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Your Johnson County DA election primer

Early voting in Johnson County begins Saturday, Oct. 19, and voters will be able to cast advanced ballots between then and Election Day on Nov. 5.

This critical election season, the Johnson County Post gave our readers in-depth, informative coverage of the races affecting Johnson County.

We hosted 18 separate public, in-person candidate forums spread out over eight nights.

We garnered responses to reader-generated questionnaires from nearly 65 candidates who are seeking federal, state and local offices impacting Johnson County.

All of that, so we could give you access to those who would govern your communities, control your tax dollars and make important decisions on your behalf.

As Johnson County residents head to the polls and mail in ballots (or drop them off at secure drop box locations), we’ve put together election primers for each of the races in the Post’s coverage area.

These guides will give you an easy way to find out more about the candidates and where they stand on the issues important to our readers, so you can decide for yourself who will best represent you in Washington, Topeka and closer to home.

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No other news outlet devotes as much attention to giving Johnson County voters a way to find out where candidates running for local office stand on the issues important to our community. If you value having a news outlet provide this kind of coverage, we hope you’ll consider becoming a subscriber if you aren’t already. YOUR FIRST MONTH OF FULL ACCESS IS JUST $1.

The candidates

  • Steve Howe (Republican), the current four-term DA
  • Vanessa Riebli (Democratic), former assistant DA and currently a defense attorney in private practice

*Read more about the candidates at the KC Voter Guide. 

The key issues

The Post crafted a five-item questionnaire for this race based on our readers’ input about what they wanted to hear from candidates.

Click on the links below to read the candidates’ responses to each of the following issues:

Watch our candidate forum

The Post hosted a forum for district attorney candidates on Oct. 16.

A recording of the forum is embedded below.

Following the embedded video are the questions each candidate answered during the forum.

Timestamps are included at the end of each question to help you navigate through the forum video if you’d like to jump around.

Questions and timestamps

  1.  Opening statements [3:45]
  2. Biggest public safety issue in JoCo: We received this question before our primary forums for District Attorney, but its’ worth revisiting now that we have a general election contest with two candidates. This reader asks, “What is the number one public safety issue in Johnson County?” How would you address this issue if elected or re-elected? [6:47]
  3. Staffing: Publicly accessible data is hard to come by but there have been suggestions for years now that staffing turnover is a problem in the DA’s office. Vanessa Riebli has pointed out in past forums and events that 16 of 35 attorneys in the office left between 2020 and 2023 and now about 40% of the staff has less than five years experience. DA Howe, you’ve responded by pointing out that your office is now nearly fully staffed and that the average experience level of attorneys has ticked up. Is turnover an issue in the DA’s office? And more broadly, what steps will you take to recruit and retain a high quality staff of prosecuting attorneys? [9:46]
  4. Assigning cases: Explain your approach to assigning cases to assistant DAs, and how will you organize and departmentalize the attorneys in your office? And why? [13:02]
  5. Experience and budget management: This question came to us during the primary but is also good to ask here, “The DA’s office has about 100 employees and a several million-dollar budget.  What experience do you have supervising/managing people or an office?  What experience do you have managing a multi million dollar budget?” [16:44]
  6. Diversion: The Johnson County District Attorney’s office currently runs diversion programs for both adult and juvenile offenders meant to give people who have committed relatively minor crimes an alternative to incarceration. As District Attorney, what will be your approach towards offering defendants an opportunity at diversion? Do you think the current programs offered are adequate or would you like to see them tweaked or expanded in any way? [19:22]
  7. Juveniles and diversion (from the audience): What will you put into place to education kids to help them avoid incarceration? [22:33]
  8. Children and “sex crimes” (from the audience): A number of commenters chimed in with a question that I don’t know the full details on but feel obligated to ask about considering the number of comments. These comments suggesting there have been children entering the criminal justice system recently, being prosecuted, for sex-related acts, maybe what might be described as inappropriate teenage decisions — nude photos on phones consensual sex among two underage people — but then facing criminal consequences. That, in turn, leading possibly to other negative social effects, like bullying, or declining mental health. How would you approach this particular issue? [25:59]
  9. Investigating officer-involved shootings: We got several reader questions and comments regarding how the Johnson County DA’s Office investigates officer-involved shootings. Many of these readers expressed sentiments similar to this emailer, who told the Post that they perceive the process as  “too cozy with police.” The DA’s office will take the findings of the county’s Officer Involved Critical Incident Investigative Team, or OICIIT, and determine whether criminal charges should be filed. In most — if not all — cases in recent memory in Johnson County, criminal chargers are NOT filed. Do you think OICIIT accomplishes its stated mission of conducting impartial and transparent investigations? What changes or improvements, if any, would you like to see? [29:10]
  10. Releasing body cam footage (from the audience): What are your stances on the public release of body cam and dashboard cam footage? [32:17]
  11. Response to mental health crises: Are there aspects of OICIIT training and procedures that need to be changed, especially when it comes to mental health crises. This has been the subtext of some of the highest profile fatal police shooting incidents in Johnson County in recent years, including the killilng of Overland Park teenager John Albers in 2018. Should there be more specific requirements about what information is collected in an investigation and how investigators look into how law enforcement officers and departments handled situations dealing with those in a mental health crisis? [36:26]
  12. Disciplinary action of DA employees (from the audience): Several comments from the audience dealing with, for lack of a better term, disciplinary action of DA staffers. Won’t read these specific allegations but the general question would be how, as the leader of the office, would you manage instance where — either through a lack of experience or a bad mistake — an assistant DA may need to be reassigned or disciplined in some way? [39:20]
  13. Use of data (from the audience): What metrics will you use to identify budget priorities for reducing crime in Johnson County? [42:21]
  14. Best practices in other states (from the audiences): What best practices in other states are you familiar with that you think the Johnson County DA’s office could emulate? [45:06]
  15. Drug crimes: There have been several high-profile cases in recent years of drug overdose deaths, particularly those of teenagers, ending in criminal prosecutions of those who supplied the victims with the drugs. There have also been a string of prominent cases involving drug deals involving juvenile offenders that ended in violence. Under your watch, what will be the DA office’s approach to targeting and prosecuting crimes involving drugs? [48:03]
  16. Cases you’ve prosecuted (from the audience): Discuss a case you have successfully prosecuted. [50:43]
  17. Guns and shootings: A reader sent us this email, “Firearms are now the leading cause of death for children and teens in America. As the mother of a young daughter, this issue is very important to me as it is to many other parents in Johnson County. If elected DA, what policies will you enact or support within the confines of your office to help curb gun violence in our community and ensure the safety of all children?” [54:15]
  18. Closing statements [57:06]

About the author

Staff Report
Staff Report

Staff reports are generally produced by one or more members of the Johnson County Post newsroom using information provided by a source or organization, typically in the form of a press release. The “Staff report” byline tends to indicate that little or no additional reporting has been done.

The “Staff report” byline is also used for housekeeping items on occasion.

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