Ex-Kansas police chief will face criminal charge after 2023 newspaper
raid
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[August 07, 2024]
By Liya Cui
(Reuters) - A former Kansas police chief who made news last year when he
raided a local weekly newspaper will be charged with interfering in the
judicial process, two special prosecutors said.
The raid on the Marion County Record newspaper led by former Marion
Police Chief Gideon Cody was widely condemned by advocates of press
freedom, pushing Marion, a town of just 2,000 people, into the national
spotlight.
Cody led raids on Aug. 11, 2023, at the newspaper's office and the home
of its publisher, Eric Meyer, who did not respond to a request for
comment.
Meyer's mother and co-owner of the newspaper, 98-year-old Joan Meyer,
died the next day. Meyer blamed her death on stress caused by the raid.
According to a 124-page report released on Monday by the two special
prosecutors, the paper committed no crimes before Cody led the raid.
"The specter of ulterior motives, personal animus and conclusions based
not on investigation but rather on assumptions permeates much of this
case," said the report by Sedgwick County District Attorney Marc Bennett
and Riley County Attorney Barry Wilkerson. "Small town familiarity
explains but does not excuse the inadequate investigation that gave rise
to the search warrant applications in this matter."
The charge against Cody will be filed later this week in Marion County
District Court, the Sedgwick County Office of the District Attorney
said.
A phone number listed under Cody's name in an online directory did not
respond to a request for comment. The identity of Cody's lawyers in the
potential new case was not immediately clear.
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Last August, Cody wrote on the Marion Police Department's Facebook
page: "I believe when the rest of the story is available to the
public, the judicial system that is being questioned will be
vindicated."
Marion police obtained search warrants to investigate whether the
Marion County Record committed identity theft and computer crime
when it accessed the driving record of a local restaurant owner,
Kari Newell.
Cody was suspended from his job last September and resigned a few
days later.
The prosecutors' report concluded that Marion police did not mislead
the court or other law enforcement agents because they "genuinely
believed they were investigating criminal acts."
The charge against Cody stems from possible actions he took
following the raids. Two pages from a written statement by Newell
were missing after they were submitted as evidence. She said they
concerned her interactions with Cody, who also asked her to delete
text messages between them, according to the report.
(Reporting by Liya Cui in New York; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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