KC Chiefs fans - suspicious deaths...

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I personally do not think the guy who hosted the game at his house is guilty of murdering his three friends.

I think all five of them (one had left the house earlier) or four (!) had been doing illicit drugs while watching the game together.

The reason that the guy who survived gave conflicting accounts of what happened after the game as well as not being reachable 48HRS afterwards is because he likely was on drugs too & was coming off of them afterward.

He likely cannot admit they did drugs together probably because it would get him canned from his current job so he is leaving that important aspect out.
I heard yesterday that he did enter rehab however.

His friends likely were on drugs too + after they walked out of the house, unfortunately they succumbed to the after-effects of getting inebriated somehow.
I am sure the snow ❄️ as well as frigid temperatures played a huge factor in their deaths.

I do not think the guy who hosted the game murdered his three friends whatsoever.


I don’t either. But his life is ruined now nonetheless
Anonymous
Families will likely claim they were drugged and not doing drugs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The mystery has been solved. It *WAS* Taylor Swift, oops, sorry, drugs in their system:

https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/other/toxicology-results-reveal-cocaine-other-illegal-drugs-found-in-three-kansas-city-chiefs-fans-discovered-frozen-to-death-report/ar-BB1hDwvb



Yeah, it’s going to be an accidental fentanyl poisoning. They thought they were doing coke and it was cut or contaminated with fentanyl.

This crap is everywhere in the U.S. It has single handedly changed casual drug use in this country. Majorly affected music scenes and LGBTQ communities.

It’s an asymmetric war being waged by China against US citizens.


…. Who are dumb enough to partake in casual drug use.


DP but the risks were much lower in the 80s and 90s. No one was cutting it with fentanyl.


The 90s were 25 years ago. Things have changed- it’s common knowledge fentanyl laced drugs are a huge problem and you are taking a big risk buying pills or coke off the streets.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Families will likely claim they were drugged and not doing drugs.


“Drugged” with coke? lol!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Yes! There had to be drugs or something else involved where they just passed out and never woke up. Beyond just being drunk.


Yes thats for sure but the fact that the homeowner didn't know his friends were dead in his backyard for several days, even when their cars were still there, and the homeowners dogs just happened to be at another family members home (otherwise would have been barking at the bodies) is ALL very suspect.


NP. I thought about this aspect. It actually isn't weird to me at all. Our house has a large back yard we do not use much, and I haven't set foot in the back yard since probably right after Christmas. If someone were lying, in certain back corners of the yard, maybe blocked from view by the shed, or in one corner where there are a lot of shrubs, I would never spot them from the kitchen window where I stand every day to use the sink. I'd simply never see them. It's not just the distance involved, it's the layout of the yard, fence, shrubs, shed, etc. I can, creepily, picture the idea that someone could be in a person's back yard and not be seen, if the person comes and goes only through the front door and keeps trash cans at the side of the house (as we do).

I'm not saying the KC homeowner doesn't have explaining to do! But I am less suspicious about the claim of "I had no idea they were there" than I think some people are.

I think one body was found on a porch of the house and that seems strange, but again, if it were a back porch and the homeowner hadn't gone out there over that day or whatever, well, I get how that could happen too. The cars thing is more weird to me, if the homeowner has said he knew his friends' cars were there and recognized those as definitely their cars. I'd have phoned them and then their families if I saw friends' cars still there a day later.

My thought is that they did drugs, possibly took something that had fentanyl in it, and that's what killed them. One last hit before they were leaving, if the homeowner really was asleep on the couch or in his room and wasn't joining them for a last hit of whatever, then they stumbled outside high, thinking they were , going to their cars, and dropped dead. I know everyone's going to suspect the homeowner killed them but -- one guy versus three grown men? It's going to be drugs.


If someone's gf was leaving you messages that her bf was missing, wouldn't you have looked in your yard?


Not if i never got the messages because i was sleeping off a high or had been incapacitated for a day or more after ingesting fentanyl. Which looks increasingly like a possibility in this case, if you read the updates.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I personally do not think the guy who hosted the game at his house is guilty of murdering his three friends.

I think all five of them (one had left the house earlier) or four (!) had been doing illicit drugs while watching the game together.

The reason that the guy who survived gave conflicting accounts of what happened after the game as well as not being reachable 48HRS afterwards is because he likely was on drugs too & was coming off of them afterward.

He likely cannot admit they did drugs together probably because it would get him canned from his current job so he is leaving that important aspect out.
I heard yesterday that he did enter rehab however.

His friends likely were on drugs too + after they walked out of the house, unfortunately they succumbed to the after-effects of getting inebriated somehow.
I am sure the snow ❄️ as well as frigid temperatures played a huge factor in their deaths.

I do not think the guy who hosted the game murdered his three friends whatsoever.


+1 But unfortunately the deceased men's families will concoct some crazy story because they don't want to accept the truth.
Anonymous
My DH says he saw a video of a friend of the homeowner saying he was the “chemist” and was always making drugs for friends, ever since high school.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Now the host has moved out of the rental, put his stuff in storage and checked himself into rehab.

He's supposed to be an HIV researcher? Has a super messy life.


You don’t think research professionals can have addiction problems?


Thank you for responding to poster’s display of ignorance.

This guy is a well respected research scientist on HIV and covid. He’s also an addict.

Over the course of my life I’ve known hundreds of addicts - from family members to friends to lovers to colleagues to clients and victims I represented.

Addicts come in all shapes and sizes and in all walks of life. As an attorney I knew of specific colleagues who struggled with addiction but in general also know that the profession has a high rate of substance use disorder. So do the medical professions and many other high pressure professions, and so do many occupations where the issues isn’t so much the stress of the work on your mind but on your body, and the stress in your mind is more about lack of opportunity and despair.

Many addicts are formerly abused children, and those are also from all walks of life.

And yes, the lives of addicts are messy. But a great many addicts are very accomplished people who make great contributions to society while struggling with use disorder.



Americans spend an estimated $100 billion on illegal drugs. There are plenty of users and addicts who occupy all HHI and education levels.
Anonymous
Fentanyl plus alcohol, accidental. The guy who was found sitting on the chair- it hit him as he sat and he stayed like that.
So many people still don't realize Fentanyl may be in everything. The claim I hear is why do would they want to kill their customers. Well, customers add alcohol to it usually and who knows what else.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Families will likely claim they were drugged and not doing drugs.


It could have been tweakers. You can't predict what they will do.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The mystery has been solved. It *WAS* Taylor Swift, oops, sorry, drugs in their system:

https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/other/toxicology-results-reveal-cocaine-other-illegal-drugs-found-in-three-kansas-city-chiefs-fans-discovered-frozen-to-death-report/ar-BB1hDwvb



Yeah, it’s going to be an accidental fentanyl poisoning. They thought they were doing coke and it was cut or contaminated with fentanyl.

This crap is everywhere in the U.S. It has single handedly changed casual drug use in this country. Majorly affected music scenes and LGBTQ communities.

It’s an asymmetric war being waged by China against US citizens.


The government should supply cheap and pure cocaine. There's no need to lose more voters. People are perfectly capable of self-regulating.


I mean why not? They supply needles and narcan. Why stop there?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Americans are such losers


Football-lovin white trash


Again, this has nothing whatsoever to do with the Chiefs. It could have been a random comment in the article but does not belong in the headline.

And lots of highly educated, high income people (who don’t do drugs) are NFL fans. It truly transcends race, class, and socioeconomics.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My DH says he saw a video of a friend of the homeowner saying he was the “chemist” and was always making drugs for friends, ever since high school.


If your DH says it, it must be true.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Now the host has moved out of the rental, put his stuff in storage and checked himself into rehab.

He's supposed to be an HIV researcher? Has a super messy life.


You don’t think research professionals can have addiction problems?


Thank you for responding to poster’s display of ignorance.

This guy is a well respected research scientist on HIV and covid. He’s also an addict.

Over the course of my life I’ve known hundreds of addicts - from family members to friends to lovers to colleagues to clients and victims I represented.

Addicts come in all shapes and sizes and in all walks of life. As an attorney I knew of specific colleagues who struggled with addiction but in general also know that the profession has a high rate of substance use disorder. So do the medical professions and many other high pressure professions, and so do many occupations where the issues isn’t so much the stress of the work on your mind but on your body, and the stress in your mind is more about lack of opportunity and despair.

Many addicts are formerly abused children, and those are also from all walks of life.

And yes, the lives of addicts are messy. But a great many addicts are very accomplished people who make great contributions to society while struggling with use disorder.



Americans spend an estimated $100 billion on illegal drugs. There are plenty of users and addicts who occupy all HHI and education levels.


Think of all that tax money that states are not getting.
Anonymous
Yes it was cocaine, fentanyl and THC. Possibly more. But that is what is known so far.
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