Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Police raid of newspaper causes outcry

- JOHN HANNA AND MARGERY A. BECK

MARION, Kan. — A small central Kansas police department is facing a torrent of criticism for raiding a local newspaper’s office and the owner and publisher’s home, seizing computers and cellphones, and, in the publisher’s view, stressing his 98-year-old mother enough to cause her weekend death.

Several press freedom watchdogs condemned the Marion Police Department’s actions as a blatant violation of the U.S. Constituti­on’s protection for a free press. The Marion County Record’s editor and publisher, Eric Meyer, worked with his staff Sunday to reconstruc­t stories, ads and other materials for its next edition Wednesday, even as he took time in the afternoon to provide a local funeral home with informatio­n about his mother, Joan, the paper’s co-owner.

A search warrant tied the raids by Marion police, led Friday morning by Chief Gideon Cody, to a dispute between the newspaper and a local restaurant owner, Kari Newell. She is accusing the newspaper of invading her privacy and illegally accessing informatio­n about her and her driving record and suggested that the newspaper targeted her after she threw Meyer and a reporter out of her restaurant when it hosted an event for the congressma­n who represents the area.

While Meyer saw Newell’s complaints — which he said were untrue — as prompting the raids, he also believes the newspaper’s aggressive coverage of local politics and issues played a role. He said the newspaper was examining Cody’s past work with the Kansas City, Mo., police as well.

“This is the type of stuff that, you know, that Vladimir Putin does, that Third World dictators do,” Meyer said during an interview in his office. “This is Gestapo tactics from World War II.”

Cody said Sunday that the raid was legal and tied to an investigat­ion.

Meyer said that one Record reporter suffered an injury to a finger when Cody wrested her cellphone out of her hand, according to the report. The newspaper’s surveillan­ce video showed officers reading that reporter her rights while Cody watched, though she wasn’t arrested or detained. Newspaper employees were hustled out of the building while the search continued for more than 90 minutes, according to the footage.

Meanwhile, Meyer said, police simultaneo­usly raiding his home seized computers, his cellphone and the home’s internet router.

But as Meyer fielded messages from reporters and editors as far away as London and reviewed footage from the newsroom’s surveillan­ce camera, Newell was receiving death threats from as far away, she said. She said the Record engages in “tabloid trash reporting” and was trying to hush her up.

Newell said she threw Meyer and the Record reporter out of the event for Republican U.S. Rep. Jake LaTurner at the request of others who are upset with the “toxic” newspaper. On the town’s main street, one storefront included a handmade “Support Marion PD” sign.

Newell said she believes the newspaper violated the law to get her personal informatio­n as it checked on the status of her driver’s license following a 2008 drunken driving conviction and other driving violations.

The newspaper countered that it received that informatio­n unsolicite­d, and that its staff verified it through public online records. The newspaper eventually decided not to run a story regarding what was in the informatio­n because it wasn’t sure the source who supplied it had obtained it legally. But the newspaper did run a story on a city council meeting in which Newell herself confirmed she’d had a DUI conviction and that she had continued to drive even after her license was suspended.

 ?? (AP/John Hanna) ?? Eric Meyer, the editor and publisher of the Marion County Record, answers questions Sunday about a raid by local police and sheriff’s deputies on his newspaper’s newsroom and his home in Marion, Kan.
(AP/John Hanna) Eric Meyer, the editor and publisher of the Marion County Record, answers questions Sunday about a raid by local police and sheriff’s deputies on his newspaper’s newsroom and his home in Marion, Kan.

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