Day 1: 2023 National Forum On Overdose Fatality Review

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Thursday, January 19 — Opening Day

8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Check-in Available

8:30 a.m. – 8:50 a.m.
Welcome, Housekeeping, and Overview of National Standards

8:50 a.m. – 9:50 a.m.
Federal Panel

President Joseph R. Biden appointed Karhlton F. Moore as Director of the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), effective February 28, 2022. Prior to joining BJA, Mr. Moore served as the Executive Director of Ohio’s Office of Criminal Justice Services, where he oversaw state and federal grants for law enforcement, victim assistance, juvenile justice, crime prevention courts, anti-trafficking efforts, reentry, corrections programs, and traffic safety. In that role, he led Ohio’s grant-making operations, advising the governor and the director of the Department of Public Safety on criminal justice strategies. He also served as the facilitator for former Ohio Governor John Kasich’s Task Force on Community-Police Relations, precursor of the Ohio Collaborative Community-Police Advisory Board, a multidisciplinary panel that establishes standards for law enforcement agencies as part of the state’s effort to strengthen community-police relations. Mr. Moore also served on the National Criminal Justice Association’s (NCJA) advisory council and executive committee and was president of the NCJA’s board of directors. He also served on the steering committee of the Justice Counts initiative. 

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

Grant Baldwin, PhD, is the Director of the Division of Overdose Prevention (DOP) at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) National Center for Injury Prevention and Control. As the scope, scale, and complexity of America’s drug overdose epidemic changed, the DOP was created to serve as an essential focal point for the CDC’s more extensive and diversified work in the area. Dr. Baldwin leads the division in monitoring trends in the drug overdose epidemic and other emerging drug threats, identifying and scaling up prevention activities to address the evolving drug crisis, and supporting local drug-free community coalitions. Prior to this appointment, Dr. Baldwin served for 11 years as the director of the Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention, where he helped raise the profile of motor vehicle injury prevention, advanced work in older adult fall prevention and traumatic brain injury prevention, and established the initial CDC response to the prescription opioid overdose epidemic. Dr. Baldwin, who has served at the CDC for more than 25 years, received his doctorate degree in health behavior and health education at the University of Michigan. He received a master of public health degree in behavioral sciences and health education from Emory University, where he is currently an adjunct faculty member. Dr. Baldwin has given keynote addresses and provided remarks at more than 150 state, national, and international conferences and meetings, authored or co-authored more than 75 peer-reviewed publications, and received awards of excellence for his leadership and teaching.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

Yngvild Olsen, MD, serves as the Director for the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT), Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). She has a long history of working within the addiction treatment field to expand access to care and enhance quality. Dr. Olsen has held numerous senior volunteer leadership positions in the field of addiction medicine. These have included vice president of the American Society of Addiction Medicine, president of the Maryland Association for the Treatment of Opioid Dependence, and president of the Maryland/DC Society of Addiction Medicine. She also has served on the boards of the National Council on Alcohol and Drug Dependence-Maryland and Stop Stigma Now and as a clinical expert to the Providers Clinical Support System (PCSS). After graduating from Harvard Medical School, Dr. Olsen completed residency training in internal medicine and served as primary care chief resident at Boston Medical Center. She completed a fellowship in general internal medicine at Johns Hopkins, during which time she received a master of public health degree from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Dr. Olsen has written and lectured extensively on opioid use disorder and its treatments, the stigma of addiction, the integration of behavioral health and medical care, and clinical and policy solutions to the overdose epidemic. She draws inspiration from the opportunity to provide care for people with substance use disorders as an addiction medicine specialist and general internist.  

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

Shannon L. Kelly is an assistant director with the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) and the National High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) Director. Ms. Kelly has been with the HIDTA Program since 2012 and, from 2015 through 2018, served as its Deputy Director. Ms. Kelly has nearly 25 years of counterdrug experience and worked previously for the U.S. Department of Justice, National Drug Intelligence Center, as a liaison to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and the ONDCP. 

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

9:55 a.m. – 10:40 a.m.
PLENARY SESSION 1: We Heart You: Recovery in Our Community

Moderators:

Established in 2018, the Winnebago County, Wisconsin, overdose fatality review (OFR) team has pursued numerous recommendations that have positively affected the community over the past 4 years. This plenary session will highlight recommendations that came out of Winnebago County’s OFR team meeting and were implemented to connect people to resources, utilize peer-led programs, break stigmas, and begin changing the culture of an entire community.

After the OFR team discovered that few OFR cases had connections to the recovery community, the team recommended to support and expand a substance-free culture that engages many stakeholders in the community and focuses on the support of individuals and families that are on a path to recovery. The initial phase of implementation included adding people in recovery to the OFR table, starting a sounding board to understand the relevance of OFR recommendations, and hosting community conversations with people in recovery to better understand their journeys and how the community could be more supportive. Participants will learn how this recommendation grew to be the “We Heart You” campaign, which included the creation of the We Heart You resource and referral card, the implementation of a public service announcement (PSA) focused on how to use the card, and the hosting of a community event. Ripples in the community were created from this event, and since that time, Winnebago County has created the We Heart You App, a peer-led rapid response team, and a PSA that breaks down the stigma of people who have been impacted by substance use disorder and humanizes recovery. After this session, the PSA video will be made available to any community that needs an inspirational template on the thriving recovery community with inputted local resources.

Learning Objectives:

  • Know how to leverage OFR relationships to engage the local communities in order to educate on addiction, recovery, and mental health; break stigmas and connect individuals to resources.
  • Know how to engage the recovery community with OFR work.
  • Leave with access to a PSA template on recovery that can be tailored for each community with its own local resources.

Jennifer Skolaski, PhD, is the facilitator of Winnebago County Overdose Fatality Review and is the owner of Community & Nonprofit Leadership Consulting, LLC (www.canpl.com). She has been involved with a variety of nonprofits, including organizations and collaborations that focus on environment, education, health care, safety, youth, domestic violence, substance use, and poverty. Dr. Skolaski has taught at both the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh and the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay and has played various roles in nonprofits over the years, from staff member and board member to intern and volunteer. These experiences have inspired her to continue working in the sector to bring results through working collaborations and making an impact in the community. Since 2018, Dr. Skolaski has facilitated the Winnebago County Overdose Fatality Review, which is a multidisciplinary team that works to prevent overdose deaths through systems change and collective impact work. She continuously looks for opportunities that use her skills, strengthen her personally and professionally, and strive to meet her life goal of making a difference in our communities.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

Sandy Shaffer is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker, Independent Clinical Supervisor, Clinical Substance Abuse Counselor, and owner of Shaffer Counseling & Consulting LLC in partnership with Collaborative Wellness. After working in the field of mental health and substance use disorder for more than 20 years, she decided to follow her passion of bridging the world of mental health and substance use disorder. She has a passion for guiding others to become the best version of themselves, which provides her the gift of growing both personally and professionally. Ms. Shaffer has been on the overdose fatality review (OFR) team since its establishment in 2018 and is involved with various OFR subcommittees. As part of the Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Initiative in Winnebago County, Wisconsin, she provides substance use disorder and mental health services, both individual and Dual Diagnosis group therapies, in the community. She also serves on the board of directors at Solutions Recovery.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

Alex Belville is a filmmaker from Oshkosh, Wisconsin, who did not start chasing his dreams until he turned his life around in his early twenties. He is passionate about telling stories for businesses, brands, nonprofits, and athletes through his production company, Mirrorless Productions. He has been fortunate to partner with VaynerSports and create videos for Gary Vaynerchuk. He has had projects funded by Mazda and Jeep, and his work has been shared by Harley Davidson. Mr. Bellville and his team have won multiple Telly Awards for their public service announcement short films, and during COVID-19, they helped local organizations raise $1 million by creating virtual event videos to help meet their fundraising needs. Mr. Belville aims to give back when he can by speaking to students in college and high school about pursuing their passions.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

10:45 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
PLENARY SESSION 2: Implementing Overdose Fatality Review Recommendations to Save Lives

Moderator:

In partnership with community partners, the Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, District Attorney’s Office established a local, multiagency overdose fatality review (OFR) team in 2020 to examine the contributing causes of overdose fatalities in Lackawanna County. This plenary session will focus on two separate recommendations involving community education and awareness, harm reduction strategies, and decriminalization of fentanyl test strips.

Through cases reviewed by Lackawanna County’s OFR team, it became clear that the risk of fentanyl overdose did not simply or predominantly lie with heroin use. The review of these cases led to the recommendation for a deeper analysis of fentanyl-related overdose deaths and to increase awareness of this local data and risk of fentanyl overdose. In order to do this, the Lackawanna County District Attorney and the Mayor of Scranton, Pennsylvania, held a press conference, where they presented data and stressed that fentanyl was being seen laced in all street drugs, not just heroin, and that there had been several local overdoses due to pure fentanyl being disguised as other drugs and pills. The press conference was covered by local media and disseminated both in the local newspaper and TV news coverage. A one-page fentanyl educational document was also developed and disseminated to the OFR team, the local recovery coalition, and other relevant community partners. This press conference led to extensive discussions with a wide variety of community partners regarding the decriminalization of fentanyl testing strips. In addition, both the Pennsylvania District Attorneys Association and the City of Scranton publicly advocated for a state bill to decriminalize fentanyl testing strips following these discussions, which passed in October 2022.

Another recommendation that Lackawanna County’s OFR team was able to identify, develop an action plan for, and implement involved ensuring that all Lackawanna County police departments have access to naloxone as well as training on naloxone administration and local resources. Through collaboration between the Lackawanna County District Attorney’s Office and Pennsylvania Ambulance, this recommendation was successfully implemented and then expanded to other sectors throughout the community. Because of a significant number of school nurses requesting naloxone through Lackawanna County’s naloxone-by-mail initiative, as well as increased overdoses due to fentanyl pills being disguised as medications such as Percocet and Vicodin—which are increasingly popular with high school students—the OFR team also generated a similar recommendation to ensure naloxone access and education in all Lackawanna County schools. The Lackawanna-Susquehanna Office of Drug and Alcohol Programs took the lead on this initiative and sent a letter to all the school superintendents, and the Lackawanna County District Attorney’s Office mailed letters to all police chiefs in Lackawanna County, with telephone follow-up completed for anyone who did not respond. All schools and police departments were provided with naloxone, resources, and training as needed and appropriate. One hundred percent of Lackawanna County schools and police departments now have naloxone and resources onsite and were provided training, if needed, as a result of the findings and recommendation from the OFR team.

Learning Objectives:

  • Thoroughly understand the process by which recommendations were generated and implemented by Lackawanna County’s OFR team and utilize this knowledge to replicate a similar recommendation, if desired.
  • Articulate the collaboration among OFR partner agencies during recommendation implementation.

Carina Havenstrite, BS, currently serves as the Program Manager for the Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, District Attorney’s Office. In this role, she led the development of the Lackawanna County Overdose Fatality Review (OFR) Team and oversees the implementation of recommendations generated by the team, as well as the pursuit and management of several other law enforcement and opioid-related grants. The Lackawanna County OFR Team has been reviewing cases for more than 2 years, has successfully implemented several recommendations, and will be acting as an OFR mentor site this year. Prior to her position with the District Attorney’s Office, Ms. Havenstrite spent 6 years working in the HIV field, which began her journey in public health, grant management, and implementation of innovative programming.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

Mark Powell, District Attorney of Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, has made combating the opioid crisis a top priority of his administration. He is the co-chair of the Lackawanna Recovery Coalition, which works to reduce opioid overuse deaths by connecting people with substance use disorder to treatment, implementing lifesaving harm reduction strategies, advocating for long-term recovery, and working to reduce stigma surrounding the disease of addiction. In October 2019, Mr. Powell established an overdose fatality review team to study overdose deaths to determine the root causes of addiction-related deaths and implement evidence-based solutions. He also initiated a Fresh Start program for lower-level drug offenders to supplement the Treatment Court. Fresh Start is a diversionary program that gives offenders the chance to choose treatment instead of jail and avoid having a criminal record. He is also a board member of the Lackawanna County Treatment Court, which established and operates the Recovery Bank in downtown Scranton, Pennsylvania, a peer-driven recovery support center that focuses on whole-person healing of mind, body, and spirit. Mr. Powell is on the Pennsylvania District Attorneys Association’s Executive Board and serves on its Education and Training Committee. In addition, he was appointed by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania to serve on the Continuing Legal Education Board, which oversees education programs for attorneys statewide. Before being elected district attorney, Mr. Powell was a partner in the Powell Law Firm in Scranton for 27 years. He earned many professional accolades, including the distinction of being a Board-Certified Trial Specialist in both Criminal Law and Civil Law by the National Board of Trial Advocacy. For 12 years, he served as a Hearing Committee member for the Pennsylvania Disciplinary Board and is a past president of Northeastern Pennsylvania Trial Lawyers Association. He is past co-chair of the Lackawanna County Bench Bar Conference and serves on the Lackawanna Bar Association’s Continuing Legal Education and Bench Bar Committee. Mr. Powell frequently teaches Continuing Legal Education seminars for other attorneys. In 2016, the National Institute for Trial Advocacy awarded him the Teaching Excellence Award at the Advanced Trial Advocacy Program in Washington, D.C. Mr. Powell earned his juris doctorate from Catholic University; his master of laws in trial advocacy degree from Temple University, where he graduated with honors; and his undergraduate degree from Villanova University.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

11:30 a.m. – 12:45 p.m.
Lunch (on your own)

12:45 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.
CONCURRENT SESSION 1: Real Life Examples from the Field: Operationalizing the National Standards

Building an Overdose Fatality Review (OFR) Program in a Large Urban Setting: Recommendations for OFR Program Development

The city of Chicago, Illinois, is home to more than 2 million people. In 2021, the city lost 1,316 community members because of drug overdose.* The city had previously explored implementing an overdose fatality review (OFR) to support the existing programs offered throughout the city to address drug overdose, but it lacked the staff to work through the initial planning process. In spring 2022, the Chicago Mayor’s Office and the Chicago Department of Public Health partnered with the Overdose Response Strategy (ORS) public health analyst in Illinois to begin the process of developing an OFR for the city. This presentation demonstrates the impact of leveraging existing partnerships to build a robust OFR program and highlights the effective utilization of existing resources such as the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) technical assistance tools and state and national ORS program subject-matter experts in the field. In addition, this presentation will walk through challenges faced by the Chicago OFR planning team, such as refining case selection methodologies and data sharing scenarios in a state without legislation specific to OFR, and draw attention to the innovative solutions and recommendations that resulted from these challenges.

*Source: Illinois Department of Public Health Death Statistics: Drug Overdose Death by County.

Learning Objectives:

  • Describe the process and the OFR National Standard tools that the Chicago OFR planning team used to identify and recruit key partners for the OFR panel.
  • Identify strategies used to address challenges around data sharing and case selection processes.

Lindsay Wilson, MPH, joined the National Overdose Response Strategy Program as a public health analyst for Illinois in January 2021. Prior to her position with the CDC Foundation, Ms. Wilson served as a health promotion coordinator with the Kankakee County, Illinois, Health Department from 2016 to 2021, where she was the opioid response project coordinator and COVID-19 emergency response coordinator. In her role as opioid response project coordinator, Ms. Wilson coordinated overdose education and prevention efforts in four counties in Illinois. She connected organizations across her area of operation from multiple disciplines, including law enforcement, jails, public health, health care systems, harm reduction, and community members, to form a regional opioid task force aimed at addressing overdose across the region. Prior to her work in public health, Ms. Wilson was a medical plans and operations officer with the U.S. Army from 2012 to 2015.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.


How a Local County Health Department Garnered Stakeholder Support to Establish a Fatality Review Team

This presentation will describe the methodical steps taken and lessons learned in developing the Broome County, New York, Accidental Injury and Death Review (AIDR) team. Opioid overdose prevention staff at the Broome County Health Department focused on the details and planning of the fatality review team to set it up for sustainability, right down to the name of the review team. Broome County intentionally expanded the name of the team to AIDR to include not only fatal overdoses but also individuals who were injured (survived an overdose) or died by suicide. Every step in the planning process was thought out for future needs as they relate to both substance use and mental health. A key strategy in the development of the team was meeting one-on-one with stakeholders to garner support as part of the process and get their buy-in and recommendations prior to the first meeting. By investing the time up front and fostering the relationships among partners at the table, the overdose prevention staff members developing the AIDR team gained valuable input from the multidisciplinary team and were able to engage them in participating without hesitation. Stakeholders were instrumental in formulating recommendations and suggestions and providing subject-matter expertise. In addition, the Broome County program staff researched successful overdose fatality review teams and were mentored by two fatality review teams, along with the coordinator of the child fatality review team in Broome County. Learn how public health professionals used a personal relationship approach by focusing on stakeholders’ strengths and proficiency to develop the AIDR team in Broome County.

Learning Objectives:

  • Hear how the Broome County Health Department describes its success working with a multidisciplinary team to establish an inclusive fatality review team.
  • Describe why establishing the name of your review team is a key factor when developing your team.

Marissa Knapp, MST, is a supervising public health educator and serves as the Opioid Overdose Prevention Coordinator for Broome County, New York, overseeing the Overdose Data 2 Action grant and opioid overdose prevention efforts in the county. Ms. Knapp received her bachelor’s degree in human development from Binghamton University and a master’s degree in teaching from the State University of New York at Cortland. She has almost 15 years’ experience at the Broome County Health Department, with 5 of those years as the Opioid Overdose Prevention Coordinator. As the Opioid Overdose Prevention Coordinator, Ms. Knapp has chaired the Broome Opioid Awareness Council and has fostered meaningful relationships with partners in the field and in the community. She is proud to work in the community to reduce the burden of overdose.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.


Intended and Unintended Outcomes of Building Comprehensive Multidisciplinary Overdose Fatality Review Teams

The Michigan Public Health Institute (MPHI) began establishing overdose fatality review (OFR) teams in Michigan in 2021. Following case reviews, MPHI sought feedback, surveyed teams, and followed up on information gaps. This resulted in several community-based, often team member-led presentations that have provided unexpected learning opportunities. The review of the case of a veteran who died because of an overdose left team members with unanswered questions, especially regarding the services and resources available to this particular population. As a result, a review team member connected MPHI with a representative from the Michigan Veterans Affairs Agency, who presented to the team about these issues and ended up joining the team. Michigan’s Children’s Protective Services representatives presented information to teams regarding what happens when children experience the loss of their parents due to overdose. In addition, the largest harm reduction agency in the region provided training on Narcan access and administration, as well as the services that the agency provides. Finally, MPHI asked emergency medical services (EMS) to share its criteria for naloxone administration, post-overdose substance use disorder treatment resources provided by EMS and any changes MPHI should recommend where those resources do not exist, treatment for non-opioid overdoses, and whether the need for naloxone reversal is increasing from previous years. MPHI has invited additional groups to educate its teams regarding information from their respective disciplines in order to enhance team capacity and efficacy. Increasing teams’ awareness of the various resources available in their communities is crucial to ensuring a robust review process that produces better-informed recommendations to prevent overdoses in Michigan communities.

Learning Objectives:

  • Share unintended outcomes from OFR teams in Michigan.
  • Describe how establishing comprehensive multidisciplinary OFR teams can build community capacity.

Kim Pickett has been a project specialist at the Center for Child and Family Health since March 2014. Before coming to the Michigan Public Health Institute, she had worked for the Harris County Department of Education in Houston, Texas, and the Jackson County Health Department in Jackson, Mississippi, as a health educator. She has a bachelor of science degree in community health education from Western Michigan University with a minor in family life education. Ms. Pickett has a passion for training and facilitating groups, and her interest lies in the child and adult fatality review processes.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.


Applying Process Improvement Approaches to Recommendation Selection

As the practice of overdose fatality review (OFR) evolves, techniques for recommendation development, prioritization, and implementation to help prevent overdoses are emerging. To assist communities with overdose prevention strategies through public health and public safety partnerships, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) support the Overdose Response Strategy (ORS). ORS teams of public health analysts, working with the CDC Foundation, and drug intelligence officers, working with the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) programs, participate in and support local reviews. After reviewing approaches from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Winnebago County, Wisconsin, and other jurisdictions, the OFR team in Lexington County, South Carolina, created a unique approach for developing recommendations and applying Lean Six Sigma process improvements, facilitated by the ORS public health analyst. This presentation will describe the team’s process for identifying gaps/needs, generating and prioritizing solutions, and creating action plans. The presentation will describe results of two prioritization exercises and recommendations that were implemented, including adding members for new sectors; educating members about Handle With Care protocols for referring children experiencing trauma to additional support; and seeking strategic partnerships and resources for community outreach, mobile services, and linkage to care. By describing methods and results of the process in Lexington County, attendees will be able to apply tools like a benefit-effort matrix and voting techniques for focusing partner resources and identify ways this process can achieve system improvements to prevent overdoses.

Learning Objectives:

  • Apply process improvement approaches for identifying gaps/needs, generating and prioritizing solutions, and creating action plans in the context of recommendation development.
  • Describe tools like a benefit-effort matrix and voting techniques for focusing partner resources.

Christina Galardi, MPH, MCRP, is the Public Health Analyst for the Overdose Response Strategy in South Carolina. The Overdose Response Strategy is a partnership between the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) Program, with the mission to help communities reduce fatal and nonfatal drug overdoses by connecting public health and public safety agencies, sharing information, and supporting evidence-based interventions. Prior to this role, Ms. Galardi served as a project manager at the South Carolina Department of Health and Human Services. She earned dual master’s degrees in public health and city and regional planning at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She received her bachelor’s degree in journalism and mass communications from the University of South Carolina and also completed a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship in South Korea.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

12:45 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.
CONCURRENT SESSION 1: Real-life Examples From the Field: Data Partnerships in Action


Moderator:


Recordings:

ODMAP Overview

Jeff Beeson serves as the Deputy Director and Chief of Staff for the Washington/Baltimore High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (W/B HIDTA) program. His responsibilities include the overall administration of the HIDTA program, including the budget, the Annual Report, the Threat Assessment and Strategy, and the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), as well as direct oversight of the Overdose Response Strategy. In addition, he is responsible for managing the non-HIDTA grants and contracts that support new and existing law enforcement, criminal justice, drug treatment and prevention, homeland security, technology, and information sharing initiatives. Prior to joining the W/B HIDTA, Mr. Beeson served as assistant vice president for applied research at Towson University, overseeing a portfolio of state and federal grants and contracts supporting workforce and public safety initiatives. Appointed to several positions within the Maryland state government, including the Maryland Department of Public Safety, he began his career as a senate staffer for U.S. Senator Barbara A. Mikulski of Maryland. Mr. Beeson has a master’s degree in social sciences, with a focus in criminal justice.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

Ali Burrell, MPH, is the Program Manager for the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP) at the Washington/Baltimore High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (W/B HIDTA). She earned her master’s degree in public health with an emphasis in environmental and occupational health from the University of Pittsburgh’s Graduate School of Public Health. She holds a bachelor’s degree in public health, health promotion, and health behavior from Oregon State University with a Global Health Certificate. Ms. Burrell has worked in overdose prevention and veteran suicide prevention program implementation through her work with the CDC Foundation’s Overdose Response Strategy in Virginia and the University of Pittsburgh’s partnership with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.


Turning Data Into Action: Use of ODMAP and Overdose Fatality Review to Guide Decision Making

This workshop will focus on jurisdictions who focused on the assembly of key, local stakeholders representing public health and public safety to address the problem of drug overdoses occurring in their communities. Through the use of information sharing tools such as the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), data dashboards, and overdose fatality review (OFR), these stakeholder groups have turned data into actionable responses to the opioid crisis. Panelists will discuss the evolution of their information sharing practices, including instances where the implementation of one process led to the use of an OFR. Panelists will also discuss their process for regular surveillance of data and how it informs the delivery of services in their communities.

Learning Objectives:

  • Understand the benefit of using multiple data collection tools to better address opioid overdose.
  • Recognize more than two options for turning data into actionable interventions in your own community.

Kelly Dennis serves as the Director of Health Promotion and Quality Improvement for the Ross County, Ohio, Health District, where he helps build programs and services for the community, manages several grant programs for the district, and helps strengthen community partnerships and programs aimed at improving health outcomes for the community. His career in public health began in 2005 with the Ross County Health District as an environmental health sanitarian conducting various types of inspections for food operations, the sewage treatment systems program, and the private water systems program. In 2012, he took the position of environmental health director with the Pickaway County, Ohio, General Health District, where he managed the environmental health programs for Pickaway County. Mr. Dennis is a 2004 graduate of Bowling Green State University with a bachelor of science degree in education with a focus on 7–12 Life Science.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

Lisa Worden is a program analyst with the Oneida County, New York, Health Department. She has been working in the field of public health for 24 years in community health planning, public health emergency preparedness, and coordination of various community health partnerships and initiatives. Ms. Worden currently serves as coordinator of the county’s Opioid Task Force and Overdose Response and Overdose Fatality Review Teams. She also manages the health department’s Opioid Overdose Prevention Program, which includes the New York State Department of Health Overdose Data to Action, Bureau of Justice Assistance Partnerships for Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and National Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO) Implementing Overdose Prevention Strategies at the Local Level grants.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.


A Multiregional Approach: The Coroner’s Role in Overdose Fatality Reviews

Oftentimes, activities related to fatal overdoses within a certain county may have been initiated in an adjacent county and vice versa. Since the opioid epidemic does not recognize county lines, critical case data may be difficult to attain from neighboring agencies because of differing case management software programs and/or lack of internal tracking of overdose case data. Smaller counties may experience hurdles in uploading overdose information to stakeholder databases, such as the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP) and the State Unintentional Drug Overdose Reporting System (SUDORS), because of limitations in funding and a lack of supportive personnel to enter data and detect the circumstances leading to fatal overdoses and identify opportunities to prevent future overdoses. When overdoses cross county lines, it is difficult to see critical investigative links between separate fatalities. It is also difficult to recognize individuals or groups who are at risk and in need of harm reduction outreach and lifesaving resources. To address these issues, the Charleston County, South Carolina, Coroner’s Office will soon begin a grant-funded project to adopt a multiregional approach to overdose fatality reviews (OFRs). The Charleston County Coroner’s Office will work with five neighboring county coroners’ offices to improve intercounty opioid investigation protocols and perform faster uploading of data to national stakeholder databases, thus providing more accurate regional opioid death statistics, which will be provided to local, state, and federal agencies that analyze opioid-related mortality rates. By assisting smaller, adjacent counties in their case data upload, the Charleston County OFR team anticipates an increase in the total number of fatal overdoses as refinement and capture of overdoses are recognized.

Learning Objectives:

  • Learn how a multiregional approach to OFRs will work and how intercounty data can be shared.
  • Learn about possible funding opportunities to replicate the multiregional system to OFRs.

Bobbi Jo O’Neal, a Registered Nurse and Board-Certified Medicolegal Death Investigator with the American Board of Medicolegal Death Investigators (ABMDI), is the elected Coroner for the Charleston County, South Carolina, Coroner’s Office. She earned her bachelor of science degree in nursing from Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee. Coroner O’Neal has been a death investigator since 1998 and is currently the president of the International Association of Coroners & Medical Examiners and the president of the South Carolina Coroner’s Association. She is a member of the National Association of Medical Examiners, a Fellow with the American Academy of Forensic Science, and the former director-at-large for the International Association of Forensic Nurses. Coroner O’Neal serves on the Executive Committee of the Low Country Healthcare Coalition and is an active member of the South Carolina Association of Counties.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

Suzanne Abel, PhD, earned a master’s degree in anthropology from the University of South Carolina and a doctoral degree from the University of Florida. She is the co-author of the book The Juvenile Skeleton in Forensic Abuse Investigations. She is a member of Charleston, South Carolina’s Addiction Crisis Task Force and Critical Incident Management System, as well as the American Academy of Forensic Sciences. Dr. Abel regularly relays overdose data to investigators with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s State Unintentional Drug Overdose Reporting System, and agents with the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA).

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.


Data Gap or Opportunity? Infusing Overdose Fatality Review with Creative Data Collection

This workshop will focus on jurisdictions who focused on the assembly of key, local stakeholders representing public health and public safety to address the problem of drug overdoses occurring in their communities. Through the use of information sharing tools such as the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), data dashboards, and overdose fatality review (OFR), these stakeholder groups have turned data into actionable responses to the opioid crisis. Panelists will discuss the evolution of their information sharing practices, including instances where the implementation of one process led to the use of an OFR. Panelists will also discuss their process for regular surveillance of data and how it informs the delivery of services in their communities.

Learning Objectives:

  • Understand the benefit of using multiple data collection tools to better address opioid overdose.
  • Recognize more than two options for turning data into actionable interventions in your own community.

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

2:00 p.m. – 2:15 p.m.
Break (on your own)

2:15 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
CONCURRENT SESSION 2: OFR in Action: Rural Communities

Overdose Fatality Review: A Rural Community Approach

A suicide/overdose fatality review (S/OFR) can impact community change and policies. Having the right participants at the S/OFR is critical to positive community engagement. Bringing together cross-sectors of a rural community to create change can bring remarkable success and significant challenges! Protecting our children and future community leaders is a great reason to work toward a solution and put bias aside. In 2019, the Jay County, Indiana, community developed an S/OFR. In 2020, it reviewed its first decedent. Since that time, the county has been able to make strides toward the following:

  • Adjustments to programs, processes, policies, and practices to meet changing priorities in the community’s needs.
  • Developing relationships with different sectors to implement substance use prevention strategies.
  • Engaging decision makers and community leaders to support substance use prevention policies, programs, and infrastructure.

Learning Objectives:

  • Identify critical steps to develop an S/OFR in your community.
  • Identify the importance and value of cross-sector collaboration and partnership for an S/OFR.
  • Describe how S/OFR review data can be used to meet changing priorities in your community’s needs and engage decision makers and community leaders to support substance use prevention policies, programs, and infrastructure

Kimbra Reynolds, MBA, LCAC, CADAC II, CAPRC I, is a Licensed Clinical Addictions Counselor and Certified Peer Addiction Recovery Coach and holds a master of business administration degree specializing in health care. Ms. Reynolds has 34 years of successful coalition building, addiction intervention, and prevention experience. Her years of leadership experience have provided her the opportunity to become a graduate of the Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America’s (CADCA) Graduate Coalition Academy and National Coalition Academy. She is part of the Indiana Coalition Network’s leadership team and the Indiana Criminal Justice Institute’s Local Coordinating Council Advisory Board. Ms. Reynolds provides contractual work with various coalitions and is a local and federal grant reviewer.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

Virgil Jones, MPA, BS, graduated from the Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America’s (CADCA) Graduate Coalition Academy and National Coalition Academy. He has been in the prevention field for more than 7 years and has worked in the education field for more than 12 years. Mr. Jones is trained in Botvin LifeSkills, Conscious Discipline, the Strengthening Families Program, Applied Science Intervention Skills Training (ASIST), Mental Health First Aid (youth), and PreVenture. He was the Jay County Prevent Child Abuse president for 2021.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.


Collaboration Within Rural Communities

Since the suicide and overdose fatality review (SOFR) team in Whitley County, Indiana, was formed in August 2022, it has learned so much. Within the rural community, the team was able to form quickly because everyone knew each other well because of their roles in the county. Within the team’s review process, the team has received significant and detailed information from the county’s prosecutor’s office, sheriff’s department, police department, department of child services, and emergency department. All collaborative partners work very closely and well together and choose to find a resolve versus just engage discussion.

As information was brought to the table and discussed, the importance of developing a timeline of the decedent’s life was critical. The timeline helps the team identify gaps in services very quickly.

Recommendations that the SOFR team has identified so far are as follows:

  • Follow-up counseling for suicide attempts in the teenage years
  • Gaps within mental health care in the county (three communities within the county do not have a community mental health office)
  • Stigma around men receiving counseling through a divorce
  • Recovery supports needed in the county

Implementing: Mission 25 is launching a Recovery Engagement Center (REC) to provide multiple pathways to recovery. This is a longtime needed service for Whitley County. The REC will open in late fall 2022.

Resources: Mission 25 and the health department are providing naloxone; the police department’s “Handle With Care” program was discussed for children who lost a parent or loved one by overdose or suicide; the department of child services is providing family care.

Learning Objectives:

  • Understand the value of drafting a timeline of a decedent’s life to make appropriate recommendations.
  • Increase collaborative partnerships within attendees’ rural communities.

Shawn Ellis has served in the nonprofit sector in Whitley County, Indiana, for more than 22 years while serving men, women, children, the homeless, those with mental illness, those with substance use disorders, victims of domestic violence, and individuals with developmental disabilities. She has worked closely with collaborative partners throughout Whitley County to address challenges within the space of mental health, substance abuse, and child abuse and neglect, as well as opening an after-school program in a targeted poverty population within the county. Ms. Ellis has served on the Board of Directors for Parkview Whitley Hospital and Indiana United Ways, along with various committees for community initiatives.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.


Emergency Medical Services/Peer Support Rural Response Teams: An Innovative Model for Enhancing Linkages to Care

In rural Sauk County, Wisconsin, if you are seen by emergency medical services (EMS) for anything substance use-related—stomach pains from drinking too much or an accidental or intentional overdose, for example—you receive a follow-up visit from response teams. A collaboration among Public Health Sauk County (PHSC), WisHope (a recovery community organization), and all six local EMS agencies, Sauk County Response Teams (SCRTs) are composed of EMS and a WisHope peer recovery coach. The teams make in-home or in-jail visit attempts to streamline a connection to needed services. The Sauk County Overdose Death Review Team recommended, planned, and helped implement SCRTs. The team reviewed multiple deaths in which the decedents had been previously seen by EMS for nonfatal incidents. The team also held a meeting to map area gaps in service delivery after a drug-related EMS incident and prioritized SCRTs as a solution to enhance linkages to care. PHSC applied and was awarded a grant, formed a planning committee, and hired an experienced consultant. SCRTs launched in May 2021. The teams receive about 10 referrals per month, and follow-up visits end in a successful connection with the client or a household member about half the time. Clients receive warm handoffs to services such as long-term peer support, treatment, harm reduction (Narcan, fentanyl test strips, education), and others (FoodShare, food pantries, health insurance, health and mental health care appointments, job training referrals, housing assistance, etc.). Monthly activity reports track referrals, rates of contact, clients’ ages and genders, and substances used.

Learning Objectives:

  • Explore how a successful program can be built from an OFR recommendation.
  • Summarize key components of a response team model for rural areas.

Sara Jesse founded and directs the county’s drug prevention and harm reduction initiatives, including the Sauk County, Wisconsin, Overdose Death Review Team, the Sauk County Response Teams, the Sauk County Narcan and fentanyl test strip distribution programs, and two community-based coalitions: the Recovery Coalition and the Sauk County Partnership for Prevention. Ms. Jesse also serves as data coordinator for the county’s Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) Rural Communities Opioid Response grant and is on the planning committee for the Sauk County Continuum of Care Consortium. Through successful grant writing, she has helped bring more than $3 million to Sauk County’s substance use-related programming in the past 5 years. Having lost her sister to opioid overdose in 2006, Ms. Jesse is a passionate advocate for community-based harm reduction, treatment, and primary prevention services.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

2:15 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
CONCURRENT SESSION 2: OFR in Action: Urban Communities

New York City’s Three-pronged Approach to Creating Change

The New York City, New York (NYC) RxStat initiative was established in 2012 and has included overdose fatality review (OFR) meetings since 2016. The past 2 years have brought many changes to RxStat. Today, RxStat has three meeting types, each with a clear goal and structure. These meeting types include:

  1. Drug trends meetings, which focus on high-level overdose trends and policies.
  2. OFR meetings, designed to unearth missed opportunities for overdose prevention and intervention.
  3. Action meetings, which create shared accountability and result in concrete recommendations and action items.

NYC has more than 2,000 fatal overdoses each year; the RxStat initiative cannot hope to review every case in its OFR meetings. Instead, it selects cases by theme to help focus the conversation in each OFR. Then, a subsequent action meeting focuses on how to take the gaps identified during the OFR and turn them into specific, achievable recommendations.

In this presentation, the RxStat initiative will provide an overview of the goals and structure for all three meeting types and provide one to two case studies that provide an overview of:

  • A theme the RxStat initiative chose for an OFR meeting.
  • The process for selecting OFR cases that fit that theme.
  • Gaps identified during the OFR meeting.
  • Recommendations generated by the action meeting, including any workgroups created.
  • Final actionable outcomes that resulted from the process.

This presentation will showcase how RxStat moves from OFR case review to action and will provide examples of OFR themes that have resulted in fruitful discussion and action in NYC.

Learning Objectives:

  • Understand how to create a PHAST structure that brings together population-level and case-level analyses to create incremental system-level change.
  • Be willing to continue to evolve to improve outcomes.

After earning her bachelor’s degree in criminal justice and history and her master’s degree in history from Iona College, Margaret Moore started her career as an analyst intern in the New York City, New York, Police Department’s (NYPD) Crime Control Strategies Office. Through this experience, she worked with the New York/New Jersey High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (NY/NJ HIDTA). At this time, NY/NJ HIDTA was collaborating via the RxStat Initiative with the NYPD and the Office of Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) on creating a Suspected Overdose Tracking system to inform New York City (NYC) overdose response efforts. Ms. Moore began working for NY/NJ HIDTA in 2016 and has spent the past 6 years working on a variety of public health and public safety team initiatives. She spent a bulk of her time helping coordinate the national Overdose Response Strategy from 2016 to 2018. In 2018, her focus shifted to NYC RxStat, and in 2021, she became the NYC RxStat Overdose Fatality Review Coordinator.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.


Expansion of Emergency Medical Services’ Naloxone Leave-behind Program in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Most decedents reviewed in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania’s overdose fatality review (OFR), OD Stat, had at least one interaction with emergency medical services (EMS) prior to their deaths. Philadelphia EMS has a naloxone leave-behind program, but the review team noted that many of the decedents would not have qualified for leave-behind naloxone and the accompanying education because they were not always using opioids. Much of the drug supply in Philadelphia is contaminated or adulterated with fentanyl, meaning that people who do not purposefully or knowingly use opioids could still be at risk for a future overdose. OD Stat pulled together a small subcommittee of public health and EMS staff to review EMS’ current naloxone leave-behind policy. The policy at the time was to provide naloxone to people following a nonfatal opioid overdose. The Philadelphia OFR provided qualitative data from OD Stat showing that opioid overdose decedents often had EMS contacts prior to their overdoses for stimulant or hallucinogen-related calls. The OD Stat team recommended that the Philadelphia Fire Department/EMS update its policy to provide naloxone to any individual who uses drugs regardless of whether they knowingly use opioids or have experienced an overdose. By expanding its reach, EMS could provide education about widespread fentanyl contamination and increase its distribution of naloxone. EMS updated its internal policy and circulated an
all-staff memorandum as of October 2020. Leave-behind naloxone was paid for through a grant funded by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. OD Stat tracks the number of leave-behind naloxone kits provided by EMS on an annual basis.

Learning Objectives:

  • Understand the role EMS has in harm reduction resource distribution and education.
  • Learn why naloxone is an important resource for people who use any substance.

Zoe Soslow, MS, is the Central Administrator for the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health’s Overdose Fatality Review, OD Stat. In her role, she facilitates data collection, analysis, and quarterly reviews of four to six drug overdose decedents with representation from state and city government, hospital systems, and community-based organizations. Before starting her current role in 2019, Ms. Soslow spent more than a decade in community behavioral health and completed her master of science degree in forensic medicine in 2016.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

Brittany Shutz, MS, has experience working within the behavioral health field within different capacities, from case management to prevention. Ms. Shutz served as a case manager for the drug treatment court program with the York/Adams Drug and Alcohol Commission, the Single County Authority (SCA), before stepping into the role of prevention program specialist with the agency. In this position, she oversaw the implementation, funding, and organization of primary prevention programming, naloxone distribution, provider training, and community outreach. Ms. Shutz also has experience within community relations through her experience working with the SCA and the Behavioral Health Managed Care Organization. During her time within the field, she has developed strong working relationships with cross-sector partners working toward combatting the effects of substance use on the community. Through this work, she understands that collaboration and a multisystemic approach is the catalyst for change. Ms. Shutz has a bachelor’s degree in sociology/criminology and a master’s degree in public health.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.


Turning the Tide for Grieving Families: Marion County, Indiana, Overdose Fatality Review Subcommittee’s Efforts to Improve Grief Connections

To address the grave issue of substance misuse and the resulting fatalities in Marion County, the largest county in Indiana, the Marion County Public Health Department (MCPHD) formed a multidisciplinary overdose fatality review (OFR) team in November 2020 with the purpose of recommending data-driven changes based on the circumstances around overdose deaths in the county. From December 2020 to May 2022, a total of 33 overdose deaths were reviewed, and seven themes emerged, with the top three being mental health and stigma, health care access, and substance use awareness. After a year of case reviews, the team decided to form three action-oriented subcommittees based on the recommendations: (1) grief support, (2) advocacy, outreach, and information, and (3) access to care. Despite barriers, the subcommittees are continuing to perform exceptional work in terms of converting recommendations into action. The OFR team identified that families of decedents need easy access to grief support and mental health resources, especially at the coroner’s office, when their grief is still fresh. The grief support subcommittee acted by assembling grief support and mental health resources to share with the grieving families. It also advocated for the addition of a social worker among the coroner’s office staff who is trained to educate the family members regarding substance misuse and mental health needs. This has fostered empathetic surroundings for the families and encouraged them to seek help from the right sources. This initiative is a significant step toward reducing substance use stigma in the community.

Learning Objectives:

  • Identify opportunities to form subcommittees based on the recommendations generated in the OFR meetings.
  • Identify strategies, through OFR subcommittee work, to address grief experienced by family members who lost their loved ones to overdose.

Nitika Jain, MBBS, MPH, has been working as a mental health epidemiologist and lead program evaluator with the Marion County, Indiana, Public Health Department for the past 7 years. She has been managing Marion County’s overdose fatality review team for the past 2 years. Ms. Jain is pursuing a doctorate degree in epidemiology with a minor in social and behavioral science from Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis and is a physician by background. She is highly passionate about bringing about positive change in the field of mental health and substance use at a global level.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.


Strengthening Partnerships With State Public Health and Increasing Stakeholders’ Knowledge by Identifying Underreporting of Somali Overdose Deaths Through Overdose Fatality Reviews

According to the Minnesota Department of Health’s (MDH) 2021 Overdose Data Report, Black Minnesotans are three times more likely to die of a drug overdose than white Minnesotans. As home to one of the largest Somali populations in the nation, Minnesota’s Somali community has been underrepresented in overdose data. When collecting data on race and ethnicity, Somalis are often classified solely as Black, with no mention of the relevant ethnic subgroup. In 2017, MDH identified that the state lacked specific data to address the needs of the Somali community. Voices from the community demonstrated anecdote stories of overdoses of Somali youth. To address this issue, MDH launched pilot overdose fatality reviews (OFRs) in 2019, which recommended applying the OFR model using a culturally specific lens in the Somali community. The following year, using funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Overdose Data to Action grant, MDH partnered with Alliance Wellness Center—a culturally specific provider specializing in treatment and recovery for Somalis. During OFR implementation training, the OFR team lead shared concerns about the deeply rooted stigma surrounding overdoses in the Somali community as a barrier to community participation and facilitation of OFRs. To address the cultural stigma and build organizational capacity, the OFR team conducted prevention interviews before implementing OFRs in the community. Through these deep conversations, the OFR team captured the Somali community’s collective voice and identified barriers preventing community discussion on overdose deaths.

Learning Objectives

  • Learn how to consider cultural values, beliefs, and assumptions when implementing overdose fatality reviews in diverse communities.
  • Recognize, critically address, and collaboratively champion overdose prevention strategies to address system-level gaps and expand early intervention supports.
  • Identify, analyze, and address specific structural and systematic cultural barriers to propose creative and effective interventions.

Pearl Evans, MAPL (Master of Advocacy and Political Leadership), has an extensive background in direct service as a peer recovery specialist and brings lived experience to her work. Hearing the voices of people through her direct service with clients inspired her to uplift health equity within her profession. Before joining the Minnesota Department of Health, Ms. Evans was nominated by Minnesota Governor Tim Walz to serve as the person in recovery on the Opioid Emergency Response Advisory Council (OERAC). During her time on the OERAC, Ms. Evans worked to allocate funding for investment in culturally responsive recovery support. In addition, she is leading the development of county profiles to share data with local public health, connecting with community organizations, and building upon community engagement work.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

Masno Abdulaya is an overdose fatality review project coordinator at Alliance Wellness Center, a culturally specific substance use treatment center and medications for opioid use disorder clinic. Before joining the Alliance Wellness Center, Ms. Abdulaya worked as a case manager at Supportive Living Solutions and as a behavior therapist with children with autism. Ms. Abdulaya holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

3:30 p.m. – 3:45 p.m.
Break (on your own)

3:45 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
CONCURRENT SESSION 3: Collective Conversations: Leveraging Community Collaboration

Overview of Harm Reduction


Leveraging Community Collaboration to Implement Harm Reduction Strategies

While establishing overdose fatality review (OFR) teams in Michigan, the Michigan Public Health Institute has naturally fallen into the model of working collaboratively with a review team and a separate community action group that drives forward the recommendations presented by the review team. These community action groups are existing groups that meet in each county, such as an opioid task force or a substance use coalition. Muskegon County’s OFR team works with the Muskegon Opiate Task Force acting as the community action group. Following each quarterly review, an infographic displaying the recommendations that resulted from each review is created. One case helped identify a municipality where there was a disproportionately high count of overdoses happening in that region’s hotels. Because of this finding, the team recommended the availability of Narcan at hotel front desks and common areas. The Muskegon Opiate Task Force, along with the implementation of this recommendation, placed “I Can Narcan” stickers on external windows of hotels and other establishments to indicate the presence of Narcan in that building. This allows external bystanders to take note of the presence of Narcan in a particular building, but especially for those who are using at the hotel. The review team has made several other recommendations around increasing access to naloxone, such as training all law enforcement officers to carry and administer naloxone. The task force continues to collaborate with law enforcement agencies to move this recommendation forward, and since the first review team meeting, the task force has helped change the policy and practice of one law enforcement agency in its jurisdiction.

Learning Objectives:

  • Describe how Michigan OFR teams collaborate with community action groups to move recommendations forward.
  • Share two innovative recommendations that the Muskegon County pilot OFR team has successfully established and moved forward.

Angela Van Slembrouck is a community health associate for the Center of Child and Family Health at the Michigan Public Health Institute. She has a formal education in sociology and criminal justice from Central Michigan University and is a prevention specialist certified by the Michigan Certification Board for Addiction Professionals. Ms. Van Slembrouck has experience working on substance use disorder prevention initiatives, community coalition facilitation, and system-level change in various communities around the United States.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.


Overdose Fatality Review’s Influence on Innovative Harm Reduction Services and Messaging

This presentation will share how, through the overdose fatality review (OFR) process, demographic trends in overdose deaths resulted in the development of an outreach plan and a marketing campaign using harm reduction interventions to target high-risk communities, including African-American, LGBTQ+, Latinx, and those experiencing homelessness. Columbus Public Health (CPH) is the lead agency for the Columbus and Franklin County Addiction Plan (C&FCAP) and a participating member in the Franklin County, Ohio, Overdose Fatality Review (OFR). In addition to the public health administrator from CPH’s Alcohol and Drug Services Division attending the OFR, a CPH epidemiologist attended in order to compile the demographic information, key findings, client histories, and other personal information of the individual cases. Based on the findings, an analysis of each decedent was performed, and a cross-examination brought forth emerging trends and areas to identify gaps in service including the African-American, LGBTQ+, Latinx, and homeless populations. Results also indicated that there was a slight increase in overdose deaths during the holiday season in specific neighborhoods, which resulted in geo-fencing messaging. With members of the C&FCAP, including the coroner; those with lived experience; grassroots organizations that focus on the homeless population and victims of human trafficking; and the quick response teams, a messaging campaign was developed and implemented.

Learning Objective:

  • Describe the data analytic process taken to develop marketing tools and outreach efforts specific to the attendees’ communities while identifying the gaps within their prevention strategies.

Andrea Boxill, MA, LCDCII, has worked in human services and behavioral health treatment since 1993. Since 2019, Ms. Boxill has served as the Public Health Administrator for the Alcohol and Drug Services Division at Columbus Public Health (CPH) in Columbus, Ohio. In this position, she monitors service delivery; assists in program development, grant writing, and project management; and coordinates the Columbus and Franklin County Addiction Plan. Prior to joining CPH, Ms. Boxill was the deputy director for the Ohio Governor’s Cabinet Opiate Action Team. Ms. Boxill has worked in the central Ohio mental health and addiction field for more than 25 years. Most recently, she served as the specialized docket coordinator for Franklin County Municipal Court and developed the first court for victims of human trafficking and the first opioid-specific drug court in the state.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

3:45 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
CONCURRENT SESSION 3: Collective Conversations: Leveraging Public Health and Public Safety Partnerships

Working Together to Leverage Multidisciplinary Partnerships to Implement Recommendations

The York County, Pennsylvania, Overdose Fatality Review (OFR) Team was established by a joint initiative among the City of York Bureau of Health, the York Opioid Collaborative, and the County of York Offices of the Coroner and District Attorney. The purpose of the OFR team is to identify drug overdose fatality trends; improve incidence data to accurately record the number of overdose deaths in a county; define effective strategies for coordinating overdose prevention strategies; recommend statutory, regulatory, and policy changes; promote coordination among agencies that investigate drug fatalities and provide services to families; and develop plans for enhancing efforts of partner organizations. Recommendations to date have focused on communication, information/resource sharing, training, referring to services, naloxone distribution, and education opportunities. The recommendations generated are presented to the OFR team’s governing committee, the Public Health and Safety Team (PHAST), that supports and provides resources for implementation. The “We Care, York” initiative was developed based on a recommendation identified during the OFR team’s first case review in June 2021. The recommendation was to create a referral-to-help card that partner agencies could share with at-risk individuals and their loved ones, based off Winnebago County, Wisconsin’s “We Heart You” initiative. “We Care, York” links individuals experiencing a mental health and/or substance use crisis to services and ensures that individuals are aware of resources in the community when they find themselves in need to minimize the stigma associated with seeking help.

Learning Objectives:

  • Describe how to implement effective recommendations with the convergence of OFR and PHAST.
  • Identify the benefits of building strong partnerships to implement innovative recommendations.

Samantha Zahm, MPH, is the Deputy Director at the City of York, Pennsylvania, Bureau of Health, where she provides leadership and management assistance to the bureau on sound, comprehensive public health practices and strategies to address public health needs within the community. In this role, Ms. Zahm leads program planning and evaluation activities to develop metrics for each program, including the Overdose Data to Action (OD2A) Program, to measure success, ensuring that evidenced-based strategies are incorporated in program design and implementation. Ms. Zahm earned her master’s degree in public health from The George Washington University.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.


Overdose Fatality Review Teams as Community Catalyst

Overdose fatality review (OFR) teams represent multisector community stakeholders coming together to address substance use challenges in their communities. The heart of the work that these teams do is the development of recommendations—for the agencies, the community, the region, and the state. What if we conceptualize the work of the OFR as community systems development? What can happen when the team itself becomes the subject of recommendations (e.g., we recommend that this team help move our local system through the stages of the community readiness model)? If we start to track and show the outcomes of that—how individual agencies made process/policy changes or the new connections or collaborations made across team members’ agencies—those can be leveraged to set the foundation for continued, and more complex, efforts. This presentation will discuss the case study of the LaPorte, Indiana, OFR team and how its work and collaboration contributed to the county being awarded a “community catalyst” grant to develop and implement a crisis intervention team (CIT). This effort will involve the participation of every law enforcement jurisdiction in the county and training for officers on utilizing the community system to provide appropriate responses and resources in crisis incidents such as overdose, suicide, or domestic violence. Patterns and recommendations identified by the OFR team can inform planning stage processes and training decisions. The OFR team will then have the unique ability to evaluate practical outcomes of CIT responses in future case reviews to provide a direct feedback loop for continuous improvement recommendations.

Learning Objectives:

  • Identify ways in which your OFR team can track and report on their role in community system development.
  • Understand opportunities for OFR team collaboration in other existing or future efforts within your community.

Cara Jones, MPA, is the Program Evaluation Manager at HealthLinc, a federally qualified health center, where she focuses largely on the integration of behavioral health and addiction services in primary care. She has worked on a variety of programs in the area of substance use, including medication-assisted treatment and mobile integrated response teams. She currently coordinates three county overdose fatality review teams in northwest Indiana. Ms. Jones earned her master of public affairs degree from Indiana University Northwest and is currently working toward a master of public health degree at Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis.

PhD, MS, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Mallory O’Brien is trained as an epidemiologist and has worked in the field of overdose and violence prevention for the past 25 years. She has a long history of working at the intersection of public safety and health. She is currently serving on to two interagency personnel agreements, Bureau of Justice Assistance and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting overdose prevention, overdose fatality review, and public safety and health interventions. During her time at the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard University she worked on the development of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Violent Death Reporting System. In 2005 she developed the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC), a real-time, multi-agency multi-disciplinary case review process, using data to drive policy for violence prevention, primarily firearm violence. Educating other jurisdictions on the MHRC process, Dr. O’Brien developed a national training and technical assistance curriculum for the US Department of Justice, Community Oriented Policing Services. In early 2016 she began the development of an overdose fatality review process for Wisconsin, bringing together the Wisconsin Department of Justice and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Dr. O’Brien has been honored with awards from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Director’s Community Leadership Award) and the US Department of Justice, Project Safe Neighborhoods (Outstanding Contribution by a Researcher). Dr. O’Brien earned her BS, MS and PhD from the University of Wisconsin Madison. She is an Associate Scientist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

RN, PhD Senior Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Alice Asher, RN, PhD, is a senior health scientist in the Prevention Programs and Evaluation Branch in the Division of Overdose Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She oversees prevention activities in the CDC’s Overdose Data to Action program, coordinates a Data to Action workgroup, and serves on multiple federal committees working to address the overdose epidemic. Dr. Asher is a subject-matter expert in harm reduction. She previously worked as a senior fellow in the National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STDs, and TB Prevention. Before joining the CDC in 2016, Dr. Asher served as the project director for research studies with people who inject drugs, including a clinical trial testing a hepatitis C vaccine, and was a nurse at the San Francisco, California, Needle Exchange for 8 years. Dr. Asher received her bachelor’s degree in anthropology and women’s studies from Grinnell College and her advanced nursing licensure and PhD in nursing from the University of California, San Francisco.

Associate Deputy Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Elizabeth Griffith is an Associate Deputy Director of the Courts, Communities, and Strategic Partnerships team at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). BJA is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which administers national criminal justice policy and grants as well as training and technical assistance (TTA) for state, local, and tribal justice systems. Ms. Griffith leads cross-cutting strategic efforts such as hate crime prevention; community violence initiatives and other violent crime and place-based initiatives; tribal justice; courts and adjudication including treatment courts, conviction integrity, wrongful conviction, and enforcing the Sixth Amendment; coordination of TTA; efforts to prevent overdose and increase access to justice and treatment; and integration of research and data into program and policy development. At BJA, Ms. Griffith has also served as the Deputy Director of the Planning Office and the Associate Deputy Director for Justice Systems, working on the issues of courts, corrections, substance abuse/mental health, and tribal justice. She started her career at DOJ in the National Institute of Justice as the Director of Development. Before that, she worked for more than a decade on criminal justice issues at the local level, serving as the Director of the Mayor’s Office on Criminal Justice for the City of Baltimore, Maryland, where she advised the Mayor and managed criminal justice initiatives and grants, including the development of the Baltimore Drug Court Program and the Comprehensive Communities Program. Ms. Griffith is a graduate of the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Melissa Heinen is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing overdose fatality review training and technical assistance. She has more than 20 years of experience working in injury and violence epidemiology and prevention at the local, state, regional, and national levels.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Lauren Savitskas is a senior research associate for the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). She is responsible for providing training and technical assistance on overdose fatality review. Lauren has more than seven years of experience working in injury and violence prevention and programming at the local, state, and national levels. Previously, she was the suicide and OFR program manager with the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), where she led the coordination, facilitation, and implementation of the Indiana Suicide and Overdose Program for over four years.

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Ben Ekelund is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). He oversees a portfolio of three demonstration projects for COSSAP: the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP), Partnerships to Support Data-driven Responses to Emerging Drug Threats, and Tribal Responses to Drug Overdoses initiatives. In his role, he provides coordination and support to communities in the planning, implementation, and assessment of data sharing, partnership development, and rapid responses to address drug overdoses.

JD, Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Kathy Rowings, JD, is a Senior Research Associate for Justice and Public Health Initiatives at the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). Ms. Rowings serves on the Interagency Response to the Opioid Crisis team funded under the Bureau of Justice Assistance Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP), providing technical support to BJA initiatives designed to transform criminal justice and treatment responses to the opioid epidemic, with a particular focus on rural communities. Previously, she served as Associate Program Director for Justice at the National Association of Counties, where she managed the organization’s work helping counties reduce the number of individuals with mental illnesses in jails, utilize data and evidence in justice system decision making, improve pretrial systems and processes, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and collaborate effectively across systems and agencies. Ms. Rowings also worked at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, where she assisted with class-action litigation under the Fair Housing Act, and as an editor and reporter for five years. She has a law degree from Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree in English from Miami University of Ohio.

Senior Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Michelle White is currently serving in dual roles as both a Senior Policy Advisor for the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), as well as a Senior Program Advisor for the State Justice Institute (SJI). At BJA, she supports the statewide grantees of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) along with work in the areas of prosecutor and court diversion programs, child welfare activities, harm reduction strategies, and support for rural communities across the portfolio. At SJI, she strengthens, supports, and guides the work of local and state court grantees across numerous program areas and monitors national trends in justice and their potential impact on the state courts and their justice system partners.

MA, LPC County Alcohol and Drug Coordinator, Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency, Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department

Kimberly Reilly, MA, LPC, is a Licensed Professional Counselor for New Jersey and has been working in public health for the past 11 years. Ms. Reilly oversees the Department of Substance Abuse, Addiction, and Opioid Dependency at the Ocean County, New Jersey, Health Department.

Senior Policy Advisory, Bureau of Justice Assistance 

Tim Jeffries serves as a Senior Policy Advisor for Drug Policy at the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), coordinating all BJA drug policy-specific programming. He has provided drug policy services for the last 20 years at the Office of Justice Programs through the Drug Court and Residential Substance Abuse programs and now assists in the delivery of the Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP) site-based training and technical assistance program. Mr. Jeffries obtained his bachelor’s degree in psychology and his master’s degree in social work. 

Senior Research Associate, Institute for Intergovernmental Research

Sam Robertson is a senior research associate with the Institute for Intergovernmental Research (IIR). He works on the Bureau of Justice Assistance’s (BJA) Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Program (COSSAP). His responsibilities include the development and provision of training and technical assistance to COSSAP grantee sites on stigma and harm reduction initiatives to prevent drug overdose. Prior to joining IIR, Mr. Robertson was the community overdose prevention coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH

Lead Health Scientist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jessica Wolff is a lead health scientist in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of Overdose Prevention and oversees the public health arm of the Overdose Response Strategy, a collaboration among the CDC, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance

Margaret (Meg) Chapman is a policy advisor supporting the Corrections, Reentry, and Justice Reform Policy Office of the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance. She has spent the past 25 years working in a variety of social science research, policy development and analysis, and program evaluation roles. Her portfolio of work is focused at the intersection of behavioral health and corrections and includes informing policy related to the identification of individuals with behavioral health disorders at the point of detainment, the assessment and provision of evidence-based treatment to individuals while in custody, and continuation of care upon release.

Policy Advisor, Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice

Julius Dupree is currently a Policy Advisor with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he is responsible for overseeing and managing projects that provide financial and training and technical assistance (TTA) resources to the criminal justice field. The initiatives within his portfolio provide assistance to states, localities, and federally recognized tribes to strengthen justice system capacity, protect public safety, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals. Areas of focus include the Tribal Justice System Infrastructure Program; Tribal Reentry TTA; Tribal Community Supervision TTA; Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Substance Abuse Tribal TTA; and the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program. Prior to working for BJA, Mr. Dupree was a program manager with the Office of Justice Programs, Drug Courts Program Office. In 1996, he began working for DOJ as an employee with the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Mr. Dupree holds a bachelor of arts degree in criminology and criminal justice from the University of Maryland in College Park.

EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, Public Health Advisor, Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy

Jared Theron Stokes, EdD, MA, MPH, CHES, is a public health advisor at the Office of Tribal Affairs and Policy. Dr. Stokes previously worked alongside the 20th Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Jerome Michael Adams, at the Office of the U.S. Surgeon General (OSG). While in this position, he supervised the peer review process for manuscripts published through Public Health Reports (PHR), the official journal of the OSG and the U.S. Public Health Service; managed contracts associated with PHR; and both developed and distributed promotional material for the journal among professional agencies, such as the Office of Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS Policy. Dr. Stokes also, in collaboration with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, developed a report for Congress on opioid use among youth, which provided resources for politicians, health professionals, and parents regarding the matter. Dr. Stokes is a public health professional, specializing in health education. Having invested himself in health affairs for more than a decade, Dr. Stokes understands the importance of health literacy and actively works to synthesize complex scientific information into language understood by the lay public. His career in health education began with working with the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Department of Public Health on a health education campaign, which used various media to promote awareness of the link among sodium consumption, hypertension, and stroke and to encourage reduced intake of high-sodium foods. Dr. Stokes has also worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on youth outreach regarding health insurance and Baruch College concerning health promotion within the college campus.

5:00 p.m.
Adjourn