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Kansas police’s raid of newspaper called ‘alarming abuse of authority’

A small central Kansas police department is facing a firestorm of criticism after it raided the offices of a local newspaper and the home of its publisher and owner – a move deemed by several press freedom watchdogs as a blatant violation of the U.S. Constitution’s protection of a free press.

The Marion County Record said in its own published reports that police raided the newspaper’s office on Friday, seizing the newspaper’s computers, phones and file server and the personal cellphones of staff, based on a search warrant. One Record reporter said one of her fingers was injured when Marion Police Chief Gideon Mr. Cody wrested her cellphone out of her hand, according to the report.

Police simultaneously raided the home of Eric Meyer, the newspaper’s publisher and co-owner, seizing computers, his cellphone and the home’s internet router, Mr. Meyer said. Mr. Meyer’s 98-year-old mother – Record co-owner Joan Meyer who lives in the home with her son – collapsed and died Saturday, Mr. Meyer said, blaming her death on the stress of the raid of her home.

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