How you can help the Marion County Record
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Dear friend of press freedom,
Here are some of the most important stories we’re following from the U.S. and around the world. If you enjoy reading this newsletter, please forward it to friends and family. If someone has forwarded you this newsletter, please subscribe here ([link removed]) .
Marion County Record. Video of officers raiding the Marion County Record and seizing its equipment, all because its journalists accessed a government website to verify a news tip.
Kansas raid shines light on press freedom issues
Last Friday’s illegal raid of the Marion County Record and its owners drew widespread condemnation from journalists and advocates alike. The night of the raid, we called it ([link removed]) “the latest example of American law enforcement officers treating the press in a manner previously associated with authoritarian regimes.” That was before we learned that the Record’s 98-year-old co-owner, Joan Meyer, died shortly after police ransacked her home ([link removed]) .
Just five days later, authorities withdrew the warrant and said they’d return the seized items, admitting that there was never any legitimate connection between the raid and whatever purported “crime” the Record allegedly committed by using public records to verify a news tip. While that’s good news, authorities can’t undo the harm they’ve done or give Joan Meyer her life back. We wrote that they ([link removed]) “deserve zero credit for coming to their senses only after an intense backlash from the local and national media and an aggressive letter from the Record’s lawyer.”
The raid was outrageous and its aftermath tragic. The one good thing that came out of it, though, is that press freedom was at the center of the national ([link removed]) and international ([link removed]) news cycle. Let’s hope it stays there. Journalists are often hesitant to make themselves the story, but press freedom isn’t just about journalists, it’s about the public’s right to know. And the interest in the news from Marion shows that the public values that right and wants to hear when it’s infringed.
Raid underscores need for newsroom encryption
Video of the raid ([link removed]) in Marion shows (at around 2:44) a police officer, while seizing multiple devices ([link removed]) , commenting, “I don’t believe that this is encrypted so I think we’re OK.”
As we wrote on our blog ([link removed]) , many journalists, especially at smaller outlets like the Record, may not give much thought to the prospect of police ransacking their newsrooms and homes over routine efforts to verify news tips using public records. That's understandable, given that their newsgathering is protected by both federal ([link removed]) and state ([link removed]) law and the Constitution.
Yet here we are, and newsrooms of all sizes need to adapt to current realities by ensuring their devices are encrypted. Marion-like raids are unusual but, as our U.S. Press Freedom Tracker documents ([link removed]) , smaller-scale seizures of journalists’ equipment happen all the time ([link removed]) .
Our Digital Security team responded to the raid with an article ([link removed]) on how newsrooms can encrypt their equipment and the importance of doing so. “When seizing a device,” our Principal Researcher Martin Shelton wrote, “law enforcement officials hope yours is unencrypted because an encrypted device is significantly more time-consuming to examine without your permission.” That means cops are far less likely to recover confidential source communications and newsgathering materials from an illegally seized device if it's encrypted.
Our team has also published numerous guides and resources ([link removed]) for newsrooms looking to improve their digital security practices, through encryption and other means. And we welcome any journalists or publishers to contact us ([link removed]) to arrange a digital security training session so we can help them adapt to the threats journalists now face.
What you can do to help in Marion
Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) hosted a meeting this week of numerous press freedom organizations where we heard from Max Kautsch, counsel to the Kansas Press Association, to get a local perspective on the situation in Marion and what people can do to help the Record and honor Joan Meyer’s memory.
Afterward, FPF Deputy Advocacy Director Caitlin Vogus passed along his tips, and some of our own, on our blog ([link removed]) . Read her post to find out more about what you can do, from supporting the Marion County Record financially to pushing investigators to get to the bottom of the raid to supporting legislation ([link removed]) that would benefit the Record as well as your own local newspaper.
** What we’re reading
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The Marion County Record ([link removed]) . Against all odds, the Record was able to put out its weekly paper on time this week. Vogus had the opportunity to offer our congratulations to publisher Eric Meyer for the achievement during her appearance ([link removed]) alongside him on NewsNation.
‘A whole lot of history’ dies with newspaper veteran Joan Meyer after police raid ([link removed]) . “Joan Meyer spent each of her almost 10 decades of life in about a six-block radius of Marion, Kansas, but she was a worldly woman who had an impactful newspaper career, a vigilance with words, a powerful sense of propriety and equally unflinching opinions.”
Feds deny return of Tim Burke’s devices amid Fox News leak probe ([link removed]) . The Marion Record’s phones and computers weren’t the only newsgathering equipment in law enforcement custody this month. We’ll have more soon on the concerning FBI raid ([link removed]) of Tim Burke’s home in early May, after he obtained and publicized outtakes of a Tucker Carlson interview with Kanye West.
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