Forbes: Will The Judge Who Let Police Raid A Small Kansas Newspaper Be Held Accountable?

Forbes: Will The Judge Who Let Police Raid A Small Kansas Newspaper Be Held Accountable? by Andrew Wimer:

News sites have been buzzing about what happened to a small newspaper in rural Kansas. The Marion County Record serves a county of just over 10,000 residents north of Wichita. It has been publishing since 1869, the same year the transcontinental railroad was completed. But now the paper is fighting for its First Amendment rights and could find itself fighting against the various immunities that keep police and judges from being held accountable.

The Meyer family has been involved with the paper since 1948 and owned it since 1998. But just two weeks ago, something unprecedented happened. Officers with the Marion Police Department, acting on a warrant, raided the office and also the home of its 98-year-old owner. That owner, Joan Meyer, passed away the next day with a coroner attributing the cause of death to the “anxiety and anger she experienced” because of the raid.

The story behind the raid is filled with the twists and turns of small-town politics. The police appeared to be acting on behalf of a prominent business owner who was upset that the paper had been given information from a confidential source about her DUI record. The DUI could have affected her application for a liquor license.

The warrant was sweeping, with two pages identifying items the police were allowed to seize, including most of the equipment the paper needed to keep publishing. Five officers entered Joan Meyer’s home and went through her personal records, even though there was no sign that she was involved in the controversy.

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