Town hall discussion planned tonight on drug overdoses

The Kansas City District Office of the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department will hold a free town hall meeting at 6 p.m. Tuesday, June 28, at the Kansas City Kansas Community College Performing Arts Center, 7250 State Ave.

Since Jan. 1, there have been 70 overdoses and 13 overdose deaths in Kansas City, Kansas, according to a police spokesman.

Since 2018, the number of overdoses has doubled every year. That year, there were only 13 overdoses; last year there were 110. It is a troubling trend being played out across the United States in big cities, as well as small towns and those in between, like KCK, according to a police spokesman.

Counterfeit pills that are made to look exactly like those dispensed from a pharmacy are fueling the increase, according to police. They contain potentially lethal amounts of fentanyl – a drug that is 50 times stronger than heroin and 100 times stronger than morphine. Many who take the pills are unaware they contain fentanyl.

Once ingested or inhaled, most overdoses occur within seconds to minutes, the spokesman stated. The only way to prevent death is by quickly administering naloxone, known commonly by the name brand, Narcan, according to police.

The DEA selected the Kansas City metropolitan area as one of 11 locations in the U.S. for Operation Engage, a community outreach effort to address this nation-wide threat posed by fentanyl and methamphetamine. This is the first of several upcoming Operation Engage events scheduled for the area.

The event will feature a panel discussion followed by a question-and-answer session with the audience.

Panelists will include DEA Assistant Special Agent in Charge, Rogeana Patterson-King; Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department Capt. John Diaz; Libby Davis, a Shawnee mother who lost her 16-year-old son last year to a counterfeit pill; Kansas City, Kansas, Fire Department Battalion Chief Chance Grey and EMT Joshua Magaha; and Megan Fowler, LCSW, director of recovery services for First Call.

  • Story from Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department

Weather warms up today

Temperatures warm up a little from yesterday, with a high near 86 in Tuesday’s forecast, according to the National Weather Service.

Then, Wednesday will see temperatures reach 91, the weather service said.

Above normal temperatures are in the forecast from midweek through Friday, according to the weather service, but dangerous heat is not expected. Humidity will be lower on these days.

Thunderstorm chances will return on Friday, with chances for potential storms continuing through the Fourth of July weekend, the weather service said. Severe weather chances are low with these storms.

Sunday will be the last day for rain chances, and mostly sunny weather with a high of 91 is forecast for the Fourth of July, according to the weather service.

Today, it will be sunny, with a high near 86 and a south southwest wind of 5 to 7 mph, the weather service said.

Tonight, it will be clear, with a low of 64 and a south southwest wind of 3 to 6 mph, according to the weather service.

Wednesday, it will be sunny with a high of 91, the weather service said. A light south southwest wind will increase to 5 to 9 mph in the morning.
Wednesday night, it will be clear, with a low of 67 and a south wind of 6 to 8 mph, according to the weather service.

Thursday, it will be sunny, with a high near 92 and a south wind of 7 to 13 mph, gusting as high as 24 mph, the weather service said.

Thursday night, it will be mostly clear, with a low of 72, according to the weather service.

Friday, there is a 40 percent chance of showers after 1 p.m., with a high near 91, the weather service said.

Friday night, there is a 50 percent chance of showers, with thunderstorms also possible after 1 a.m., according to the weather service. The low will be around 69.

Saturday, there is a 60 percent chance of showers, mainly before 1 p.m., with a high near 86, the weather service said.

Saturday night, there is a 50 percent chance of showers, with a low of 69, according to the weather service.

Sunday, there is a 40 percent chance of showers, with a high near 88, the weather service said.

Sunday night, it will be partly cloudy, with a low of 72, according to the weather service.

Monday, it will be mostly sunny, with a high near 91, the weather service said.

Kansas GOP governor candidate arrested on felony charge plunges ahead with campaign

Candidate Arlyn Briggs confident criminal threat case will be dropped

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Republican gubernatorial candidate Arlyn Briggs recorded a campaign commercial outlining his vision of conservative government in Kansas only to find out a prominent Christian radio network had no intention of airing the advertisement.

He said an employee at Bott Radio Network in Overland Park explained the campaign spot couldn’t be used on the network after learning of Briggs’ arrest on a charge of criminal threat against a law enforcement officer. The arrest in Allen County was a misunderstanding that ought to be resolved in his favor, Briggs said, but the radio network’s rebuff was a setback in his primary campaign against GOP frontrunner Derek Schmidt, who is the state’s attorney general.

“I’m a strong Christian,” Briggs said. “My job is to be a strong reflection of Jesus Christ.”

Briggs, 64, of rural Kincaid, said the legal trouble stemmed from allowing a man being sought by law enforcement for an alleged stalking offense to stay with him in early June. Briggs noticed a sheriff’s department vehicle driving slowly past his home, so he called the department to remind authorities of the “castle doctrine,” the stand-your-ground right of individuals in Kansas to take reasonable action, including deadly force, in defense of a home.

He warned law enforcement officers not to try anything, he said, and pointedly added “I may shoot you.” He said he wouldn’t have actually fired on deputies, and nothing happened. But officers later served an Anderson County warrant on him for criminal threat. He was released June 15 from Allen County Jail.

If successful in the Aug. 2 primary against Schmidt, Briggs would likely face Democratic frontrunner Gov. Laura Kelly as well as independent candidate Dennis Pyle and Libertarian Seth Cordell in November. If victorious in the general election, Briggs said he would donate his state government salary to charity.

“I feel the primary is where the contest is this year. Kelly is so liberal,” Briggs said. “I say vote for the person. Not what they said, but what they do.”

Briggs said he was disappointed with Schmidt as a political leader, and asserted the attorney general was too focused on getting on U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran’s “good list” in anticipation of eventually running for Moran’s seat in the U.S. Senate. Briggs said he’d challenged Schmidt to five debates, but hadn’t received a response.

“I think there’s growing concern among conservatives across the United States and Kansas with what’s happening with government and our leaders,” Briggs said.

On social media last year, Briggs was critical of state legislators who he claimed talked about the value of local government control and then passed bills stripping local elected officials of influence. He said they all should be taught a lesson by being voted out of office.

Briggs ran for the Kansas House in 2012 and 2020, but lost both contests. He was soundly defeated in the most recent campaign, falling to state Rep. Trevor Jacobs, with Jacobs securing 83% of the vote in a GOP primary.

He said he lived in Johnson County for about 30 years. He worked for a Kansas City bank and at Hallmark and has been employed as a trucker and farmer. He performed mission work in more than a dozen countries, he said.

Briggs’ lieutenant governor running mate is Abilene resident Lance Berland, who Briggs said recently performed community service in Colorado to deal with his own legal challenges.

On social media, Berland said “we the people” were engaged in a fight against Republican and Democrat “warmongers,” the “most bloated, wasteful bureaucracy in human history” and “corrupt crony capitalists.” He claimed businessman George Soros, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Berkshire Hathaway chairman Warren Buffett were involved in demise of U.S. freedom.

“We have been played, and Americans killed, by our own government and the ultra-wealthy non-citizens who dominate our nation from Davos, Geneva, and Brussels,” he said. “These people have perpetuated and delivered the world only racism, eugenics, war, toxicity, disease and unnecessary deaths by the hundreds of millions. These people serve only themselves and the devil.”

He also expressed disappointment Presidents Donald Trump and Joe Biden were convinced by the “global health mafia” to recommend Americans be vaccinated against COVID-19.

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2022/06/27/kansas-gop-governor-candidate-arrested-on-felony-charge-plunges-ahead-with-campaign/