© 2021
In touch with the world ... at home on the High Plains
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

County commissioner requests outside investigation into Kansas teen’s death

Deborah Shaar

Sedgwick County Commissioner Lacey Cruse made a formal request for an outside investigation in the death of Cedric Lofton – but other commissioners are not supportive of it.

Cruse said the independent investigation would be in tandem with a joint task force put together by the county and city of Wichita.

“This isn’t either-or, this is all,” Cruse said. “Let’s do it all.

“Let’s do short-term and long-term. Let’s talk about how we have a real broken system. Let’s do short-term policy changes now, and then those long-term goals by someone who really is a neutral party.”

The task force has been asked to review the circumstances around Lofton’s death and to recommend policy changes to lawmakers at the city, county and state level. The task force is scheduled to have its first meeting on Thursday.

Lofton, 17, died in September after being taken to the county's Juvenile Intake and Assessment Center during a mental health crisis after his guardian called 911.

Cruse made the request to County Manager Tom Stolz and Commission Chair David Dennis after the county district attorney declined to press charges in the teen’s death.

Stolz said in an email to KMUW that an outside investigation or audit would have to be made through the commission.

The commission meets Wednesday.

“I know that my colleagues do care about this situation, and they have their reasons for supporting or not supporting,” Cruse said, “and that’s really all I’d like to say.”

Dennis and Commissioner Sarah Lopez said at a news conference last week, after Cruse made her request to the county manager, that an outside investigation would not be done.

“Anything beyond that is outside the scope of our authority and so we want to make sure what we’re doing is what we actually have the ability to do and change,” Lopez said, “and if we go outside of that, I worry that it could muddy the waters and we can’t get as much done.”

Local activists have also called for the Department of Justice to investigate Lofton’s case for civil rights violations.

The department declined to comment on the matter.

Copyright 2022 KMUW | NPR for Wichita. To see more, visit KMUW | NPR for Wichita.

Kylie Cameron, a Kansas native, is a News Lab intern at KMUW. A political science and journalism major, she also serves as the editor in chief for The Sunflower, Wichita State’s student newspaper.