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From YouTube: Kankakee County Criminal Justice Meeting 12/11/2019
Description
Kankakee County Criminal Justice Meeting 12/11/2019 7:30 AM
A
Or
these
are
things
that
you
know
in
this
day
and
age.
I
think
the
most
important
thing
is
that
we
want
a
record
of
who
it
is
in
case
we're
not
saying
that
everybody
who
gets
a
vendor's
license
or
peddlers
license
or
whatever
want
to
call
it
is
legit
I
mean
we'll,
try
to
verify
it
as
much
as
we
can.
But
the
important
thing
is
is
that
if
they're
not
legit,
we
we
at
least
have
their
information
so
that
we
can
go
after
them
at
a
later
date.
B
C
D
D
F
I'll,
probably
have
them
look
at
selling
telling
food
from
vehicles
that
would
be
part
of
farming.
That's
what
they
do
so,
if
I
know
I
know
like
Bill
Carson
ice
cream
cars
like
that,
we
do
want
to
make
sure
that
you
know
those
interviews
has
a
felling
license,
but
I
don't
want
to
penalize
farmers
that
are
out
there
in
that
particular
area.
That
does
that.
Do
that
on
a
regular
basis
for
the
living.
So
that's
where
I
just
have
the
only
objection,
because
I
know
the
kid
coming
up.
That's
what
we
did
on
the
back.
F
H
E
I
think
that
one
of
the
important
things
to
note
is
that
this
is
an
initial
draft
and
again
we
borrowed
from
surrounding
community.
So
we
thought
maybe
consistency
was
important,
but
sometimes
there's
things
that
make
certain
community
unique,
maybe
get
incorporated
areas.
People
there's,
there's
a
reason
to
change
this.
A
little
bit.
That's
heads
up
to
the
board,
but
the
changes
you
want
to
see.
D
E
Contractors,
what
allows
them
to
actually
go
out
and
do
the
work
right
to
apply
for
the
building
permits
if
they
were
going
door
to
door
trying
to
sell
roofing
services.
That
would
be
a
peddlers,
a
solicitors
license,
and
that's
really
where
the
problem
is
right.
The
problem
isn't
the
guy
who
gets
a
who
the
resident
calls
a
roofing
company
and
says
I've
got
a
hole
in
my
roof.
Can
you
come
out
and
fix
it?
The
problems
I
would
imagine.
B
B
I
B
G
B
J
The
report
speaks
for
itself,
the
year-end
coming
up,
I'm,
going
to
kind
of
reboot
again
to
see
where
we
need
to
go
paperwork
wise
as
far
as
reporting
as
far
as
making
sure
that
the
the
data
is
correct.
I've
been
talking
to
my
assistants
about
you,
know
long
term
goals
regarding
backlog.
I
know
I
want
to
talk
to
mr.
Rowe
about
that
at
his
convenience.
So
we
can
kind
of
get
a
unified
front.
It
benefits
the
county.
It
benefits
the
the
clients
we've
talked
about
this
before
benefits
the
jail
in
a
perfect
world.
J
J
Know
what
I'm,
but
thank
you
for
bringing
that
up.
Roger.
We
do
have
a
full
timeout
public
defender
now
in
juvenile
court,
Becky
Cellini.
She
is
very
proactive
in
getting
these
types
of
that
issues
resolved
it's
a
priority
for
her
and
she's
doing
exactly
what
she
is
putting
out
to
do.
So.
That's
that's.
Definitely
a
good
thing:
correct,
good,
okay,.
B
We
have
a
motion.
A
second
all
in
favor,
say
aye
opposed
same
sign
motion
carries
anything
else
for
the
committee.
Thank
you.
Thank
you
up.
Next
is
mr.
Latham
from
probation,
also
in
the
package,
have
a
copy
of
his
monthly
report.
Take
a
motion
to
approve
that
mr.
Smith
second
by
mr.
Bern
Morning
Calm.
K
K
H
Tom,
do
you
think
it's
it's
it's
time
to
maybe
do
an
analysis
of
River,
Valley
kind
of
where
we're
at
with
no
detention
days
and
where
we
started
with
this,
when
we
were
bought
out
just
to
kind
of
see,
you
know
the
average,
it
seems
like
it's
lower
than
we
thought
it
was
gonna,
be
the
average
detention
days.
H
I
think
our
estimate
was
eight
going
out
and
that
impacts
how
long
we
we're
spending
down
our
liquidity
of
that
facility.
So
it
just
helps
if
I
don't
know
if
we
can
maybe
put
it
on
for
February
to
get
up.
It's
fine.
K
H
H
B
A
A
Our
local
average
is
staying,
steady
still
over
270
Arana
county
average
is
at
379
and
that's
a
combination
of
Marshalls,
a
nice
car.
Marshalls
numbers
have
gone
down
a
little
bit
in
November
we're
averaging
about
339,
so
that's
quite
difference
from
the
yearly
average
of
379.
So
and
those
are
again,
those
fluctuates
so
one
of
the
things-
and
in
fact
I
just
saw
it
on
the
news
this
morning
for
those
that
are
interested,
the
border,
arrests
and
the
border
captures
are
down
significantly
whether
that
will
affect
us
at
this
point.
I
A
Obviously,
we've
kind
of
focused
all
year
long
and
these
fatals
that
continue
to
occur,
we'll
address
that
a
little
bit
in
the
in
the
PowerPoint
here,
but
right
now
that
numbers
at
23
and
we
continue
to
work
with
other
agencies
and
provide
patrol
in
and
identify
problem
areas
where
some
of
these
are
occurring.
So
questions
on
the
report.
F
A
A
A
B
A
However,
with
it
being
under
the
arm
of
the
sheriff's
office,
we
just
kind
of
want
to
keep
you
guys
advised
as
to
what's
been
going
on
and
how
the
transition
has
gone
and
I
can
tell
you
that
the
transition
has
gone
very
well.
Kerri
Laird,
who
is
the
director
now
has
jumped
in
with
both
feet
and
is,
has
been
very
busy
doing
some
things
that
you
know
we
feel
like.
We
need
to
do
to
move
the
department
forward.
A
We've
met
with
the
shelters,
we've
met
with
the
vet,
the
the
vet
that
is
contracted
by
the
county,
we're
setting
up
meetings
with
local
municipalities
to
contract
with
them
for
animal
control,
services,
and
so
things
are.
Things
are
heading
in
the
right
direction.
It's
overall!
It's
going
very
well,
but
we're
11
days
in
so
that
could
change
by
next
month,
but
I
doubt
it
carries
doing
a
theory
doing
a
great
job.
So
any
questions
on
that.
A
B
B
A
A
A
A
However,
the
board
was
actually
back
then
considering
purchasing
a
new
system.
Then,
however,
we
we
backed
off
of
that
and
said
we'll
limp
through
as
best
we
can
based
on
a
number
of
issues,
mainly
financial
and
we've
held
it
off
for
three
years,
and
it
was
down
twice
last
week
and
the
problem
is:
if
we
could
get
parts
for
it,
it
would
be
a
non-issue.
We
would
continue
to
get
parts.
The
problem
is,
we
are
running
out
of
places
to
purchase
parts,
normally
half
of
eBay
and
they're,
just
not
there
anymore.
A
A
H
B
A
A
Me
chairman,
if
I
could
do
the
last
one
the
stakeholder
engagement
first,
yes,
okay,
that's
right!
So
we'll
come
back
to
the
state
of
the
sheriff's.
I
was
presentation,
but
last
Friday
myself
in
chief
Calhoun
Zoo
and
chief
Schultz,
attended
what
was
referred
to
as
the
2019
stakeholder
engagement
meeting
up
at
the
Department
of
Homeland
Security
final
I
used
to
be
Congress,
but
they've
not
changed
the
name
of
the
road
to
I
to
be
Wells.
So
it's,
but
it
was
basically
where
Department
Homeland
Security's
offices
and
the
three
of
us
went
there.
A
A
Ice
Chicago
focuses
on
four
things
when
it
comes
to
immigration,
and
this
is
important
for
you
guys
to
know
so
that
when
people
want
to
pass
on
information
to
you
want
to
have
the
we
want
you
to
have
the
accurate
information.
So
the
four
things
that
ice
focuses
on
are
those
who
have
entered
the
country
illegally
have
gone
to
court,
ordered
by
an
immigration
judge
to
leave
the
country.
So
these
are
people
that
aren't
in
custody.
These
are
people
that
have
gone
to
court
have
been
ordered
by
an
immigration
judge.
A
A
Thirdly,
those
convicted
of
crimes.
Well,
that's
who
ice
is
going
after
that's
their
focus
and,
lastly,
those
arrested
and
charged
with
crimes.
Those
are
who
ice
is
going
after
so
I
think
that's
important
for
everybody
to
know,
and
everybody
understand
and
I,
don't
know
that
ice
necessarily
does
a
great
job
in
getting
that
information
out,
but
I
think
the
immigration
attorneys
I
know
the
religious
people
that
were
there.
A
Is
they
focus
on
specific
targets?
So
if
they
target
an
individual
who
maybe
meets
one
of
these
four
criterias?
That
I
talked
about
I
mean
anybody
else
around
in
that
situation.
You
know
who
knows
what
they
do
with
those
individuals,
but
ice
does
not
do
what
what
the
media
likes
to
refer
to
as
raids.
So
just
FYI
questions
on
that.
B
F
You
can't
just
send
me
that
brief
narrative
via
email,
because
I
would
like
to
post
a
I,
think
I
sent
a
young
lady
to
you
is
gonna,
be
doctor.
That's
going
to
have
some
questions
and
I
told
her
just
talk
to
you
as
foreign,
that's
concerned,
because
they
were
trying
to
get
good
at
the
support
and
I
was
saying
it's
not
that
I'm
opposed
to
their
endeavors.
F
But
what
I
suggested
is
that
they
build
utilize
their
time
to
build
a
legal
defense.
Fine
I
think
that
would
be
most
constructive
because
all
we
do
is
provide
a
service.
So
in
this
Marad
of
individuals
who
do
come
to
our
County,
most
of
my
on
account
I
don't
see
a
lot
of
individuals.
That's
in
Kankakee
County,
coming
up
to
the
mic,
so
I
understand
if
they
want
to
handle
the
problem,
I
think
it's
misplaced
to
bring
in
the
Kankakee
County.
She
goes
to
Washington
and
then
address
it.
F
They'll
go
through
your
Senators
as
far
as
that's
concerned,
I
want
to
ask
the
question:
did
Chui
show
up
at
that
meeting?
No
I
think
so,
but
my
thing
was
I
applaud
again
the
sheriff
office
when
they
I
mean
he
didn't
have
to,
but
he
did
take
him
through
or
whatever,
which
would
eliminate
a
lot
of
what
they
do
on
a
day
to
day
basis,
but
all
of
these
myths-
that's
out
there,
that's
making
it
look
like
it's
just
you
know.
The
county
is
just
jumping
out
here
and
we're
doing
all
of
this
disservice.
F
A
A
Right
I
will
I
will
go
through
this
fairly
quickly
for
those
of
you
that
went
to
the
state
of
the
county
breakfast.
This
may
be
repetitive
and
for
that
I
apologize,
but
I
think
it's
important
that
as
board
members,
whether
you've
been
here
a
while
or
whether
you're
just
newly
appointed
to
the
board
recently
I
think
it's
important
that
there
is
information
that
you
should
know
about
what
our
office
does,
both
on
the
corrections,
side
and
the
sworn
side.
So
I
will
go
through
this
relatively
quickly.
A
A
We
highlighted
the
important
things
that
everybody
assumes
that
we
do,
but
some
people
still
don't
know
and
and
I'm
not
gonna,
go
over
all
the
statutes
with
you.
But
basically
we
work
together
to
fulfill
the
statutory
and
ethical
obligation,
the
office
of
Sheriff,
the
duties
of
the
sheriff.
We
serve
the
courts.
We
maintain
and
execute
warrants
civil
process,
court
orders
and
judgments,
and
other
duties
is
directed
by
the
courts.
A
We're
conservators
of
the
piece
and
and
I
say
that
only
because
we've
heard
before
where
people
have
said
well,
there's
nothing
in
the
statute
that
requires
you
to
patrol
the
roads.
Well,
there's
nothing
in
the
statute
that
requires
the
village
of
Bourbonnais
or
the
city
of
Kankakee
to
patrol
the
roads.
So
that's
a
that's
really.
A
non-issue
to
be
the
conservator
of
the
piece
prevent
crime
is
something
that
you
as
a
board,
allow
us
to
do,
and
for
that
we
appreciate
it.
But
it's
not
something
out
there
that
we
have
to
that.
A
A
Supervisor
safety,
the
office
of
supervisor
safety
is
created
for
each
county
to
be
held
by
the
sheriff
of
the
county
jail
facilities.
You
all
know
we
have
to
jail
facilities,
the
sheriff's
response
worth
four
for
both
of
those,
and
we
are
responsible
for
the
prisoners
and,
lastly,
we
are.
We
have
custody
and
care
of
the
courthouse
in
the
jails,
so
those
are
just
simplified
duties
of
the
sheriff's
office.
I
talked
earlier
about
the
about
the
fatals,
and
here
is
a
these-
are
23
fatals
that
have
happened
this
year.
A
As
you
can
see,
we
have
all
the
locations
indicated
on
there,
which
is
how
we
go
about
our
business
in
trying
to
fix
problem
areas
and
without
focusing
this
is
a
little
bit
easier
from
a
map.
If
you
can
look,
if
you
look
at
the
bottom
and
for
those
of
you
that
there's
a
bottom
area
right
here
that
is
45
and
8,000
right
out
here,
just
south,
that
is
a
problem
area
for
us.
A
We
have
met
with
the
Department
of
Transportation
various
fire
departments
of
the
Illinois
State
Police,
to
improve
that
to
improve
that
intersection
as
best
we
can.
So
there
are
obviously
or
other
problem
areas
that
we
are
also
focusing
on.
But
right
now
that
45,
52
and
8,000
is
is
a
problem
area
for
us.
So
something
that
we're
well
aware
of.
A
A
A
A
Fortunately,
we
have
great
cooperation
with
all
the
municipalities
in
town
in
our
County.
Rather
we
get
along
very
well.
We
work
well
together
and
that's
a
big
help
on
both
ends.
We
help
them.
They
help
us.
We
are
this
county
and
has
been
said
before
by
people
outside
of
our
County.
How
well
the
police
agencies
in
our
in
our
County
work
together.
So
that's
a
it's
a
credit
to
all
the
administrators
and
police
agencies
within
the
county.
A
The
corrections
expenses,
so
if
you
look
at
this
number
and
these
date
back
all
the
way
to
2005
when
we
first
started
housing
for
erotic,
county
prisoners,
our
bed
rental
program,
as
some
people
affectionately,
refer
to
it
as
our
over-under
budget,
whether
we're
over
under
budget
and
I
would
I
would
call
it
rather
over
under
expenses
rather
than
a
budget.
But
it's
really
relative
to
our
out
of
county
population.
As
our
numbers
go
up,
our
expenses
also
go
up,
but
so
does
our
revenue.
A
So,
unfortunately,
our
revenue
normally
outpaces
our
expenses
when
it
comes
to
out
of
county.
Some
of
the
expenses
that
we
have
are
out
of
our
control.
Medical
issues
are
one.
We
spend
a
lot
of
time
and
I've
said
this
before
that.
The
majority
of
inmates
that
we
have
in
our
custody
locally
don't
take
care
of
themselves,
whether
on
the
street.
They
don't
get
medical
treatment,
but
we
as
a
county
are
required
to
care
for
their
medical
needs
and
I've
said
it
before.
I.
A
A
So
the
revenue.
If
you
look
at
the
revenue,
you
can
see
that,
based
on
the
graph
that
the
majority
of
our
revenue
comes
from
the
United
States
Marshal
Service.
But
you
can
see,
on
the
left
hand,
side
that
list
of
all
the
agencies
that
we
have
housed
for
since
2005
Cook,
County,
McLean,
County,
Kane,
County,
Iroquois,
County,
Department,
Homeland,
Security,
the
Marshalls,
and
that
total.
A
For
that
same
time,
period
of
revenue
is
a
hundred
and
seventeen
million
three
hundred
and
thirty
three
thousand,
which,
if
you
take
the
hundred
and
thirty
million
in
expenses,
subtract
117
in
revenue.
That
leaves
you
with
about
thirteen
million
three
hundred
thousand
divided
by
fifteen.
Is
we
have
ran
the
corrections
division
for
about
nine
hundred
nine
thousand
dollars
a
year
and
I'm
not
sure
you
can
find
anywhere
else
across
the
country
that
has
done
that
so
credit
to
the
board
for
allowing
us
to
do
it?
A
A
Don't
get
ahead
of
yourself
bones
come
on,
but
that's
a
great
question.
That's
a
great
question.
So
the
this
slide,
the
corrections
average
daily
population
I
only
got
two
slides,
so
we'll
be
quick,
average
daily
population.
You
can
see
the
yellow
represents
out
of
County.
So
you
can
see
that
the
majority
of
years
our
auto
County
population,
has
exceeded
our
local
population,
which
is
technically
where
we
want
to
be.
If
we
want
it
to
benefit
the
county
there.
A
There
were
a
couple
years
where
obviously
early
on
the
first
year
as
we
built
it
up
and
then
the
lull
in
2015
2016,
which
doesn't
mean
that
it
didn't
benefit
us
because
it
did,
but
it
didn't
that
benefit
is
quite
as
well.
So
it's
it's
been
a
positive
thing
for
us,
and
hopefully
it
continues
for
a
long
long
time
so
and
then,
lastly,
the
cost
of
housing
locals
versus
out
of
county.
A
So
one
of
the
problems
that
that
we've
talked
about
a
number
of
different
times,
because
everybody
says
was
it
costed,
I
wasn't
in
me:
what's
it
cost
you
housing
out
of
county
in
me
and
the
the
the
biggest
issue
with
that
is.
Where
do
you
draw
the
line
with
staff,
the
need
for
staff
versus
the
need
for
no
additional
staff
when
you're
talking
numbers,
if
our
number,
if
our
local
number
is,
is
two
hundred
and
seventy,
which
is
our
average?
A
And
we
get
a
call
from
somebody
and
says:
hey
I
want
to
house
two
people
in
your
jail.
Well,
the
cost
for
us
basically
amounts
to
what
we
pay
them
in
meals.
Well,
you
pay
for
the
meals
every
day.
That
would
be
the
cost
of
those
two
inmates,
because
we
have
to
keep
the
lights
on
whether
we
have
Auto
County
inmates
or
not.
A
Our
total
utility
expense
at
both
jails
is
seven
hundred
eighty
seven
thousand
our
liability
insurance
is
eight
hundred
twenty
four
thousand,
that's
the
total
number
and
then
our
staff
benefit
expense,
which
includes
your
IMR
F
contributions
and
your
contributions
to
employee
benefits
of
three
million
one
hundred.
Ninety
two
thousand
dollars
for
a
total
of
seventeen
million
dollars
just
over
17
million
dollars
right
here
in
this
far
right
column.
A
Now
how
you
break
that
down
you
you
get
into
what
our
revenue
is
and
what
our
direct
jail
expense
is.
If
we
don't
have
the
outer
county
prisoners-
and
that
involves
our
staffing
levels,
which
would
drop
significantly
but
remember
one
of
the
things
that
is
probably
most
confusing
if
we
have
not
one
out
of
County
inmate,
we're
gonna
have
seventy
five
employees
of
those
75
employees.
Those
75
employees,
are
the
highest
paid
correction
staff.
A
We
have
because
it's
by
seniority,
so
everybody
we
hire
to
work
in
the
jail
when
we
have
out
of
County
inmates
is
on
the
bottom
part
of
the
payroll,
so
they're
the
cheapest
employees
we
got
and
I
don't
mean
that
litter
or
figuratively
whatever.
So,
if
we
don't
have
them
you're,
getting
rid
of
we're
getting
rid
of
our
lowest
paid
employees,
you're
still
gonna
have
these
75
employees
are
gonna,
make
the
same
money,
regardless
of
whether
we
have
zero
out
of
County
or
whether
we
have
300
so
and
I.
A
Think
sometimes
that
gets
a
little
bit
confusing
for
people,
because
we
sometimes
have
a
tendency
forget
that
we
are
responsible
for
those
local
inmates,
which
is
our
priority.
Obviously
so
our
utility
expense
broken
down
the
those
numbers
are
simply
if
we
were
to
close
the
downtown
jail.
Those
were
the
utilities
that
cost
that's
what
the
utilities
cost
at
the
downtown
jail
in
that.
Second,
it's
that
second
row
under
utilities
and
it's
got
local
and
out
of
County
same
thing
with
liability.
Insurance
I
mean
talking
to
our
liability,
company
or
liability
carrier.
A
Those
are
the
numbers
that
they
gave
us
and
same
with
staff
benefits.
If
you
look
at
the
staff
benefits,
the
outer
county
benefits
aren't
that
great,
because
your
IMR
F
contributions
aren't
as
great
and
a
lot
of
our
younger
correctional
officers
still
live
at
home
and
are
still
on
mom
and
dad's
insurance.
God
bless
them.
A
Our
local
cost
per
inmate
is
about
a
hundred
and
two
dollars
and
32
cents
based
on
these
numbers
are
on
a
county.
Cost
is
about
$48
and
84
cents.
So
when
you
figure
we're
charging
$90
a
day,
you
can
do
the
math
on
that
and
figure
out
how
that
benefits
us
and
again,
that's
just
not
expenses
versus
revenue.
That
is
which
is
our
budget.
That
is
all
the
expenses.
Utilities
benefits
liability
insurance.
So
these
numbers
are
significant
when
it
comes
to
the
benefit
that
this
program
gives
to
us.
A
So
if
you
look
down
at
the
bottom
down
in
this
area
here,
the
the
total
jail
expense
with
the
inmate
program
is
17
million
the
total
jail
revenue
with
the
revenues
that
we
have
this
year,
plus
the
about
a
hundred
and
seventy
two
million
of
revenue
or
a
hundred.
Seventy
two
thousand.
We
would
have
anyway
comes
out
to
about
12
to
77
for
a
cost
to
run
the
jail
at
about
four
point:
eight
million
and
again
that's
everything.
A
That's
everything
without
the
inmate
program,
which
is
on
the
far
right
hand,
side
down
at
the
bottom,
the
total
jail
expenses
is
still
ten
point.
One
your
jail
revenue
is
only
a
hundred
and
seventy
two
thousand
dollars
and
the
cost
to
run
the
jail
is
about
nine
point.
Nine
million
so
I
hope
that,
and
we
will
continue
to
upgrade,
update
this
and
these
these
numbers
of
our
employees
and
and
I'm
not
very
good
at
Paylocity.
So
I
did
a
lot
of
this
manually,
but
we
went
through
every
employee
and
got
every
employees
hourly
rate.
A
B
I
A
A
few
well,
we
used
at
the
at
the
at
the
state
of
the
county.
I
think
we
had
a
different
forum
because
we
had
there
was
three
less
at
the
state
of
the
county.
We
added
three,
so
we
changed
the
slide
actually
and
I
believe
there
were
six
of
those
at
that
time:
nine,
twenty
or
nineteen.
However
many
we
had
and
I
think
now,
with
the
last
two,
a
total
of
those
23
are
in
county's
jurisdiction.
B
A
H
I'll
mention
I
said
at
the
full-bore,
but
just
so
this
community,
since
the
the
courthouse
is
in
the
custody
of
the
sheriff,
we're
gonna
be
talking,
probably
after
the
meeting
about
the
ABA
courtroom.
Yeah
in
the
jury,
deliberation
room,
which
is
where
that
sometimes
that's
where
the
people
are
brought
before
they
go
into
the
courtroom,
so
I
out
from
the
jail.
So
I
just
want
to
mention
that
the
committee
that
we're
gonna
make
sure
that
everything's
in
line
with
the
security
and
everything
that's
going
on
there.
So
yep.
B
L
Basically,
I
go
through
that
real
quickly
that
we're
down
the
month
of
November
our
calls
are
at
85
or
average
about
102
102
a
month.
The
autopsies
basically
were
we're
down
this
month.
So
that's
that's
good
and
in
the
long
run
other
than
that
you
can
see.
My
like
I
said
if
I
talked
many
times
before
that
our
our
accidents
are
different
with
our
amount
of
vehicles
r17
compared
to.
L
Odie's,
actually,
we
thought
we
knocked
out
of
here
at
29,
but
yesterday
one
of
our
pendings
came
back.
We
had
no
idea
that
this
was
going
to
be
an
overdose
and
they
ended
up
being
loaded
with
fentanyl
and
in
cocaine,
so
that
was
on
so
we're
now
at
at
30,
which
is
over,
which
we
were
last
year
and
the
only
other
part
that
I
put
on
there
I
think
it
was
registered
in
the
paper
last
night
that
we
had
twenty
eight
narcan
saves
to
the
police
officers.
That's
a
lot.