Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Kansas newspaper publishes after raid

Prosecutor says police should return devices

- John Hanna and Jim Salter

MARION, Kansas – A police raid that drew national attention to a small Kansas newspaper over threats to press freedoms wasn’t supported by evidence, a prosecutor said Wednesday, as the paper’s staff scrambled to print its first weekly edition since their cellphones and computers were seized.

Forced to rewrite stories and reproduce ads from scratch, the four-person newsroom toiled overnight to print Wednesday’s edition, with a defiant front-page headline that read: “SEIZED … but not silenced.” Under the 2-inchtall typeface, they published stories on the raid and the influx of support the weekly newspaper has since received.

On Wednesday, Marion County Attorney Joel Ensey said his review of police seizures from the Marion County Record offices and the publisher’s home found “insufficient evidence exists to establish a legally sufficient nexus between this alleged crime and the places searched and the items seized.”

“As a result, I have submitted a proposed order asking the court to release the evidence seized. I have asked local law enforcemen­t to return the material seized to the owners of the property,” Ensey said in a news release.

But in a statement released along with the county attorney’s, the Kansas Bureau of Investigat­ion said it still is examining whether the newspaper violated state laws. A warrant for the raid, signed by a local judge, suggested the raid was over whether the paper improperly used a local restaurant owner’s personal informatio­n to access her state driving record online. Editor and Publisher Eric Meyer has said the paper did nothing illegal.

In Topeka, Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach, a conservati­ve Republican who oversees the KBI, said its “principal interest” remains the computer access allegation­s. He told reporters he didn’t understand the KBI’s role to include “an evaluation of constituti­onal claims about the raid.”

The KBI said it would continue its work without examining any evidence seized last Friday. Once the state investigat­ors finish, Kobach said, the county attorney will decide whether to prosecute. Meyer said that the county sheriff’s office, which had been storing the items for the police, released them Wednesday afternoon to a computer forensics firm from the Kansas City area hired by the newspaper’s attorney. It is reviewing their files and programs to see whether materials on the devices have been copied, Meyer said.

“You cannot let bullies win,” Meyer said. “We have a staff that’s very experience­d, including myself, and we’re not going to take crap.”

Meyer has said that the stress from the raid of his home caused the death Saturday of his 98-year-old mother, Joan, the paper’s co-owner.

Last week’s police raid put the town into the center of a national debate about press freedom, with watchdog groups condemning the department’s actions. Meyer said he believes the raid was carried out because the newspaper was investigat­ing why the police chief left his previous post as an officer in Kansas City, Missouri.

Police Chief Gideon Cody left the Missouri department earlier this year and began the job in Marion in June. He has not responded to interview requests, and he did not reply to an email seeking comment about Wednesday’s developmen­ts.

Meyer said police seized a computer tower and cellphone belonging to a reporter who wasn’t part of the effort to check on the business owner’s background – but who was looking into Cody’s background.

Asked if the newspaper’s investigat­ion of Cody may have had anything to do with the decision to raid it, Bernie Rhodes, the newspaper’s attorney, responded: “I think it is a remarkable coincidenc­e if it didn’t.”

Meyer’s family has long published the newspaper in the town of about 1,900 among rolling hills about 150 miles southwest of Kansas City, an area that once was a sea of tall prairie grass. It’s known for its aggressive coverage of local politics, and some residents have accused it of driving businesses away, something Meyer dismisses.

Dennis Calvert, a 67-year-old Wichita resident and U.S. Navy nuclear submarine veteran, drove more than an hour to get a copy of Wednesday’s edition and sign up for a six-month subscripti­on.

Asked about the role of local journalist­s, he said, “It’d be equal to, how important is your doctor if you’re going into surgery?”

At one point, a couple visiting from Arizona stopped at the front desk to buy a subscripti­on, just to show their support, said Emily Bradbury, executive director of the Kansas Press Associatio­n, who was helping at the paper. Many others from around the country have purchased subscripti­ons since the raids. An office manager told Bradbury that she’s having a hard time keeping up with demand.

To put out the Wednesday edition of the paper, journalist­s and those involved in the business side of the newspaper used a couple of old computers that police didn’t confiscate, taking turns to get stories to the printer, to assemble ads and to check email.

Because electronic­s were so scarce, it took the newsroom until 5 a.m. to finish the paper, Bradbury said. She chipped in herself by answering phones and ordering meals for staffers.

“There were literally index cards going back and forth,” said Rhodes, who was also in the office. “They had all the classified ads, all the legal notices that they had to recreate. All of those were on the computers.”

The newspaper’s press run is normally 4,000 papers. But since the raids, they have received more than 2,000 new subscripti­ons, Meyer said.

A warrant signed by a magistrate about two hours before Friday’s raid said that local police sought to gather evidence of potential identity theft and other computer crimes stemming from a conflict between the newspaper and the local restaurant owner, Kari Newell.

Newell accuses the newspaper of violating her privacy and illegally obtaining personal informatio­n about her, while the newspaper has countered that it received informatio­n about her unsolicite­d, then verified its authentici­ty through public records online.

 ?? JOHN HANNA/AP ?? Forced to rewrite stories and reproduce ads from scratch, the four-person newsroom of the Marion County Record in Marion, Kan., worked overnight to print Wednesday’s edition.
JOHN HANNA/AP Forced to rewrite stories and reproduce ads from scratch, the four-person newsroom of the Marion County Record in Marion, Kan., worked overnight to print Wednesday’s edition.

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