$300,000
one
month,
and
that
would
happen
every
year
at
least
once
and
Kashiwa
I
allocate
off
every
month
for
our
salaries.
Those
reimbursements
come
back,
as
you
know
it
here
months
later,
and
so
they
would
get.
They
might
get
their
reimbursement
back
for
those
right
now
for
September
October
November
that
here's
the
shortfall
and
we
just
get
a
bill,
and
it
was
so
we
didn't
really
know
it
was
coming.
F
F
F
I
have
to
look
at
my
report.
I
could
find
in
here
that
how
many
a
bond
it's
a
the
there's
two
or
three
on
its
worked.
Well,
we
haven't
had
any
violations
with
them.
We
get
on
every
date
track
where
their
movement,
it's
worked
and
I,
know
city
police,
permit
real
heavy
and
we're
not
I've
not
seen
a
huge
rate.
We're
not
using
a
lot
of
it.
B
I
Nothing
of
significance,
the
only
thing
that
really
kind
of
stands
out
is
the
calls
for
service
from
2019
to
2020
they're
up
over
a
thousand
and
just
looking
at
what
we're
doing
and
statistics
and
our
citations
and
things
I.
Think
a
lot
of
those
are
generated
because
we
have
a
lot
of
traffic
enforcement
going
on
we're,
trying
to
push
that
fatal
number
down
and
in
traffic
enforcement's.
A
funny
thing
is
his
enforcement
drops
off.
We
see
our
fatals
go
up
and
it's
a
lot
of
to
do
with
perception.
B
I
Don't
really
have
anything.
I
would
just
like
to
compliment
Kari
Laird
for
jumping
in
with
both
feet,
she's
doing
a
heck
of
a
job.
I
know
she's,
coming
in
on
the
weekends
to
do
things
and
clean
the
kennels
and
she's
dragging
her
kids
and
her
husband
with
her
and
he's
happy
about
that,
because
sometimes,
whether
his
days
off
but
she's
doing
well,
it's
a
it's
a
huge
learning
curve
when
you
step
into
a
management
position
in
an
organization
that
you
weren't
part
of
beforehand
and
she's
adapted
well
and
we're
pretty
proud
of
her.
J
I
You,
okay,
just
two
other
things:
I'd
like
to
mention
about
the
cash
bail
reform.
It
has
been
my
experience
in
my
humble
opinion,
that
not
all
of
them
but
a
lot
of
career
criminals
are
criminals
because
they
don't
do
what
they're
supposed
to
do
and
if
they
don't
have
any
skin
in
the
game
like
cash
bond
and
there's
nothing
holding
them
to
appear
in
court.
They
don't
appear
in
court
and
then
we
get
a
warrant
and
we
go
get
them.
I
We
bring
them
in
and
they
get
recog
degan
and
then
they
don't
show
up
and
and
it
ties
up
mr.
rose
office,
it
ties
up
our
office.
So
unfortunately
our
legislators,
don't
ask
the
practitioners
I
know
Robin
Chad
do
a
heck
of
a
job
going
through
that
list
and
they
always
have
and
they
look
for
those
individuals
and
they
they're
in
contact
with
mr.
Rose
office
and
there's
tourney's
do
a
great
job.
Also
of
you
know,
looking
and
saying:
okay,
we
need
to
move
this
person
out
of
here
some
other
places.
I
Don't
do
it
I
think
we're
being
punished
for
the
sins
of
others
like
Cook
County,
where
they'll
cherry
pick
a
retail
theft
guy
that's
been
in
there,
for
you,
know
six
months
and
say
see
we
told
you
well,
that's
not
that
doesn't
happen
here
and
that's
compliments
to
our
administration
of
mr.
rose
office
and
my
last
thing
would
be
to
compliment
Andy
wheeler
because
he's
modest
this
whole
Detention
Center
thing
you
know
said
it's
not
a
good
idea
because
it
was
yours,
but
it's
a
good
idea
for
the
taxpayers.
I
B
G
H
H
B
H
Only
other
thing
I
want
to
point
out
to
you
is
in
our
morgue
that
was
built
in
2005
we're
having
some
problem
with
the
walls
wise.
It's
paint
wise
that
it's
still
got
the
paint
in
2005
we're
gonna
repaint,
the
morgue
I'm
gonna
redo
the
bathrooms
from
the
tile
to
the
painting,
not
only
in
the
morgue
into
our
office
and
I'm
gonna.
Look
at
all
of
you
and
say
it's
not
gonna
cost
the
county.
One
cent
it's
coming
out
of
my
coroner's
fees,
so
I
can
improve
the
area
that
which
we
work.
H
This
is
a
fine
place
we
have
out
here
should
be
kept
updated
and
that's
that's
my
goal
and
it's
gonna
start
here
we're
paying.
There's
no
Union.
I
know
we
have
to
do
it
Union
wise
there,
but
there's
no
Union
tyler's
around
here
they
come
out
of
Chicago,
so
we're
paying
prevailing
wages,
I
should
say:
I
am
so
all
that
expensive,
hopefully,
will
improve
our
area.
We're
updating
our
facility
out
there
to
make
it
still
the
number
one
more
other
than
Cook
counties
in
the
state
of
Illinois
and
I'm,
going
to
continue
to
do
that.
H
G
H
Is
a
big
deal
when
we
meet
all
the
corners
are
gonna
meet
here
at
the
end
of
first
part
of
April?
That
is
a
big
subject.
We
do
have
a
whole
of
the
sponsors
and
we've
talked
about
them
that
you're
in
our
area
we're
blessed.
They
have
two
board
certified
forensics
in
our
neighborhood
and
also
with
two
backups
of
board
certified
forensics,
where
there's
12
in
in
in
Cook
County,
and
then
there's
only
like
three
to
four.
H
So
there's
it's
almost
impossible
to
do
that,
because
we'd
be
we'd,
have
to
move
out
of
here
to
probably
go
to
Will
County
or
to
Page
County
or
wherever
and
I.
Don't
want
that
to
happen
so
being
Secretary
of
the
Illinois
corners
there
I'm
on
it
quite
heavily
and
I've
talked
to
the
chairman
about
that.
It's
a
big
factor
I,
certainly
you
know
in
the
long
run,
want
to
keep
the
corners
because
I
don't
think
the
amount
of
money
it'll
cost
us
traveling
would
be
outstanding
for
our
thank.
H
H
B
K
They
would
have
done
that
that
would
be
a
tremendous
increase
in
cost
when
you're
dealing
with
a
medical
examiners,
because
those
are
doctors,
and
so
they
were
not
something
they'll
succumb
to
what
a
corner
actually
receives
now.
So
that
would
be
a
tremendous
increase
in
cost
and
the
other
thing
is
they
have
to
remember
that
corners
are
actually
police
officers.
They
are
investigators
of
wrongful
death
and
not
so
much
of
the
pathology
part
of
the
day
kind
of
hired
that
out.
K
B
Thank
you.
Yes.
Is
there
any
old
business
to
come
before
the
committee,
any
old
business,
any
new
business,
any
new
business
taking
motion
to
adjourn
mr.
Fairfield
second
by
mr.
Kerry
Co,
all
in
favor,
say
aye
opposed
same
sign
motion
carries
anybody
that
needs
to
sign
the
affidavit.
Just
hang
on
till
they
get
here.