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    You are at:Home»State News»Government watchdog eying testimony against Kansas official

    Government watchdog eying testimony against Kansas official

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    By KMAN Staff on August 9, 2019 State News
    FILE - In this March 24, 2015, file photo, then Kansas state Sen. Michael O'Donnell, a Wichita Republican, speaks to a colleague at the Statehouse in Topeka, Kan. Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback says his office received a letter Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2017, saying federal officials had intercepted calls to his office from O'Donnell, a former state senator now serving on the Sedgwick County Commission. The governor said the letter from the U.S. Department of Justice is similar to one that news reporters and others in Wichita have received. Donnell told reporters Wednesday he was shocked to learn that his phone was tapped in 2015 when he was in the Senate. (AP Photo/Nicholas Clayton, File)

    WICHITA — Court filings show a Kansas government watchdog is examining the testimony of four purported campaign workers who testified against Sedgwick County Commissioner Michael O’Donnell at his federal trial.

    Jurors acquitted O’Donnell in March on 21 counts of wire fraud. The judge later dismissed five remaining counts at the request of the government.

    That had appeared to end O’Donnell’s legal woes.

    But docket notices filed this week in the federal case indicate the general counsel of the Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission has purchased transcripts of trial testimony of four of his friends.

    The commission’s general counsel said Thursday that he can’t confirm or deny any investigation.

    O’Donnell says he is not worried about it because he didn’t commit a crime and was acquitted. He says they’ve moved on.

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