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From YouTube: Kankakee County Public Safety Meeting 6/13/2018
Description
Kankakee County Public Safety Meeting 6/13/2018 7:30 AM
B
B
A
Okay,
I
have
no
comment
or
no
public
comment
requests.
Is
there
any
public
comment
at
this
time
other
than
you?
Any
public
comment
is
just
I:
okay,
moving
along
first
of
all,
I
guess
we
should
welcome
Anita
and
Wes
I.
Think
it's
your
first
criminal
justice
committee
meeting.
So
it
might
be
your
last
two
after
today
you
never
know.
C
A
We'll
take
approval
of
the
minutes
minutes
from
July
11th
2018
April
11th.
Thank
you.
Mr.
Washington,
second
by
mr.
Fairfield,
all
in
favor,
say
aye
opposed
same
sign.
Motion
carries
no
Chief
Judge
sandy
in
your
package.
We
have
a
copy
of
the
monthly
report
from
the
circuit
clerk's
office.
I'll.
Take
a
motion
to
approve
mr.
C
Royce
second
by
mr.
Snipes
good
morning,
sandy
good
morning,
comments
on
your
report.
D
So
for
the
other
reports,
the
state's
attorney
Court
call
report.
That
is
the
the
court,
call
that
our
state's
attorney
sends
people
to
and
works
with
the
people
with
rules
to
Show
Cause
and
things
like
that
brings
them
into
court,
keeps
them
accountable
so
this
year,
so
far
we
brought
in
almost
$37,000
with
a
grand
total
of
127
nine
3540
I'm.
That
portion
then
the
next
page
is
the
Harrison
Harris
recovery
program
that
we
have
in
last
month.
D
In
May
we
brought
in
one
hundred
and
almost
one
hundred
and
eighty
eight
thousand
dollars,
which
was
right
around
twenty
thousand
dollars
more
than
we
did
the
last
year
on
the
same
month.
So
we're
moving
pretty
far
ahead
with
that,
so
that
total
for
this
year,
is
seven
hundred
twenty
nine
thousand
dollars
so
that
we're
over
a
hundred
and
right
around
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
more
from
last
year
and
even
in
2016.
At
this
time
we
had
brought
in
five
hundred
thousand.
So
we're
doing
really
well
this
year
with
our
collections.
D
D
As
far
as
what
I
was
going
about
we're
doing
our
the
mandated
efiling,
which
has
been
a
learning
curve
for
everyone
in
the
office
and
everyone
filing
to
us,
we
are
not
integrated
yet
meaning.
When
people
I
filed
the
paperwork
to
us,
we
have
to
print
it
out
and
then
go
back
into
the
case
management
system
and
then
re-enter
it.
D
So
we're
right
now
we're
doing
double
the
work
court
view
just
sent
me
an
email
yesterday,
saying
they're
getting
close
to
being
able
to
start
testing
the
integration
part
so
we're
six
months
behind
on
getting
that
done,
but
court
view
was
they're
working
with
Tyler
and
they're
trying
to
get
all
of
the
mapping
done
and
all
of
the
all
the
behind-the-scenes
stuff.
It's
really
been
a
long
project,
so
we're
anxiously
awaiting
that.
Hopefully,
that
will
help
our.
D
We
do
feel
that
because
when
the
law
offices
and
the
pro
se
litigants
sent
their
send
their
efiling
in,
they
don't
do
it
properly
and
we
have
to
reject
it
a
lot
of
times,
and
so
they
have
to
refile
it.
So
they
get
frustrated
with
us,
but
we
have
to
do
what
we
have
to
do.
We
feel
that
when
we
are
integrated,
things
are
still
going
to
be
bumpy
for
quite
a
while,
but
hopefully
it
will
smooth
out
by
the
end
of
this
year.
So
that's
kind
of
where
we
are
with
the
computerization.
C
D
E
D
And
then
we
open
it
up
and
go
from
there.
So
that's
another
thing:
when
the
law
office
is
calling,
they
may
not
be
using
Odyssey,
which
we
are
familiar
with,
because
that's
how
we
receive
it
they'll
ask
us
20
questions
on
why
ABC
system,
you
know:
how
do
you
do
it
with
them
and
we
have
no
idea.
We
only
know
what
we
know.
So
it's
been
a
very
complicated
situation
now.
E
D
D
C
D
There
is
a
form
that
people
can
file
if
they
don't
have
access
to
a
computer
at
all.
There
is
a
waiver
that
they
can
do
and
then
we
have
to
do
it
over
the
counter.
We
do
that
with
orders
of
protection
right
now,
because
people
are
so
I
think.
The
reason,
too,
is
because
people
are
in
such
a
state
that
you
know
then
adding
the
e-filing
component
to
it.
It's
just
too
much,
I'm
personally
yeah.
D
So
then,
so
with
our
collections,
we've
been
very
busy
with
collections
taking
the
money,
especially
during
the
tax
season,
so
we
got
really
far
behind
with
our
filing,
because
we
only
have
so
many
people
and
if
they're
at
the
counter
receiving
the
money,
then
they
aren't
at
their
desk
doing
their
work.
So
we've
been
working
quite
a
few
Saturdays
lately
trying
to
keep
up
at
one
point.
We
were
like
two
weeks
behind
on
the
e-file
II,
so
we
needed
to
catch
that
up
and
then
the
criminal
courts
in
the
traffic
course
are
always
super
busy.
D
So
we
had
a
chance
to
get
them
caught
up.
The
expungement
seminar
that
was
held
earlier
this
year
caused
about
2,000
cases
to
come
to
our
office
and
the
person
that
does
the
expungement
is
one
person
and
she
does
that.
Probably
that's
about
a
fourth
of
what
she
does.
So
it's
been
a
lot
of
work
for
her
to
keep
up
with
that
too,
but
we're
getting
there.
C
A
E
D
F
F
D
That
it,
that
is
true
because
the
bond,
the
new,
the
barn,
want
the
law,
the
statute
with
the
buns,
a
lot
of
them
are
recog,
and
so
they
get
out
of
jail.
Just
when
the
judge
you
know
they
may
offer
a
recog
vine
and
then
or
the
it's
reduced,
if
they're
in
jail
for
so
many
days,
they
get
$30
a
day
credit.
So
if
they
post
a
thousand
dollars
but
we're
there
for
three
days,
we
have
to
subtract
that
$90
from
the
100
that
they
posted.
D
F
F
F
D
The
recommendations
will
to
bring
it
back
to
thee
the
outside
auditor
comes
in
and
they
do
a
full
complete
audit
of
all
of
our
transactions
and
one
of
the
I,
don't
even
cut
they
don't
call
it
a
concern
they
just
they
note
it.
It's
a
note
on
my
it's
about
internal
control
over
the
bank
reconciliations.
So
when
the
previous
Auditor
was
the
county
auditor,
they
decided
that
it
was
too
complicated
to
come
over
to
do
our
auditing
and
with
our
new
court
view
system.
For
some
reason
they
thought
it
was
difficult.
D
F
F
F
D
F
This
is
an
actual
finding
this
year.
It's
not
just
a
recommendation.
It's
an
official
finding
it's
the
last
paragraph
were
that
says.
The
county
auditor
reviewed
search
bank
parking
solution
is
in
2017
that
was
supposed
to
continue
to
review
the
Bennigan's
silly
ations
on
a
regular
and
timely
basis,
going
forward
that
profit
process
did
not
endure
for
all
of
2017,
and
the
circuit
court
did
not
make
alternative
plans.
D
F
D
D
F
F
H
F
H
H
F
H
I
just
like
when
I'll
do
the
statutory
duties
in
the
auditor
I
just
and
I
did
because
I
know
that
this
came
up.
I
just
don't
see
where
there's
a
dude
reconciliations
outside
department-
and
you
know
an
audit
is
an
order,
but
a
month
a
month
review
of
reconciliations
and
he
has
one
staff.
Member
like
and
I
know
there
was
a
period
there
where
there
was
no
other
staff
members.
He
was
an
office
of
one
for
a
while
during
2017
when
this
happened
so
I.
H
C
F
They
applies
for
grants
within
the
county.
It's
a
systemic
problem,
and
so
my
only
thing
was
is
that
this
affects
not
only
her
office,
part
of
the
whole
County's
ability,
I'm,
not
saying
we're,
not
gonna
get
for
answer.
It
calls
into
question
all
of
our
federal
grant
monitoring.
So
if
we
don't
do
it,
somebody
has
to
do
it.
The
question
the
problem
that
I
had
was,
if
somebody
agreed
to
do
it
and
then
didn't,
and
it
caused
problems
in
your
office
and
flat-out
refused
for
another
office.
F
But
that's
not
part
of
this
consideration
now
part
of
those
statutes
do
say,
maintained
a
continual
audit
of
all
property
and
operations,
whatever
not
going
to
do
it
verbatim
within
the
county.
Now
that
may
or
may
not
fall
under
it,
but
if
you're
not
gonna,
do
it
don't
say
you're
gonna?
Do
it
then
put
an
office
in
jeopardy.
E
D
E
E
I
guess
both
sides
of
the
equation,
assets,
liabilities
and
determined
some
type
of
before
to
see
if
you're,
in,
what's
in
whatever
line
items,
you
are
supposed
to
be
etcetera.
So
what
is
it
that
these
statutory
is
not
doing?
Is
what
I'm
trying
to
take
out
cuz?
It
looks
like
there's
something:
that's
an
issue
was
something
in
statutory.
He
should
be
doing
that
he's
not
doing
is
that
correct.
E
D
Just
for
filing
that
has
nothing
to
do
with
the
fees
for
my
office.
The
Circuit
Clerk
like
that,
if
you're
paying
a
fine
or
a
collection
fee,
then
it
comes.
You
pay
that
like
either
on
a
credit
card
or
in
the
office,
so
the
Odyssey
file
and
serve
that's
only
if
you're
filing
a
document
to
be
put
into
a
file
and.
E
A
D
Thirty-Four,
including
myself,
so
there's
no
way
to
segregate
bookkeeping
duties
among
those
thirty-four.
Thirty-Five
people
they
all
have
their
different
duties,
she's,
the
only
one
that
there's
only
one
or
there
was
a
she
she's,
the
only
one
that
does
that
position.
Everybody
else
is
either
a
minute
clerk
or
a
clerical
staff
of
some
sort
and
and
the
bookkeeper
is
at
a
higher
level.
So
then
it
would
be
me
or
it
would
be,
my
chief
deputy
who
has
a
lot
going
on
and
that's
the
only
other
person
only
two
people
that
could
be
doing.
F
A
H
The
board
can
see
were
up
to
305,
that's
within
five
cases
of
where
we
were
last
year,
so
basically
in
no
different
position
and
we
weren't
17,
but
that's
still
up
about
40%
Bureau
year-over-year
we've
seen
a
lot
more
weapons.
Offenses
they're
not
reflected
on
this
grand
jury
report,
but
they
will
be
on
the
next
one
got
to
say.
When
Sheriff's
Department
said
you
can't
keep
Police
Department
detectives
came
egg,
especially
they've
been
getting
a
lot
of
guns
off
the
street.
H
A
H
F
H
Do
we
do
you
know
that
money's
restricted?
We
can
only
use
it
for
certain
things,
but
when
local
departments
need
that
type
of
assistance
we
provide
I
also
want
to
recognize
two
attorneys
in
the
state's
attorney's
office,
Brenda
Claudio
and
Ericka
Hamer.
They
did
a
major
sex
case
recently
it
was
tough.
We
had
a
young
victim.
She
was
nine
at
the
time
of
the
offense.
She
was
10
or
11
when
she
testified
she
had
to
get
on
the
stand
and
tell
that
story.
She
had
to
reiterate
what
happened
to
her.
H
She
had
to
do
it
in
the
courtroom
with
12
jurors.
She
doesn't
know
where
14
actually,
with
the
two
alternates
and
bailiffs
and
judges
and
attorneys
in
front
of
people
she's
never
met
before,
and
she
was
able
to
do
that
in
great
part
because
of
the
work
of
KC
Casas
and
their
advocates,
and
our
Victim
Witness
advocates
who
walk
victims
through
that
process
and
then
Erica
and
Brenda
did
a
fantastic
job.
H
Prosecuting
that
case,
you
never
know
which
way
those
are
going
to
go,
because,
ultimately,
when
there's
no
forensic
evidence,
it
comes
down
to
one
person's
testimony
against
another's,
but
the
jury
saw
through
it
and
did
return
a
conviction
and
that
gentleman's
facing
6
to
60
years,
and
he
should
face
more
toward
60
and
6
his
backdrop.
So
they
did
a
fantastic
job
with
that
case,
if
you
happen
to
see
them
in
the
courthouse
or
elsewhere,.
A
A
A
A
A
I
As
far
as
the
report
again,
things
are
trending
up,
I
know
the
chief
of
Corrections
and
the
sheriff
we're
getting
calls.
People
are
looking
for
beds,
that's
a
good
thing.
Currently,
we
have
150
for
ice
detainees,
total
out
of
counties
is
368,
our
full-time
staff
is
at
135
and
we've
just
hired
five
part-timers
and
we're
in
the
process
of
getting
them
trained
up
and
they're
gonna
be
a
great
asset
for
all
kinds
of
different
reasons,
but
we'll
certainly
help
out
cut
some
costs
there.
I
As
far
as
the
actual
report,
again,
you
can
see,
the
numbers
of
train
are
trending
up
and
we
don't
see
a
change
in
that
again.
The
sheriff
and
the
chief
of
Corrections
is
getting
are
getting
calls
constantly.
You
know
we
need
beds
and
we're
trying
to
they're
trying
to
move
things
around
and
accommodate
as
many
as
they
can,
but
there's
only
you
know
so
much
space
and
they
keep
telling
folks.
I
We
just
need
a
little
bit
of
money
and
we
can
give
you
beds,
but
that
hasn't
happened
yet
so
we're
gonna
keep
they're
gonna
keep
swinging
and
I
want
to
take
a
minute
and
thank
Chad
and
Rob
and
his
staff,
because
myself
included,
nobody
knows
how
much
work
they
are
doing.
This
is
not
a
give
me
program.
This
program
is
highly
intensive.
It
takes
so
much
more
than
they're
used
to.
I
There
are
agencies
I'm,
giving
this
program
up,
because
it's
too
much
of
a
problem
and
we're
gladly
taking
their
detainees,
we're
like
bring
them
down,
but
it's
not
just
and
again,
I,
don't
even
understand
it
all,
but
I'm
in
the
middle
of
some
of
it
and
they're
going
through
a
phenomenal
amount
of
work,
and
they
just
keep
pushing
because
they
understand
it
is
the
lifeblood
we
got
it.
I
mean
we're
all
in
this
together
and
we
all
win
or
lose
together.
We've
lost
for
too
long.
It's
time
we
keep
winning
I,
won't.
I
I
If
you
look
at
the
sworn
side
again
that
citation
numbers
are
turning
up
ISP,
we
combined
our
resources
because
they
are
vastly
under-resourced.
Like
ourselves,
we
combined
their
resources
for
a
detailed
traffic
detail
because
they
are
very
sensitive
to
the
fatal
numbers
climbing
as
they
have
and
lack
of
traffic
enforcement,
and
we
did
a
detail
which
was
quite
successful.
I
We
are
planning
more
of
those
in
the
future
because
when
you
take
few
of
our
games
and
a
few
of
their
guys,
it's
not
a
big
of
an
impact
on
either
agency
and
it's
in
this
big
bang
and
it
really
makes
a
an
impression
with
the
public.
They
see
those
cars
out
there
and
they
see
our
cars
and
state
police
and
they
don't
know
what's
going
on
so
they
think
hey,
maybe
I'll
slow
down.
I
I
I
If
they
go
to
the
this,
all
the
state
bid
dealers
or
what
and
they're
trying
to
work
that
out
to
see
if
they
can
even
get
the
cars
we
need
to
get
from
because
obviously
we'd
like
to
deal
locally,
but
if
they
can't
get
us
the
cars
we
need,
then
that
doesn't
do
a
little
bit
of
bad
news
and
I.
Don't
know
how
we
want
to
deal
with
this
because
it's
not
on
the
agenda,
but
we
have
to
take
action
on
it.
I
The
x-ray
machine
at
the
courthouse,
which
is
probably
replaced
when
commander
Fairfield,
was
here
last
time
a
decade
or
two
ago,
is
on
the
way
out
no
I'm
just
talking
how
long
you've
been
retired,
not
your
age
or
anything,
they
came.
The
the
repair
guy
came
and
looked
at
it
and
said.
If
we
turn
it
off,
it
probably
won't
come
back
on
so
we'll
keep
our
fingers
crossed,
that
we
don't
have
a
power
outage
to
fix
that
machine
is
seven
to
eight
thousand
dollars
and
I.
Don't
know
how
long
that
process
is.
I
The
backup
is
also
broken.
Of
course
it
is
so
a
new
one
is
about
twenty.
Five
thousand
dollars
will
be
looking
to
Bent
and
you
actually
need
a
backup
one,
because
when
that
thing
goes
down,
otherwise
you've
got
four
or
five
deputies
up
there,
wanting
people
as
they
come
in
and
and
that's
obviously
not
as
effective
or
efficient,
and
it's
most
certainly
not
cost-effective,
because
now
we're
hiring
people
back
at
over
time
to
scan
people,
especially
in
the
morning
in
the
afternoon
when
that
rush
comes
so
we'll
be
advancing.
F
F
I
Hopefully,
we'll
have
an
answer
by
then
and
we
can
move
that
forward
and
then
the
last
thing
I
have
is
in
the
last
week
or
so
I've
gotten
a
couple
different
calls
from
folks
about
the
scams
going
on
there
and
we
can't
reiterate
it
enough.
The
IRS
is
not
going
to
call
you
and
tell
you
to
send
them
money
or
they're,
gonna
come
and
arrest.
I
You
we're
not
gonna,
call
you
and
tell
you
that
you
have
a
warrant
and
if
you
don't
send
us,
Walmart
gift
cards
and
and
people
are
smiling,
but
but
it
only
takes
one
or
two,
and
these
folks
are
successful
and
and
they
sound
very
convincing
and
they're
very
pushy.
If
you
get
one
of
these
calls
hang
up,
let
us
know
they're
going
on
it
doesn't
even
matter
if
it
comes
back
to
our
phone
numbers.
There
are
interesting.
I
There
are
internet
programs
that
it'll
look
like
it's
being
called
from
the
IRS
or
the
Sheriff's
Department
or
the
president
president
in
the
United
States.
It's
not.
We
don't
do
business
that
way.
Now,
if
your
pictures
on
warrant
Wednesday-
that's
legit,
come
on
in,
because
all
your
friends
are
calling
trying
to
get
the
fifty
bucks
from
Crimestoppers
about
you,
but
short
of
that
the
IRS
isn't
gonna.
Call
you
we're
not
going
to
call
you.
I
So
if
you
get
these
calls,
the
other
one
we
got
was
a
guy,
got
a
sold,
an
item
and
got
a
check
in
excess
of
what
he
sold
the
item
for
and
when
he
called
the
person
he
was
dealing
with.
They
said.
Oh,
you
know
what
I
my
bookkeeper
made
a
mistake.
Just
send
us
the
money
back,
that's
not
yours
and,
of
course
it
checks,
bad
and
by
the
time
it
clears
and
it
bounces
and
it
comes
back
and
then
they
get
hit
for
the
bank
fee
and
and
all
the
money
on
that
check.
I
So
the
bottom
line,
if
it
sounds
too
good
to
be
true,
it
is,
is
that
that
just
every
one
of
these
cases
just
look
at
it
and
go
now.
This
doesn't
work
and
we
ask
people
to
call
us
again,
there's
not
a
lot.
We
can
do
because
a
lot
of
this
stuff
is
overseas,
because
unless
the
board
would
like
to
prove
me
to
go
to
Malaysia
or
some
other
foreign
country
to
investigate
these
things,
which
they
don't
thinks
on
the
agenda,
you
know
will
advise.
I
Sometimes
we
get
some
outside
agencies
if
it's
a
big
deal
or
if
it's
local,
absolutely
we'll
go,
but
it's
it's
they're
still
getting
people
they're
still
out
there
and
again
I
got
two
calls
last
week
from
folks
saying:
hey
this
is
going
on,
so
we
want
to
just
put
it
back
out
there
for
a
public.
The
IRS
isn't
gonna.
Call
you
we're
not
going
to
call
you.
You
know
the
two
guys
in
the
suits
that
show
up
from
is
IRS.
That's
probably
legitimate.
I
You
probably
got
a
problem,
but
but
they
don't
call
you
on
the
phone
and
tell
you
to
send
them
gift
cards
or
wire
money
or
do
any
of
that
stuff.
And
if
you
have
a
warrant
you
have
to
be
booked
in
unless
you
have
an
attorney
that
gets
a
warrant
quash,
so
sending
gift
cards
or
sending
money
through
you
know,
one
of
the
money
exchanges
is
not
going
to
quash
your
warrant.
I
You
know,
there's
a
legal
process
for
them,
so
please
notify
your
local
law
enforcement,
but
hang
up
on
these
people,
you
know
or
entertain
them.
I
like
I
get
one
every
once
awhile
I
like
to
keep
them
on
the
line
too
I
got
a
woman
from
what
now
I
was
never
in
that,
and
you
have
conversation
with
coz
I
know
the
longer
I
keep
them
on
the
phone
less
time
they
have
to
try
and
scam
somebody
else.
I
get
a
little
entertainment
out
of
it.
E
Thanks
a
lot
according
the
journal,
because
the
one
that
contacted
me
because
they
get
such
a
check
or
whatever,
and
it
was
a
$4,000
a
savory.
But
since
we
had
was
only
like
seven
couple
dollars
and
so
the
check
and
then
I'm
saying
what
every
call
the
table.
When
I
looked
at
the
paper
solve
the
scam
I'm,
leaving
probably
into
the
back
and
tell
them
that
that
was
a
I.
E
I
We'll
try
and
be
involved
in
anything
we
can.
First
of
all,
most
of
those
agencies
are
private
prisons
and
they're
illegal
in
Illinois,
okay,
I
mean
there's
a
reason
they're
illegal,
because
the
way
you
save
money
is
in
prisoner
care
and
prisoner
prisoner
medical
in
employees
and
you
get
what
you
pay
for
employees
and
in
food
and
they
have
a
board
of
directors
to
answer
to
and
not
the
public
and
not
a
board
like
this.
I
Good
luck
with
that,
but
we
try
and
keep
our
ear
to
the
rail
and
you
know
figure
out
what's
going
on,
but
you
just
every
day,
I'm
reading
about
another
round
out
where
they
get
a
hundred
folks
here
now
they're
starting
to
hit
some
of
these
businesses
that
and
taking
100
120
130
detainees
and
I'm
out
of
businesses
and
they're
looking
for
beds,
the
National
sheriffs
Association
put
something
out
and
you
know
I
wish
we
had
more
for
them
because
again,
they're
gonna
help.
We've
always
said
they're
gonna
house
them
somewhere
bring
them
here.
I
We're
gonna
treat
them
like.
We
want
our
family
to
be
treated
these.
These
are
folks.
These
are
these
are
people
with
families,
but
you
know
there's
a
process
they
have
to
go
through
and
somebody
is
going
to
have
to
make
care
for
them,
and
we
would
like
to
be
that
somebody,
so
they
can
keep
trying
for
that
prison.
I
You
know
that
the
woman's
prison
would
have
been
a
boom
out
there.
Obviously
you
know
there
was
a
one
of
the
channel.
2,
5
or
7
had
something
on
it
the
other
day,
and
it
talked
about
utilities
like
natural
gas
and
stuff,
and
that's
what
it's
going
to
take
some
kind
of
industry
or
something
out
there
to
to
to
bring
that
in
and
then
that
area
may
explode
it
like
that
again,
I'm,
not
real
familiar
with.
What's
going
on,
there's
all
kinds
of
things
circulating,
but
we've
not
seen
anything
solid.
Yet.
E
E
E
I
Kudos
to
can't
go
into
and
the
sheriff
there's
not
a
week
or
two
go
by
that
they
don't
call
somebody
and
remind
them.
Hey
we
keep
reading
this
stuff,
guess
what
you
know
a
little
bit
of
money
and
we
can.
We
can
help
you
out
with
this
situation,
so
we're
gonna
keep
swinging.
That's
all
we
can
do
and
it's
gonna
like
the
ice
detainee
program.
J
I
The
regard
at
all
yeah
well.
J
I
C
J
I
K
K
C
I
K
K
K
I
I
You
know,
I
need
money
wired
here
my
in-laws
got
that
phone
call
and
of
course
they
were
smart
enough
to
hang
up.
Thank
goodness
Thanksgiving
they
didn't,
but
but
yeah
that's,
you
know
and
a
lot
of
times
you
know
and
then
all
my
father-in-law
said
well,
what
is
your
name
yeah?
So
if
it,
if
it
doesn't
sound,
legit
trust
you
got
but
hang
up
on
these
people
and
we're
not
gonna
call
you
in
town
we're
coming
to
get
you
all
right.
Thank.
A
L
You
can
see
we
had
686
successful
field
contacts
in
2043
office
contacts
and
may
totaling
to
over
2700
successful
context
and
which
brings
us
to
12,000
978
contacts,
year-to-date
forty-one
investigations.
We
did
150
drug
tests,
screen
28
miners
for
detention
and
detained
15.
It
says
on
there
currently
up,
12
and
9
in
custody.
It's
actually
ill
7
+
3
7
at
River,
Valley,
Detention,
Center
and
3.
It
out
here.
Drone
calls
for
a
total
of
11
custom
QuickLook
than
any
questions.
L
A
L
L
L
L
L
L
L
J
C
A
M
Let
you
know
our
as
our
autopsies
are
we're
averaging
around
ten
to
eleven
we're
down
to
eight
right
now
for
a
month
which
is
which
is
good.
Our
homicides
are
going
up
our
suicides
last
year.
At
this
time
we
had
thirteen
suicides.
We
only
have
two,
that's
good,
we're
doing
a
lot
of
programs
on
that
particular
subject
as
far
as
drug
wise
I'll
get
into
it,
but
the
last
part
of
the
agenda.
The
new
office
hours,
are
back
in
the.
A
M
M
M
So
the
2018
overdoses
I
have
to
really
say
that
we
brought
that
number
down
quite
considerably
we're
right
now,
averaging
at
last
year.
At
this
time
we
were
at
at
25
Odie's,
we're
worth
actually
at
12
that
says
11
there,
but
we're
at
12
right
now,
which
is
really
good,
I,
feel
that
we've
been
on
all
over
the
county
night
and
day.
M
You
see
it
all
over
the
news
about
the
about
the
overdoses
and
the
opioid
problems,
we're
having
so
I
think.
That's
a
great
savings
to
us
right
now.
If
we
were
closed
out
right
now,
we
saved
twenty
five
thousand
five
hundred
dollars
and
just
autopsy.
So
you
could
see
the
amount
of
impact
that
was
last
year
with
the
56
overdoses
we
had
so,
hopefully
a
knock,
knock,
hey
that
we
don't
go
up.
I
know!
M
M
It
doesn't
cost
the
county
anything
for
us
to
go
home
as
a
as
a
may
of
this
at
the
end
of
May
we
between
Eric
and
I,
we
have
brought
in
over
twelve
thousand
two
hundred
and
forty
six
dollars.
It
goes
back
into
the
general
fund,
which
will
remind
yourself
we're
not
a
large
department,
we're
only
two
of
us
out
there
teaching
so
we're
bringing
in
money
out
of
that
aspect
as
much.
You
know,
Bob.
A
M
Anyhow,
in
the
long
run,
they
were
very
satisfied
that
we
just
got
another
we're
just
working
on
the
2018
and
19
grant
that
we
got
and
got
another
225,000
so
we'll
be
out
in
the
public
again
continually
doing
that.
I
think
it's
working,
but
I
do
got
an
interesting
park
that
an
arc
and
so
big
out
there
right
now
and
I
hats
off
to
all
law
enforcement.
M
They've
all
got
they've
done
their
job
along
with
the
EMS
drugs
are
still
out
there,
they're
continually
going
you're,
seeing
it
more
coming
into
the
fire
department,
saving
or
the
police
officers,
but
we're
gonna
we're
going
to
continue
to
be
able
to
afford
another
year
of
narcan
form.
I
think
that
it's
working.
M
M
We'll
continue
to
do
that.
I'll.
Take
any
questions
on
that,
but
I
just
want
to.
Let
you
know
that
sometimes
you
don't
get
to
see
that
that
we're
bringing
in
twelve
thousand
two
hundred
forty
six
dollars
plus
one
other
thing
on
the
summary
report.
You
notice
the
Iroquois
has
really
kind
of
come
on
strong
with
their
autopsies.
Now
they
usually
average
around
twelve
and
we
already
had
fourteen
of
their
autopsy
problem.
All
that
stuff
is
we're
paying
for
people
for
Rusted
one
there
to
do
their
autopsy.