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Kansas City Chiefs fans found dead in friend's backyard: what to know

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Kansas City Chiefs fans found dead in friend's backyard: what to know

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Mystery shrouds the deaths of three Kansas City Chiefs fans found dead in their friend’s snowy backyard after a Jan. 7 NFL watch party.

Jordan Willis hosted the gathering in his Northwest 83rd Terrace home. After Ricky Johnson, 38, Clayton McGeeney, 36, and David Harrington, 37, were found dead on his property two days later, he reportedly told family members that his friends “froze to death,” a victim’s family member told FOX4 Kansas City. 

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Willis has since moved out of the home “in fear of retaliation,” according to his attorney John Picerno. 

Willis is not considered a suspect and has not been charged with a crime – the Kansas City Police Department said last week that “this case is 100% not being investigated as a homicide,” and added on Friday that they “do not anticipate any additional information released prior to the findings of the medical examiner.”

PARENTS OF KANSAS CITY CHIEFS FAN FOUND DEAD THINK VICTIMS ‘SAW SOMETHING THEY SHOULDN’T HAVE SEEN’

David Harrington, far left, Clayton McGeeney, second from right, and Ricky Johnson, right, were found dead in their friend’s backyard two days after they had gathered to watch the Kansas City Chiefs playoff game. (Ricky Johnson on Facebook)

“It is still the case that the ruling on the cause of death is the next piece to determine any needed additional investigative tasks,” Captain Jacob Becchina told Fox News Digital on Friday, adding that every major news outlet across the country had lodged at least one inquiry about the case with their communications department.

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A spokesperson for Frontier Forensics Midwest, the private company contracted by Platte County to carry out autopsies, told Fox News that the results of the men’s toxicology reports will take 6 to 8 weeks to process, while their full autopsy reports won’t be released for another 10 to 12 weeks. 

Experts have told Fox News Digital that a drug laced with fentanyl could have contributed to their deaths, or a drug like K2 that can be mistaken for marijuana and cause an overheating sensation that may have led the men to jump into the snow before passing out. 

The autopsies have already been carried out, the worker confirmed, with two of the men’s family members saying their deceased loved ones had already been cremated. 

When asked about discrepancies in one of his previous statements, Picerno told Fox News Digital on Thursday that he is “not making any more public statements until the autopsy has been completed.” Picerno’s account of his client’s final hours with the three men – and the subsequent 48 hours when the victim’s family members allegedly tried to contact him repeatedly when they hadn’t heard from their loved ones – has changed multiple times. 

Family and friends of Clayton McGeeney, left, David Harrington, center, and Ricky Johnson, right, are clamoring for answers after the three men inexplicably died in freezing temperatures outside their friend’s Kansas City home. (Facebook)

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A gruesome discovery

After she was unable to reach her partner or Willis by phone, McGeeney’s fiancee reportedly drove to Willis’ Northland residence on Jan. 9 and banged on the door. 

When she got no answer, she broke in, announcing her presence and shouting Willis’ name inside. Picerno told Fox News Digital that his client did not hear the knocks at his door or the woman breaking in. 

There, she stumbled upon one of the men’s bodies on the back porch. She called police, who arrived at the scene around 8:51 p.m.

“Officers responded to the back porch and confirmed there was a dead body,” the Kansas City Police Department wrote in a press release. “Upon further investigation, officers located two other dead bodies in the backyard. There were no obvious signs of foul play observed at or near the crime scene.”

FAMILY OF KANSAS CITY CHIEFS FAN FOUND DEAD OUTSIDE PAL’S HOUSE THINKS HE WAS DRUGGED

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McGeeney’s fiancée found one of the men dead on Jordan Willis’ back porch, pictured. (DWS for Fox News Digital)

McGeeney’s fiancee told Fox News Digital that she had “answered any questions the detectives have had and will continue to do so,” and would not comment further.

At least one of the men, Johnson, wasn’t wearing his coat – his father told Fox News Digital that “he never would have gone outside without a coat.”

Picerno confirmed accounts on social media that his client answered the door for police with a wine glass in hand – however, he said that the wine glass had been used for its intended purpose the night before and contained just water at the time. 

He said that, although Willis slept through the break in, he was awoken by police outside and was underdressed because he had been sleeping.

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Willis was “cooperative with detectives the day the deceased were discovered,” the Kansas City Police Department said; Picerno told Fox News Digital that Willis allowed them to search his home without a warrant and with no lawyer present. 

Ross Nigro, an attorney retained by Johnson’s family, told Fox News Digital that police carried out a second search with a warrant on Jan. 11. The Kansas City Police Department did not confirm this, citing an active investigation.

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS FANS DEATHS: DRUGS, FREEZING WEATHER COULD HAVE CREATED LETHAL CONDITIONS, EXPERTS SAY

An exterior view of the backyard and porch of Jordan Willis’s home in Kansas City, Missouri on Friday, Jan. 26, 2024. The bodies of Willis’ three friends – Ricky Johnson, Clayton McGeeney, and David Harrington – were found in Willis’ backyard, with one body found on the porch, on Jan. 9, 2024, two days after attending a Kansas City Chiefs watch party at the home. (Delbert Shaw for Fox News Digital)

The night of the game

McGeeney, Harrington, Johnson and Willis all attended Park Hill High School together, friends told Fox News Digital. Picerno’s attorney said that his client was high school friends with two of the men and had met the other man about four years earlier. 

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Alan McGeeney told The Kansas City Star that his cousin mentioned that he would be watching the Chiefs game with friends while they were working a flooring job together earlier on Jan. 7. 

Initially, Picerno told outlets that there were just four men in Willis’ house that night. But on Jan. 23, the attorney told FOX4 Kansas City that he misspoke, saying that a fifth man had watched the game with them. 

That man, who has not been named and has since hired a criminal defense attorney, told the outlet that he was not the last person to see the men alive, and that all four were awake and watching “Jeopardy” when he left the house around midnight. 

Picerno said later on, his client walked McGeeney, Johnson and Harrington out of his house and went to sleep on his couch.

BROTHER OF CHIEFS FAN WHO WAS FOUND DEAD IN FRIEND’S BACKYARD SPEAKS OUT, SAYS STORY ‘NOT ADDING UP’ 

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Jordan Willis has moved out of the house on Northwest 83rd Terrace in Kansas City, pictured, since the incident. (Delbert Shaw for Fox News Digital)

Days without contact

Family members told Fox News Digital that they knew something was awry when their loved ones never returned home or showed up for work, respectively, the day after the Chiefs game against the Los Angeles Chargers. 

Johnson never showed up for work at his family’s construction company that Monday. After repeated attempts to reach him, his father Rickie Johnson Sr. told Fox News Digital, his family worked to find the address where his son watched the game.

A friend of the three men, Kaylee La Tier, wrote in a Facebook post that her husband “banged on [Willis’s] door for 20 minutes.” Lyndsey Rae Baldwin wrote that she and other friends had attempted to contact Willis for 24 hours with no response.

Attorney Andrew Talge, who is representing the fifth man at the gathering, said that his client texted Willis after McGeeney’s fiancée and Johnson’s mother had contacted him about their missing loved ones.

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3 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS FANS FOUND FROZEN OUTSIDE HOME OF FRIEND WHO HAD ‘NO KNOWLEDGE’ OF DEATHS: LAWYER

Ricky Johnson’s mother, Norma Chester, is pictured with her son and one of his three children above. She contacted the fifth man at the watch party when she could not reach Johnson or Willis and had not seen her son in two days, attorney Andrew Talge said. (Norma Chester)

Jennifer Marquez, Harrington’s mother, told Fox News Digital that her son uncharacteristically never responded to her Sunday text message.

Picerno has denied these claims, saying “none of those people called him on his cellphone.”

“One of them, I believe it was the fiancée, did send him a message on Facebook Messenger. But he didn’t receive it until after police had,” he said.

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The three men’s cars were also parked outside Willis’ house – his attorney told Fox News Digital that they were in the street, not his client’s driveway, and that it wasn’t atypical for his friends to leave their cars there. Because his client did not go outside, he said, he did not notice the cars.

In the days after the game

Picerno’s account of what Willis did in the days before police arrived has varied between interviews with different news outlets. 

He told the New York Post that his client slept for 48 hours after his friends left. He later clarified to Fox News Digital that Willis slept for “a lot” of the next two days – not necessarily through the entire period – and did so with noise-canceling headphones and a loud fan that prevented him from hearing knocks at his door. 

Picerno also noted that his client works from home, although it is still unclear whether he was working in the days after the deadly Chiefs watch party. 

Ricky Johnson, pictured alongside his father Rickie Johnson Sr., and his children. (Provided by Johnson family )

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“That part makes no sense to me,” said Jonathan Price, Johnson’s brother, in an interview with Fox & Friends. “Especially when, it seems like you’re a responsible individual, a responsible enough individual to… gain a Ph.D. … in what seems like a very complicated science… If you’re one of those type of people in order… to sleep all day on a Monday, which I assume was a work day, if you’re working from home… I don’t know how that is possible. I definitely wouldn’t be able to do that.”

Dr. Michael Baden told Fox News Digital that Willis’ story of sleeping through all or most of 48 hours could make sense if the men had taken a drug like fentanyl. 

“If these four people all took it together, the guy on the couch sleeps it off for a long time, whereas the three who went outside disoriented, maybe didn’t have on their coats. Because of the freezing weather, it [could be] a combination of the drugs and hypothermia that caused their death.” 

Willis has two dogs, begging the question of how he could have gone two days without letting them outside during the two days the men laid dead in his backyard. 

While Picerno said that the animals were staying with Willis’ father during that period, Nigro told Fox News Digital that another individual who was at the house that night – possibly the fifth man – recalled that the dogs were present. 

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Who is Jordan Willis?

Willis, a Virginia native, graduated with a Ph.D. in chemical and physical Biology from Vanderbilt University in 2014. He previously studied chemistry and molecular biology at Northwest Missouri State University. 

According to an interview that Willis gave to the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative’s website in 2022, he is the senior principal scientist at the IAVI Neutralizing Antibody Center in Kansas City. 

Picerno confirmed that his client worked at IAVI, and said he was taking a leave of absence in light of recent events. 

In 2022, Willis earned a Young Investigator Award from the Scripps Consortium for HIV/AIDS, according to the initiative’s website, for his “significant contributions to HIV vaccine development.”

In the intro section to his now-deleted Facebook page, Willis said he was “walking the line to be the funnest guy in the room and a full-on mental breakdown.”

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Who were Clayton McGeeney, Ricky Johnson and David Harrington?

Clayton McGeeney has one daughter, according to his obituary, and loved traveling the country on his Harley. One high school friend told Fox News Digital that he was known for riding his skateboard around town in their younger years.

He had installed flooring for 20 years, had been engaged to his fiancée for 12 and was a “hard worker and a sharp shooter,” his obituary read.

Ricky Johnson was the father of three girls, aged 2, 9 and 14, who “loved him to death,” according to his father, Rickie Johnson Sr. The Johnson father and son owned a construction business together, the family said. Johnson’s mother, Norma Chester, told Fox News Digital that he was “a very good person.”

Harrington’s mother told Fox News Digital he could “make you pass out laughing” and would “give you the shirt off his back.” (FOX4 KC)

“He was a good father, a good brother, a good son, a good uncle. He was not a bad guy. He had the best smile,” Chester said earlier this week. 

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David Harrington could make you “almost pass out laughing,” according to his mother, Jennifer Marquez. He was a stepfather to his girlfriend’s two children, according to his obituary, and a little league baseball coach. 

His father, Jon Harrington, called him a “rabid” Kansas City Chiefs fan who also loved the Texas Longhorns. His celebration of life, the father said, was an 80-person-strong watch party of the Chiefs game against the Buffalo Bills on Jan. 21.

“Whenever the Chiefs would make a drive, they were all chanting my son’s name. I will never forget that for the rest of my life,” the elder Harrington recalled.

Jennifer Marquez, Harrington’s mother, said that her son was the “best person [she has] ever known” and that she do whatever she could to “find out what happened that night.” (FOX4 KC)

“His favorite thing in the world was to make other people happy and he did that,” Marquez said of her son. “I envy my son – he’s the best person I’ve ever known.”

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Family theories

In light of the suspicious circumstances surrounding their sons’ deaths and Willis’ background in science, two of the three affected families have come forward with accusations that he played an active role in their deaths. 

“Seriously, these were responsible men. How do they go in a backyard and freeze to death, all three of them?” Chester, Johnson’s mother, told Fox News Digital. “Something that comes to my mind: This guy wants to brag about how smart he is, he’s a scientist. My thoughts are that he concocted something and gave it to all three men. I know I’m just thinking, but how could this have happened?”

“I think that Jordan guy drug[ged] them, because they were picking on him. In a nice way … but I think that’s what happened,” Johnson Sr. told Fox News Digital. 

Harrington’s father echoed their suspicions, telling Fox News Digital that he is “not buying” Willis’ story and “doesn’t believe anything [Willis’] attorney says.”

“[Harrington’s mother] and I are both convinced that Jordan Willis played a part in this somehow,” the elder Harrington said on Thursday. “We just haven’t figured out how yet. … What else could it be? Perfectly healthy men don’t just drop off the face of the earth.”

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“I’m thinking that he, the three of them learned something or saw something that they shouldn’t have seen, and he decided ‘well, I need to get rid of you now,’ friends or not,” he said on Thursday.

Marquez, Harrington’s mother, told Fox News Digital that although her son “smoked cigarettes and drank beers with his friends,” she doesn’t believe he overdosed, and that “Jordan [is going to] have everything to do with what we find out” about his death.

“Yes, I believe that something happened that night and that Jordan had something to do with it,” Marquez said. “We all believe that Jordan had something to do with that.”

Willis’ attorney has called the families’ theories “ridiculous.” 

“He’s a scientist, and somehow he’s to blame? That’s an opinion not based in fact,” the attorney said in response to Chester’s comments.

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“There’s no allegation of any animosity between Jordan and his three friends,” Picerno told Fox News Digital on Tuesday. “People want to speculate, [but] it’s not like anyone ever called the police saying, ‘We’re afraid of this Jordan guy.’”

Willis’ father also refuted these claims in an interview outside his home with The New York Post, saying his son “didn’t do anything wrong.” 

“He would never in a million years do anything,” Rodney Willis told the Post on Thursday. 

“These were all good friends of his, these were all people he went to school with, and he took them to a football game the day before for the Chiefs,” Willis’ dad said Thursday outside his home in Kansas City.

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North Dakota

2026 NFL Draft Profile: North Dakota State wide receiver Bryce Lance

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2026 NFL Draft Profile: North Dakota State wide receiver Bryce Lance


The Denver Broncos made their big splash this offseason trading for wide receiver Jaylen Waddle to bolster their offense. The position is now five deep at the position with Waddle, Courtland Sutton, Marvin Mims Jr., Troy Franklin, and Pat Bryant.

The receiving corps has a lot of talent, but also a lot of questions. Sutton isn’t getting any younger and has a significant cap hit in 2027. Additionally, it’s the last year of Mims’ rookie contract. In my opinion, the Broncos don’t have a long-term replacement in the mix for Sutton at the X position, which could be an area they seek to address in the 2026 NFL Draft.

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The Broncos utilizing their second-round selection on a wide receiver is very unlikely. However, a player I believe they will carry a relatively high grade on his North Dakota State standout Bryce Lance. Lance broke out in 2024 during the Bison’s last FCS title with 75 receptions for 1,053 yards and 17 touchdowns catching passes from Cam Miller. This past year, he had 51 receptions, 1,070 receiving yards, and 8 touchdowns with projected Day 2 pick Cole Payton throwing him the ball.

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He checks a lot of the boxes Head Coach Sean Payton covets at the position. Not only that, but I also believe he has the ability to be an explosive X receiver at the next level. Let’s do a deep dive regarding his strengths and weaknesses, and why and when the Broncos should consider selection him in this year’s draft.

Player Profile: Bryce Lance — Wide Receiver — North Dakota State

Height: 6’3” | Weight: 204 pounds | Arm Length: 32-1/8” | Hand Size: 9-1/4” | Age: 23 Years Old

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40-Yard Dash: 4.34 seconds | 10-Yard Split: 1.49 seconds | 3-Cone Drill: 7 seconds

Vertical: 41.5” | Broad Jump: 11’1” | 20-Yard Shuttle: 4.15 seconds

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Statistics: 57 games played, 26 starts, 127 receptions with 2,157 receiving yards. 25 receiving touchdowns, as well as 121 rushing yards and two rushing touchdowns.

Film Room & Highlights

Hart’s Scouting Report

Positives:

  • Good size and frame to handle being an X receiver on the outside in the NFL

  • Elite athlete who has top-tier speed and vertical playmaking ability

  • One of the most productive wide receivers in college football the past two seasons with a penchant for touchdowns and big-time plays that move the chains

  • Incredible ball tracker down the field with a knack for coming down with highlight reel catches in the endzone, much like Sutton

  • Amongst the best in this class most with respect to efficiency on outs, posts, corners, screens, and nine routes

  • Top-notch hops and strong hands who routinely comes down with contested catches

  • Ample special teams experience serving primarily in that fashion for the Bison in 2022 and 2023 after his redshirt season

Negatives:

  • Despite tremendous downfield speed, he doesn’t sport much short area quickness

  • Will likely need to add some strength and weight to handle the rigors of the next level

  • Route refining and release at the line of scrimmage will need some work to take on NFL caliber talent

  • Doesn’t have a lot of drops, but would like to see better catching technique, too often body catching instead of extending out and plucking from the air

Hart’s Projection: Top 75 Selection — Late Second Round, Early Third Round Value



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Ohio

Three Republicans vie for Ohio 5th District Court of Appeals seat

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Three Republicans vie for Ohio 5th District Court of Appeals seat


RICHLAND COUNTY — Three Republican candidates have filed to run for Ohio’s 5th District Court of Appeals, setting up a contest for the six-year judicial term.

The position carries a salary of $187,013 in 2026.

The candidates in the Republican primary include Licking County Municipal Court Judge Matthew George, Chief Legal Counsel to the Governor and Lieutenant Governor Matt Donahue, and attorney Jeff Furr.

Voters will choose one nominee in the Republican primary to advance to the general election.

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Matthew George: Licking County judge emphasizes originalist judicial philosophy

Matthew George, 45, currently serves as a judge on the Licking County Municipal Court.

Republican candidate Matthew George. (Image provided by Matthew George)

He earned a Bachelor of Arts from Ashland University in 2002 and a Juris Doctor from Washington and Lee University School of Law in 2007.

George said he believes a judge must interpret the Constitution and laws based on their plain meaning as understood at the time of adoption.

“Ohio needs judges who will faithfully apply the law, not rewrite it,” George added. “At every level of government, we have seen activist judges impose their own views instead of following the Constitution and statutes as written.

“When judges depart from that standard, they create uncertainty, inject personal preferences into the law and allow shifting political winds to dictate outcomes,” he said. “That is not justice, and it is not how our system of government was designed to work.”

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Experience and judicial philosophy

He first ran for office in 2019, stating he wanted to ensure judges reflect values many Ohioans possess – faith, liberty, limited government and a proper understanding of the constitutional system. 

“Those principles continue to guide me today, and they are the reason I am running for the Court of Appeals,” he said. 

He added three things differentiate him from his opponents – experience, judicial philosophy and independence. 

George noted he is the only candidate who has served on the bench, with 18 years of judicial experience. 

“That means I have a proven record of applying the law fairly, treating people with respect and making tough decisions based on facts and the law, not outside pressure,” he said. 

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He described himself as a consistent, proven conservative and an originalist, stating he has applied that philosophy throughout his career.

George added judges should not act as extensions of political offices.

“I have spent my career as an independent judge and magistrate,” he said. “I will continue to apply the law as written, without influence or agenda.”

“At the end of the day, this race comes down to proven experience, a consistent conservative record and true judicial independence,” he added. “Those are the qualities I bring to the bench.” 

Matt Donahue, 46, currently serves as Chief Legal Counsel to the Governor and Lieutenant Governor. Prior to those roles, he was the chief of the Special Prosecutions Section of the Ohio Attorney General’s Office.

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Republican candidate Matt J. Donahue. (Image provided by Matt J. Donahue)

He earned a Bachelor of Science cum laude from Bethany College and a Juris Doctor from the University of Dayton School of Law. He has not previously held elected office.

Donahue said he is running for the 5th District Court of Appeals because appellate courts play a critical but often under-recognized role in the justice system.

“It is critical to our state and country that the law is applied with consistently conservative legal principles in order to ensure that legal decisions are fair and just,” he said. 

He pointed to his experience as a prosecutor and legal advisor as evidence of that commitment.

“I spent over a decade as a prosecutor handling the most difficult of cases at both the county and the Ohio Attorney General’s office,” he said. “I have a lot of experience in the court of appeals. As a special prosecutor, I was involved with criminal cases in every county in this 15-county district.”

Donahue said appellate experience is essential for the position, noting he has written, argued and participated in numerous appeals and original actions in Ohio’s Courts of Appeals and the Ohio Supreme Court.

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He also cited his involvement in an original action at the Ohio Supreme Court seeking to require a three-judge panel to follow the law as written.

Donahue said he played a major role in the legal aspects of redistricting for years.

“While as judge I will always follow the law and be impartial. I have a record of conservative legal actions that are unmatched,” he said. “I advised on the Heartbeat bill and was in the room when it was signed. I advised on the signing of constitutional carry and stand-your-ground law.” 

He highlighted several professional recognitions, including the Ohio Division of Wildlife Award of Recognition (May 2011), the Attorney General’s Outstanding Achievement Award, Ohio Attorney General’s Office (2013), Meritorious Assistant Prosecutor, Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association (2010), among others. 

Donahue added his wife, Jill, began her television career at WMFD, and his father-in-law, Gene Del Greco, worked for the Richland County Engineer for many years.

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He also noted one of his most prominent endorsements is from Jim Tressel.

Jeff Furr: Attorney emphasizes broad experience and appellate background

Jeff Furr, 65, is an attorney with more than 30 years of legal experience.

Republican candidate Jeff Furr. (Image provided by Jeff Furr)

He has a Bachelor’s degree in Computer and Information Science from The Ohio State University College of Engineering, as well as a Master of Business Administration, a law degree with honors and a Master of Laws in Taxation, all from Capital University.

Furr previously served two terms on Johnstown City Council.

He said he is seeking the position to give back to the community.

“I have a diverse background with experience in law, technology, business and government which is needed for the Court of Appeals as it hears all types of cases,” Furr said. “My background, experience and education make me the perfect candidate for this office.”

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Furr highlights military service and experience 

Furr said he is the only candidate with military experience, having served in the Ohio Army National Guard, and is a member of the American Legion. 

He described himself as a constitutional conservative who believes courts should interpret — not make — the law. He also emphasized his strong family values, noting he has a spouse, children, and grandchildren.

“I will work hard to make sure people have access to the court system,” he added.

Furr said he has more than 30 endorsements from elected officials within the 5th District.

He has argued before a court one level below the U.S. Supreme Court and is licensed to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court.

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He also pointed to his private-sector experience, including more than a decade as a computer programmer, and noted he worked while attending law school and graduated with honors.

“I am not a career politician and will serve only one term,” he added. “I will work hard to make sure people have access to the court system.”





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South Dakota

South Dakota’s Palisades State Park has dramatic spires and 1800s lore

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South Dakota’s Palisades State Park has dramatic spires and 1800s lore


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It’s an ominous, enchanting scene right in the middle of farmland: 50-foot, gothic rock formations with a clear-water creek running through it.

Maybe it’s just another campground in South Dakota, but if you kayak in the canyon, scale the spires or cross the legendary bridges of Palisades State Park, you’ve made it to another era indeed.

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As part of a USA Today Network project exploring places across America with historical and cultural significance, and a celebration of the nation’s 250th birthday, here’s a look at an ideal outdoor destination for a family day trip.

Location

48422 256th Street in Garretson, South Dakota.

Why it matters

It’s been celebrated as a state park for over 50 years now, but old Indian legends here date back centuries, and the quartzite rock chasms are over a billion years old.

History lessons really hold up at the Palisades, remembered for its 19th-century silver rush and that one time Minnesota bandit Jesse James allegedly jumped an 18-foot gap on horseback nearby the park after a botched bank robbery in 1876 – and made it, managing as a fugitive for five more years before his assassination.

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In 1924, then Garretson newspaper reporter W.W. Sanders wrote, “It was across the Devil’s Gulch, as pedigree legend has it, that Jesse James jumped.”

Devil’s Gulch, actually its own city-managed park a couple miles north of the Palisades, still maintains intrigue for the Palisades.

What to see today

Many come to see the migrant birds, who flock along the 1.5-mile-long creek, but the park is wooded enough to spot Great Horned Owls or even white-tailed deer.

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Geologists come to marvel at the metamorphic processes of the park’s pink quartzite.

Ask a local

Ok, you didn’t hear it from us but spend a warm Sunday cliff jumping into Split Rock Creek. Some are over 50-foot drops, but what a thrill! Otherwise, you can more safely canoe, fish, hike or have a picnic. It’s a very clean park, with over 100 campsites and many picnic shelters.

Plan your visit

  • Best time: It feels like an Italian summer to swim in the canyons of Split Rock Creek, but, ohh, you should see those colors in the fall.
  • Hours/admission: Open year-round, with water systems closed from October-April. Camping fees range from $16-$60.
  • Getting there: Palisades is located 20 miles northeast of Sioux Falls. Take exit 406 along Interstate 90. The park is 9 miles north, toward Garretson.
  • Learn more: Palisades State Park | South Dakota Game, Fish, and Parks

Written by Angela George with the Argus Leader in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. USA 250 Most Treasured Views is a USA TODAY Network project exploring places across America with historical and cultural significance, created in celebration of the USA 250 initiative marking the nation’s 250th birthday.



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