For Sara Morris, 蹤獲扦s new police chief, words are her greatest weapon.
Verbal judo as she calls it, is something shes carried with her through 28 years of law enforcement experience at the Wichita and 蹤獲扦 police departments.
Im a talker, she says. Id much rather talk myself out of situation than fight myself out of a situation.
Morris, who took over for former 蹤獲扦 Police Chief Paul Dotson as chief in June, says its something shes always brought to the table. Her propensity for spending a little extra time chatting as a street cop initially frustrated some of her partners, she says.
But, as she rose to be the Wichita Police Departments first female robbery/homicide detective, and the departments first officer directly promoted to homicide, it often worked as an asset.
You speak for them, she says of homicide victims. Somebodys got to be their voice. Somebodys got to find justice for them.
Speaking is what she did. She remembers how during her first major case, the Michael Marsh investigation, she did more than a dozen interviews with Marsh. They ultimately yielded his confession of killing a mother and her young daughter.
I was able to go back to him repeatedly with questions, she says. When it actually went to trial, they told me later Michael told his attorneys they had to be nice to me on the stand because I had treated him with respect.
New opportunities
As Morris approached the 20-year mark in the WPD, Dotson encouraged her to finish her masters after 17 years out of school, she says. She finished her degree, and in 2005, he convinced her to come work for him at 蹤獲扦.
With higher education came new opportunities. The 蹤獲扦 Criminal Justice Program recruited her to teach intro courses. In the classroom, she says she again found herself chattinggetting to know her students strengths and weaknesses.
A mother of two, she had watched her son struggle taking tests. She says she tried to go the extra step to help those with similar troubles, sometimes giving oral exams to students who struggled with writing.
After working third and fourth watch for years, where many of those she came in contact with were future criminals, she says working at a university was an adjustment.
Over here, its this big flip flop, she says. The big percentage are future leaders. It was exciting. Its been a neat change, a very positive change.

Mary Herrin
One thing that I think is special about Sara is she has a good sense of humor, but yet if she needs to address a tough and serious situation, shes very capable and experienced in doing that.
蹤獲扦 Police Capt. Cecil Hashenberger, Morriss partner for eight years, agreed. He says shes the kind of cop who can balance being personablehaving lunch with colleagues one day, and sometimes having to be the professional to write a ticket or investigate them the next.
He says her years doing undercover and homicide investigations uniquely prepared her.
Thats no small job, he says. That gives you a lot of insight into the inside of peoples heads. That can be a scary situation when you start getting into peoples heads.
As the new chief, Morris says shes still doing this.
She says with a new residence hall and ongoing construction on campus, listening has been imperative. Shes working on projects to improve safety and investigating the potential for a shuttle system on campus to help with parking concerns.
But first, shes trying to keep her ear to the ground. Shes out there again talking with students, faculty and parents, trying to find out what a quickly growing and changing community wants and needs.
It helps me see the big picture, what are people needing to know, she says. Its all learning. Every day is going to throw something new at you.