AMERICAN POLICE BEAT: SEPTEMBER 2017 9 Medical workers and law enforcement officials treat a woman who overdosed on heroin, the second case in a matter of minutes in Warren, Ohio. According to recent statistics, at least 4,149 Ohioans died from drug overdoses in 2016, a 36 percent leap from just the previous year and making Ohio the leader in the nation’s overdose deaths. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images) I n Ohio, Butler County Sheriff Richard K. Jones says he will not allow his officers to carry Narcan. Jones says he under- stands that some people disagree, but he has his reasons. Jones says Narcan costs are “sucking the taxpayers dry.” He also appeared to suggest that since Narcan doesn’t cure addiction like it does acute overdose, saving the wrong people’s lives is a waste of time. “All we’re doing is re- viving them, we’re not curing them,” Jones told NBC News. “The police feel unsafe using this Nar- can because they have to get down on their knees, squirt it into their nose. There’s no law that says police officers have to carry Narcan,” he said. “Until there is, we’re not going to use it.” Boss is not interested WHETHER YOU’RE DEFENDING FREEDOM OR ENJOYING IT, OUR OPTICS ARE READY FOR ANYTHING. ©2017 Trijicon, Inc. | Wixom, MI USA | 1-800-338-0563 | 17TRIJ12129-R-1/2 | trijicon.com TRIJICON RMR® TYPE 2 What we’ve learned from decades of deployment with America’s greatest fighting forces, we’ve put back into our technology for America’s greatest shooters. • Upgraded electronics for increased survivability • Enhanced ruggedness for the toughest conditions • Easily adjustable windage/elevation • Patented, concave housing shape for increased durability • Ideal for concealed carry and compatible with all RMR mounts • Available now See the new technology at Trijicon.com/RMR.