Former WPD officer stripped of license a year after child sex abuse convictions
A former Wichita police officer has had his law enforcement license revoked almost a year after he was found guilty of child sex crimes, including one that occurred while he was employed by the city’s police department.
Brock England was arrested in March 2023 while off-duty in Wichita and accused of sex crimes that took place over the course of several years. He was charged with sexual abuse of a child under the age of 12 and two counts of lewd molestation in connection with incidents that happened on July 1, 2018, Sept. 14, 2010 and Sept. 14, 2012, respectively, court records show.
England, 34, worked for the Wichita Police Department from June 19, 2014, to July 22, 2019, previous reporting shows, before briefly working for the Enid, Oklahoma, police department and then returning to WPD from Dec. 30, 2019 to July 25, 2023, according to an order of revocation.
Agents with the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigations, who led the investigation into England, determined he committed his crimes in both Oklahoma and Kansas, some during his time as a Wichita police officer, court records show.
Upon his arrest, he was put on unpaid administrative leave by the department and his employment with the law enforcement agency later ended.
He was found guilty by the Garfield, Oklahoma County District Court on one charge of sexual abuse of a child under the age of 12 and two counts of lewd molestation on Jan. 22, 2025, and was sentenced to 80 years in prison. He will not be eligible for early release or parole consideration for at least 68 years, a statement from Oklahoma District 4 District Attorney Tommy Humphries read.
England’s license was revoked by the Kansas Commission on Peace Officers’ Standards and Training, also known as KS-CPOST, on Jan. 14, 2026. The 12-member body that oversees law enforcement training in Kansas said England “failed to maintain the good moral characteristics of integrity, upholding the laws of the state and nation, and conduct that warrants the public trust.”