CLARION, Pa. (EYT) – Clarion County Sheriff Rex Munsee always wanted to be a private detective, and he’ll get his wish in January when he leaves his post after three four-year terms as sheriff and becomes a private citizen.
As a young boy, Munsee built a lifelong appreciation for comic books, but his Number One hero was Batman, “the world’s greatest detective.” The deductive reasoning employed by Bruce Wayne’s alter ego and the adventures of Sherlock Holmes stuck with Munsee throughout his career.
The experiences he gained as a 27-year state police trooper and another 12 years as sheriff did not lessen his desire to be a detective, but they were good years for him.
“The second-best job I’ve ever had is Clarion County Sheriff, and the best job I’ve ever had is with the Pennsylvania State Police,” Munsee said.
A graduate of the state police academy in 1981, he was assigned to the Shippenville barracks of the PSP. As a native of Erie County, the assignment was a surprise, and he wasn’t quite sure where Shippenville was located. Twenty-seven years later, and he knew it was home.
Rex is also opening his new detective office in his daughter’s Munsee Law Office building on the corner of Liberty Street and Fifth Avenue in the shadow of the Clarion County Courthouse.
Cassandra started her own practice, Munsee Law LLC, and specializes in Family Law. She also practices Criminal Law and Personal Injury.
Asked if he encouraged his daughter to become a lawyer, Rex offered an enthusiastic “yes.”
“She always wanted to argue all the time,” Rex said. “There’s no sense that she was arguing for free. If you’re going to argue as much with me, you might as well become an attorney and get paid to do it. So she took me…
Kyleigh Alexander (left), Tania McCormick (middle) and Fatima Taylor are the three women behind the foster care program, called Alternative Care, at Mnaasged Child and Family Services in Munsee-Delaware First Nation, southwest of London. The Indigenous child wellbeing agency is now recruiting Indigenous and non-Indigenous foster parents across Southwestern Ontario to apply. (CALVI LEON, The London Free Press)
Bernie Francis of Membertou First Nation is one of the few linguists who are experts in Mi’kmaw (Nic Meloney/CBC)