Trooper Ferdinand F. (Bud) Pribbenow


Pribbenow joined the Patrol on July 13, 1959. Upon graduation from patrol school, he was stationed in Columbus. In 1962, he was promoted to Trooper Class A and transferred to the Patrol’s Kansas Turnpike detail in Wichita.
Shortly after 8 p.m., on July 11, 1981, Pribbenow stopped a car for traveling 98 mph in the 55 mph zone on the Turnpike north of the El Dorado interchange (US-77). Pribbenow was walking up to talk with the driver when suddenly the driver leapt out of his car and shot the trooper in the chest. The 23-year-old suspect then shot him in the neck before fleeing in his car.
A physician from Prescott, Arizona, was the first person on the scene after the shooting. He called for assistance on the patrol car radio, but was unable to save Pribbenow.
A short time later, police spotted the killer’s vehicle driving through the tollgate at the Kellogg exit in East Wichita, and a pursuit ensued. About a mile into the chase, the suspect rammed the back end of a van that was stopped at a light at Kellogg and Rock Road near the Towne East Shopping Mall. Officers demanded the suspect leave his car, and he replied with gunfire. Officers returned fire, striking the suspect several times before he was taken into custody.
Pribbenow served the citizens of Kansas for 22 years before his death. His wife, Dorothy, and 5 daughters survived him.
Memorial Highway:
The portion of K-96 from its western junction with interstate highway 235, then northwest to the eastern city limits of the city of Mount Hope, is hereby designated as the trooper Ferdinand ‘‘Bud’’ Pribbenow memorial highway.

