Remember that cold January playoff game in Kansas City?

3,839 Views | 16 Replies | Last: 2 mo ago by EliteElectric
dabo man
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Weren't the shirtless fans badass?!?

Many Chiefs fans who suffered frostbite at bitter cold playoff game need amputations
https://fox4kc.com/news/70-of-chiefs-fans-who-suffered-frostbite-at-bitter-cold-playoff-game-need-amputations/
Quote:

KANSAS CITY, Mo. The medical director at the Grossman Burn Center at Research Medical Center says 70% of patients referred for frostbite injuries suffered during the bitter cold in January are now being advised to schedule amputations.

Majority of them are Chiefs fans who attended the team's frigid playoff game.
ac04
How long do you want to ignore this user?
W
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
when are the lawsuits against the NFL and the Chiefs starting?

game probably should have been postponed / moved
toucan82
How long do you want to ignore this user?
I have no idea how frostbite works. Does it usually take this long to figure out if someone needs an amputation?
Southlake
How long do you want to ignore this user?
This is all fake news to get a temperature limit on games.
Max Power
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
W said:

when are the lawsuits against the NFL and the Chiefs starting?

game probably should have been postponed / moved
I'm guessing the only ones who would have a case would be those who were required to be there due to their jobs. The fans didn't have to attend, I was shocked at the number of people in the stands. I thought that stadium was going to be close to empty. If one of the players or team employees sustained an injury perhaps they'd have a chance. The NFL only postpones games generally due to snow, which they did for the Buffalo/Pittsburgh game.
dabo man
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
I can't imagine that if you'd covered your face and head, put on mittens, wore layers, etc, you'd be facing an amputation from frostbite. The Boy Scouts here in Columbia had a campout with it -11F (some particular badge involved). You can actually dress for that weather.
redag06
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Max Power said:

W said:

when are the lawsuits against the NFL and the Chiefs starting?

game probably should have been postponed / moved
The NFL only postpones games generally due to snow, which they did for the Buffalo/Pittsburgh game.
They only postponed the game, because there was a travel ban in the county, so there was no possible way for Pittsburgh to even get to Buffalo, or the Bills players to get to the stadium. Much different than cold temps.
MookieBlaylock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
what a worthless article- doesn't say how many people or even what is being amputated-

typical
The Porkchop Express
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Here's some grade A BS from KC. Jesus ****ing Christ.

Mother of girl injured in Britt Reid crash shocked by commutation
The mother of the young girl injured in the 2021 crash involving former Kansas City Chiefs assistant coach Britt Reid told ESPN she still hasn't forgiven him for the crash and was shocked when Missouri Gov. Mike Parson commuted Reid's sentence after 16 months in prison.
"We went to court, we [were] told, you're going to get justice," Felicia Miller told ESPN in an exclusive interview, her first since the March 1 commutation. "He's put away for a year and about three months. So we didn't get [any] justice. It's not enough.
"I know they say sometimes you have to forgive and forget to move on," said Miller. "But looking at my baby every day and seeing my daughter, how she has to live, and then seeing how he could be back at home, comfortable."
Reid, the son of Chiefs coach Andy Reid, served 16 months of a three-year sentence after pleading guilty to felony driving while intoxicated resulting in serious physical injury. According to prosecutors, Reid was driving about 84 mph in a 65 mph zone when he hit two parked cars near Arrowhead Stadium in February 2021. Six people were injured, including Miller's then-5-year-old daughter Ariel Young, who sustained a traumatic brain injury, was in a coma for 11 days and spent two months in a hospital.
Reid previously pleaded guilty to flashing a gun at another motorist in a 2007 incident, and while serving his sentence for that charge, he pleaded guilty to another unrelated charge of driving while under the influence of a controlled substance. Miller said she worries that Reid could hurt another family.
"He keeps just getting a little slap on a wrist when you keep just letting somebody get away, get away, get away. They're going to continue to do it," Miller said.
A spokesman for the governor's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Calls made to phone numbers listed for Reid were not returned.
Parson's office has declined to give specifics about his decision to commute Reid's sentence. In a statement to ESPN last week, Parson's office said, "No request, official or otherwise, was made on behalf of Mr. Reid for this commutation." A spokesperson for the office declined to comment beyond the statement.
Parson's office told ESPN in a statement that Reid met parole eligibility requirements.
"Mr. Reid was sentenced to three years in a correctional facility with the eligibility for parole after serving 33 percent of his sentence (1 year in this case). Mr. Reid served one year and four months. He will serve the remainder of his sentence under house arrest until October 31, 2025, with strict conditions."
Jackson County prosecutor Jean Peters Baker told ESPN last week she would have never agreed to a plea deal if she knew Reid would serve only 1 years.
Parson, a self-proclaimed Chiefs fan, attended the Super Bowl in Las Vegas last month where the Chiefs won their third Super Bowl in four years. He received a tattoo to commemorate their win in 2023.
Amid public criticism of the decision, Parson expressed "his deepest sympathy for any additional heartache this commutation has caused the Young Family, as that was certainly not his intention," according to the statement to ESPN.
"If it was reversed, it would have been a completely different situation," Miller said. "If I was drunk and slammed into [Reid's] car. He had his child in the car and his child was injured, it would have been over for me. My whole life would have been over."
Miller said she was not notified by the governor's office about the commutation, and she said she has not personally heard from Reid or his family since the accident. Asked if she would take their calls, she said "no."
Young, now 8, has made significant progress since the accident but still has development delays and takes special education classes, Miller said. She also has balance issues and is aware that she is different from her siblings and friends.
"She always tells me, 'I'm different from the other kids now,'" said Miller. "Oh, my God, that hurts. Seeing it in her face and seeing that stuff that she can't do and knowing that's how she feels about the whole thing, that she can't do it, it hurts me."
Young's family and the Chiefs reached a confidential settlement agreement for an undisclosed sum in November 2021. As part of that agreement, the Chiefs will continue to pay for Ariel's medical care for the rest of her life.
IrishAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
The Porkchop Express said:

Here's some grade A BS from KC. Jesus ****ing Christ.

Mother of girl injured in Britt Reid crash shocked by commutation
The mother of the young girl injured in the 2021 crash involving former Kansas City Chiefs assistant coach Britt Reid told ESPN she still hasn't forgiven him for the crash and was shocked when Missouri Gov. Mike Parson commuted Reid's sentence after 16 months in prison.
"We went to court, we [were] told, you're going to get justice," Felicia Miller told ESPN in an exclusive interview, her first since the March 1 commutation. "He's put away for a year and about three months. So we didn't get [any] justice. It's not enough.
"I know they say sometimes you have to forgive and forget to move on," said Miller. "But looking at my baby every day and seeing my daughter, how she has to live, and then seeing how he could be back at home, comfortable."
Reid, the son of Chiefs coach Andy Reid, served 16 months of a three-year sentence after pleading guilty to felony driving while intoxicated resulting in serious physical injury. According to prosecutors, Reid was driving about 84 mph in a 65 mph zone when he hit two parked cars near Arrowhead Stadium in February 2021. Six people were injured, including Miller's then-5-year-old daughter Ariel Young, who sustained a traumatic brain injury, was in a coma for 11 days and spent two months in a hospital.
Reid previously pleaded guilty to flashing a gun at another motorist in a 2007 incident, and while serving his sentence for that charge, he pleaded guilty to another unrelated charge of driving while under the influence of a controlled substance. Miller said she worries that Reid could hurt another family.
"He keeps just getting a little slap on a wrist when you keep just letting somebody get away, get away, get away. They're going to continue to do it," Miller said.
A spokesman for the governor's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Calls made to phone numbers listed for Reid were not returned.
Parson's office has declined to give specifics about his decision to commute Reid's sentence. In a statement to ESPN last week, Parson's office said, "No request, official or otherwise, was made on behalf of Mr. Reid for this commutation." A spokesperson for the office declined to comment beyond the statement.
Parson's office told ESPN in a statement that Reid met parole eligibility requirements.
"Mr. Reid was sentenced to three years in a correctional facility with the eligibility for parole after serving 33 percent of his sentence (1 year in this case). Mr. Reid served one year and four months. He will serve the remainder of his sentence under house arrest until October 31, 2025, with strict conditions."
Jackson County prosecutor Jean Peters Baker told ESPN last week she would have never agreed to a plea deal if she knew Reid would serve only 1 years.
Parson, a self-proclaimed Chiefs fan, attended the Super Bowl in Las Vegas last month where the Chiefs won their third Super Bowl in four years. He received a tattoo to commemorate their win in 2023.
Amid public criticism of the decision, Parson expressed "his deepest sympathy for any additional heartache this commutation has caused the Young Family, as that was certainly not his intention," according to the statement to ESPN.
"If it was reversed, it would have been a completely different situation," Miller said. "If I was drunk and slammed into [Reid's] car. He had his child in the car and his child was injured, it would have been over for me. My whole life would have been over."
Miller said she was not notified by the governor's office about the commutation, and she said she has not personally heard from Reid or his family since the accident. Asked if she would take their calls, she said "no."
Young, now 8, has made significant progress since the accident but still has development delays and takes special education classes, Miller said. She also has balance issues and is aware that she is different from her siblings and friends.
"She always tells me, 'I'm different from the other kids now,'" said Miller. "Oh, my God, that hurts. Seeing it in her face and seeing that stuff that she can't do and knowing that's how she feels about the whole thing, that she can't do it, it hurts me."
Young's family and the Chiefs reached a confidential settlement agreement for an undisclosed sum in November 2021. As part of that agreement, the Chiefs will continue to pay for Ariel's medical care for the rest of her life.

**** that *******......I hope....damn, he's ****ing *******. As someone who dealt with the possibility of my kid having issues like that when she was born, but being blessed with her having a full recovery. The sheer stab of terror I have right now mixed with just ****ing rage reading this article is about too much to bear. I honestly don't know what my reaction would be in that situation, but I know it ****ing scares me.
dabo man
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Parson isn't all that bright. I can say that because he's my governor. He's a star struck Chiefs season ticket holder who had a chance to help one of his heroes and ran with it.
alvtimes
How long do you want to ignore this user?
wait…. he served 4 months longer than the article quotes the parole eligibility began and everyone is shocked? 1000's of people are paroled every single yr across this country.
The Porkchop Express
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
alvtimes said:

wait…. he served 4 months longer than the article quotes the parole eligibility began and everyone is shocked? 1000's of people are paroled every single yr across this country.
This is his third conviction and second felony. A child suffered brain damage as a direct result of his actions. And it wasn't some unfortunate accident on a freeway, it was him hitting a PARKED CAR while going 83 miles an hour and drunk, and immediately told the cops, "My dad is here" after the crash like that was going to be his get out of jail free card.

And yes, lots of people get paroled if it's their first offense and they have served at least 33% of the sentence. But I'm pretty sure when your local weed dealer serves 4 months out of his 1-year sentence, it's not the governor coming down to the jail in Fort Bend County to commute his sentence like Missouri's governor did for Reid. The incredibly overt abuse of power on display here is horrifying.
South Platte
How long do you want to ignore this user?
The Porkchop Express said:

alvtimes said:

wait…. he served 4 months longer than the article quotes the parole eligibility began and everyone is shocked? 1000's of people are paroled every single yr across this country.
This is his third conviction and second felony. A child suffered brain damage as a direct result of his actions. And it wasn't some unfortunate accident on a freeway, it was him hitting a PARKED CAR while going 83 miles an hour and drunk, and immediately told the cops, "My dad is here" after the crash like that was going to be his get out of jail free card.

And yes, lots of people get paroled if it's their first offense and they have served at least 33% of the sentence. But I'm pretty sure when your local weed dealer serves 4 months out of his 1-year sentence, it's not the governor coming down to the jail in Fort Bend County to commute his sentence like Missouri's governor did for Reid. The incredibly overt abuse of power on display here is horrifying.
And now let's celebrate the greatness of Andy Reid with a contract extension. No way this is how Lamar Hunt wanted his franchise to be run.
BMX Bandit
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Quote:

And now let's celebrate the greatness of Andy Reid with a contract extension. No way this is how Lamar Hunt wanted his franchise to be run.
yeah, no way lamar hunt would have extended the coach that won 3 super bowls
EliteElectric
How long do you want to ignore this user?
They don't call it Camarohead for nothin

www.elitellp.net/

Refresh
Page 1 of 1
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.