SAD NEWS: Three lifelong friends from high school were killed at a friend’s Kansas City house…

Four friends. Two months after the three killings, it’s still unknown what killed the Chiefs fans.

It has been two months on Thursday since a cold Sunday afternoon in January, when three lifelong friends from high school got together to watch football at a friend’s Kansas City house.

The last time anyone saw them alive was also on this date.

The bodies of Clayton McGeeney, 36, Ricky Johnson, 38, and David Harrington, 37, were discovered outside their friend’s suburban Missouri home on January 9—two days after the Kansas City Police Department said they had gotten together to watch the game.

For almost two months, several people—including relatives of the deceased—have conjectured that the three individuals passed away from a drug overdose, possibly using fentanyl, a synthetic opioid authorized for the treatment of pain that is frequently mixed with cocaine and other illegal recreational narcotics.

What’s new in the Kansas City three death investigation?

On the night of the game, temperatures dipped to 29 degrees, the National Weather Service reported.

Police stated that after not hearing from McGeeney for about 48 hours, his fiancée called and claimed she went to the house. When no one answered the door, she broke in and discovered a dead body out back.Two other guys were found dead in the backyard by the time the police arrived…

Kansas City, Missouri’s Clayton McGeeney
Officer Alayna Gonzalez, the spokesman for the Kansas City police, stated on Thursday that no further details regarding the case had been made public.

“We are still in contact with the Platte County prosecutor’s office and the family members as the death investigation continues,” Gonzalez stated to USA TODAY.

Why are the autopsy results for Johnson, Harrington, and McGeeney not open to the public?
The results of toxicology and autopsies are usually not made public for six to eight weeks after the death.

However, Lauren McDaniel of Forensic Medical in Kansas City, where the men had postmortem examinations, verified on Thursday that the results were kept confidential by Missouri law.

Eric Zahnd, the district attorney for Platte County, told USA TODAY that “it’s a death investigation and, as part of any death investigation, police and prosecutors want to rule out any potential criminal conduct.”

Johnson, Ricky, Riverside, MO
The autopsy records are still closed, according to the prosecutor, because the inquiry is still “active and ongoing.”

According to a Missouri state statute, releasing them would result in a criminal penalty.

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