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Kansas Cops Shut Down Newspaper For Reporting

Stevicus

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
The judge who signed the warrant appears to be a dedicated drunk driver.

The article stated that the newspaper has gotten an influx of subscriptions:

As for the newspaper, which continues publication — and has even had an influx of subscriptions — Meyer says the small team is going to carry on has it has always done.
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
This is a long one, for anyone interested.
An Institute For Justice (loopy libertarians) lawyer describes & analyzes the raid.
 

Stevicus

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
I came across this article in my newsfeed: https://www.kansas.com/news/politics-government/article278775244.html

Marion Mayor David Mayfield says he’s not “sure exactly what they did wrong” when the Marion police department executed search warrants at a newspaper office and two homes for evidence of computer crimes.

And he says if there was a problem with the search warrants, the county attorney or judge should have rejected them beforehand.

“I mean, everybody’s looking at Marion like we’re a bunch of hicks now,” Mayfield told The Eagle recently in his first extensive interview since the raids. “And the police department just did what the judge allowed them to do.”

I agree that the judge should have nixed the warrants in the first place, so it's a fair question to ask why that was not done.

The Aug. 11 searches carried out by Marion Police Chief Gideon Cody — along with five police officers and two sheriff’s deputies — at the Marion County Record and at the homes of newspaper publisher Eric Meyer and Vice Mayor Ruth Herbel drew international condemnation as an assault on the free press.

Meyer’s 98-year-old mother, Joan Meyer, died the day after officers rifled through her belongings and seized her devices as she decried what she later called “Hitler tactics.”

Cody said in the applications for the warrants that police were searching for evidence of identity theft, computer crimes or, in Herbel’s case, official misconduct after restaurant owner Kari Newell publicly accused them of illegally sharing records related to her drunken driving history as she was seeking a liquor license for her business.

Marion County Attorney Joel Ensey revoked the search warrants five days later, saying there was insufficient evidence. “Why didn’t he (Ensey) do that in the first place?” Mayfield asked.

Mayfield said he’s “perplexed” that people are more upset with Cody, a newly hired police chief, than with Ensey and Magistrate Judge Laura Viar, the two people with law licenses who he said were supposed to make sure the warrants were legally sound.

The mayor is worried that everyone is looking at their town like they're "a bunch of hicks." I wouldn't hold it against the whole town, though; it seems it was just a few people involved in this.
 

Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
I agree that the judge should have nixed the warrants in the first place, so it's a fair question to ask why that was not done.
Sometimes due to the close working nature between police and judges they forget that they are supposed to be on the side of justice, not on the side of the police. The police are not always right. The judge needs to own up to his errors before actions are taken against him. If he doesn't do that a mere sanction on his record would not be good enough. A person that can learn from his errors can be very valuable. One that cannot needs to be canned.
 

Stevicus

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
Sometimes due to the close working nature between police and judges they forget that they are supposed to be on the side of justice, not on the side of the police. The police are not always right. The judge needs to own up to his errors before actions are taken against him. If he doesn't do that a mere sanction on his record would not be good enough. A person that can learn from his errors can be very valuable. One that cannot needs to be canned.

The articled mentioned that the case is under investigation from the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. It should be interesting to see what their findings might be.

Sounds like something from East Berlin under the stasi.

Sounds like it, or maybe it's a situation where Almira Gulch becomes the town judge.

5oZjDL.gif
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
It's happening again, but in Alabama
Excerpted...
ATMORE, Ala. — When Don Fletcher checked the mailbox outside his newspaper’s office on Main Street in late September, he found a little gold mine waiting for him.

Folded up inside was a copy of a grand-jury subpoena served on two employees of the local school system. The confidential document indicated that a criminal investigation into potential financial abuse was underway — a solid lead for a veteran reporter like Fletcher.

It took a couple of weeks to confirm, but Fletcher soon broke the news in the weekly Atmore News that officials were probing the Escambia County Board of Education’s handling of federal covid-19 relief funds. What happened next, though, lifted Fletcher’s story far beyond this town nestled amid cotton fields north of the Florida panhandle.

Days later, the local district attorney ordered the arrest of Fletcher and his boss, Sherry Digmon, the News’ publisher and co-owner. He charged both with violating a state law that prohibits the disclosure of grand-jury information — a felony punishable by up to three years in prison.

The reporter, 69, and publisher, 72, were taken to the county lockup by police officers they had known for years. As a courtesy, the deputies waited until they were out of public view before placing handcuffs on them.


The article continues in the link.
 
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