Jul 12, 2023

18 sex offenders arrested in months-long Kansas operation

Posted Jul 12, 2023 12:00 AM
On June 7, deputies arrested 31-year-old Brandon True for a third violation of the offender registration act, according to the Sedgwick County daily booking records. He has been listed as a registered sex offender since 2012 after a felony conviction for attempted criminal sodomy involving a child under the age of 16 in 2009, according to the KBI Offender Registry
On June 7, deputies arrested 31-year-old Brandon True for a third violation of the offender registration act, according to the Sedgwick County daily booking records. He has been listed as a registered sex offender since 2012 after a felony conviction for attempted criminal sodomy involving a child under the age of 16 in 2009, according to the KBI Offender Registry

SEDGWICK COUNTY —The Sedgwick County Sheriff’s Office, with the assistance of the United States Marshals Service, recently completed a three-month sex offender operation “Operation New Day," according to Sheriff Jeff Easter.

Beginning April 1, and continuing through June 30, deputies with the Sedgwick County Sheriff’s Office Offender Registration Unit and deputies of the United States Marshals Service conducted 1,015 compliance checks on registered sex offenders in Sedgwick County. 

There were 31 offenders found to be non-compliant and 18 were arrested for Violation of the Offender Registration Act.  The operation was conducted during regular duty hours as well as after hours and utilized over 350 man-hours of Sheriff’s Office personnel.

The USMS Sex Offender Investigations Branch (SOIB) was created following the passage of the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act (AWA), which became law on July 27, 2006.

The SOIB carries out the USMS’s three principal responsibilities under the AWA:  assist state, local, tribal, and territorial authorities in the location and apprehension of non-compliant and fugitive sex offenders; investigate violations of the act for federal prosecution; and assist in the identification and location of sex offenders relocated as a result of a major disaster. To ensure the safety of communities and children across the country, the USMS has implemented an aggressive enforcement strategy for its responsibilities under the AWA