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After two terms as marshal, Miller served two terms as sheriff of Sedgwick County. As a Wichita, Kansas police laboratory investigator, he was called out to the crime scene of the Earl and Ruth Bowlin murders in Sedgwick County on April 13, 1963. [4] He was elected Sedgwick County sheriff in 1964 and re-elected twice. [5]
Sedgwick County is located in the U.S. state of Kansas. Its county seat is Wichita, [3] the most populous city in the state. As of the 2020 census, the population was 523,824, [1] making it the second-most populous county in Kansas. The county was named for John Sedgwick, the highest ranking Union general killed during the American Civil War.
A driver reported seeing the body in plain sight of a grassy field between the off-ramp of I-135 north to 21st and Kansas Avenue, police said. First responders were called at 7:31 a.m. First ...
In 2008, he ran in a primary for the Kansas State House in District 96. [25] At the Kansas Republican Party level, Gietzen worked to bring an anti-abortion leadership to the party during his chairmanship of the party in Sedgwick County. [26] He served as president of the Kansas Republican Coalition for Life [26] until his death.
Sedgwick Township covers an area of 35.74 square miles (92.6 km 2) and contains one incorporated settlement, Sedgwick. According to the USGS, it contains one cemetery, Hillside. The streams of East Emma Creek, Emma Creek, Kisiwa Creek, Mud Creek, Sand Creek and West Emma Creek run through this township.
Michael O'Donnell II [1] (born August 6, 1985) – also known as Michael O'Donnell, Jr. – is a former Republican member of the Sedgwick County Commission in Kansas, representing District 2 from 2017 to 2020.
Records obtained by The Eagle show Sedgwick County has so far spent $480,948 fighting the civil rights lawsuit. Wichita has spent $224,723. ‘Making the wrong decision’
The idea to construct a memorial to Sedgwick County Civil War veterans began with two local GAR posts in 1904, but sufficient funds were not available until in 1911. In that year the Kansas State Legislature passed a one-time county tax levy to fund the building of monuments in counties with a population of over 72,000. [2]