"Last Week Tonight" host John Oliver examined the "good, the bad or the total weirdos" who are sheriffs across the United States on Monday night.

Among those highlighted: Butler County Sheriff Rick Jones.

"Sheriff Richard Jones in Butler County, Ohio, has refused to allow his deputies to carry Narcan to revive people mid-overdose, which is an incredible policy to adopt in a place where at one point, overdoses were killing more people than all other deaths combined," Oliver said.

The show cited one Enquirer article from 2017.

"Jones has argued that it is unsafe for his officers to help revive people but the more he talks, the less it seems like he thinks people are worth reviving at all," Oliver said.

In a 2017 interview with the Enquirer, Jones said when people who overdose are revived, they are often violent and are almost never happy to see the police.

Deputies in surrounding Clermont, Hamilton and Warren counties carry Narcan, as do City of Cincinnati police.

"Last Week Tonight" also showed clips of an interview that Jones did with the Washington Post.

"I'm not advocating that people die but I'm not advocating that the police, this is their job. I understand that people say it's a disease but I don't know that I believe it is a disease," Jones said in the clip.

The episode is available through HBO and can be found on Youtube.

"With over 1,000 elections this year, possibly where you live, we thought tonight might be a good time to take a look at this job," Oliver said.

Sheriff Jones could not be reached for comment on Monday.

Oliver said there are over 3,000 sheriffs in America and that 25% of law enforcement officers work for sheriffs.

"As for Sheriff No Narcan, unless someone steps up to challenge him, he will be unopposed when he runs for re-election later this year," Oliver said.

Jones is currently the only person running for Butler County sheriff. The deadline for a Republican or Democratic sheriff has passed, but an Independent candidate has until March 16 to file.