From Kirstin McCudden | U.S. Press Freedom Tracker <[email protected]>
Subject After Kansas: Putting newsroom raids in context
Date August 31, 2023 4:35 PM
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Since 2017, there have been 90+ search and seizure incidents in the Tracker's database.

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Friends of the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker:

Welcome back to your monthly newsletter around press freedom violations in the United States as captured by the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker ([link removed]) , a project by Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF). To subscribe directly to this monthly newsletter, sign up here ([link removed]) .

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Search and seizure incidents documented in the Tracker from 2017 to today. — U.S. Press Freedom Tracker

The events took less than a week to unfold. On Friday, Aug. 11, the entire police force of Marion County, Kansas, was in the entire news operation of the Marion County Record, hauling away computers ([link removed]) and wrestling cellphones from the hands of reporters ([link removed]) and doing the same thing at the home ([link removed]) of Eric Meyer, the newspaper’s publisher and editor, where he lived with Joan Meyer, his mother and co-owner of the weekly. Joan Meyer died the following day, her son said, “of shock and grief.”

The raids, ostensibly part of an investigation into alleged unlawful use of a computer and identity theft, were swiftly condemned by press freedom advocates near and far. Within hours, Freedom of the Press Foundation, which operates the Tracker, released a statement: “Based on the reporting so far, the police raid of the Marion County Record on Friday appears to have violated federal law ([link removed]) , the First Amendment, and basic human decency,” Director of Advocacy Seth Stern wrote.

By Wednesday, the county’s top prosecutor had withdrawn the search warrants, citing insufficient evidence to justify the searches, and requested the seized devices — nine computers, three cellphones and a few hard drives — be returned to the journalists. Joan Meyer’s funeral was Saturday.

Marion County Record publisher Eric Meyer during an Aug. 16, 2023, news conference at the newspaper office. — MAX MCCOY FOR KANSAS REFLECTOR

When the equipment was en route back to the newsroom, Record attorney Bernie Rhodes told our Senior Reporter Stephanie Sugars that it was “a promising first step,” but did nothing to cure the damages done by the original illegal search. “We have a long way to go to establish that justice is served,” Rhodes said.

This is also a good time to acknowledge the work of the local Kansas and Midwest journalists whose reporting was instrumental in giving us a window to the people and events as they unfolded. The Kansas Reflector ([link removed]) worked to make sure we all got the story right (and were gracious in their email responses) and KSHB-TV often led the way in news (reporter Jessica McMaster’s feed on X ([link removed]) , formerly known as Twitter, was instrumental in real-time updates).

It’s also a good time to put the Marion County Record raids in context with other press freedom violations across the U.S.; more than 90 incidents are captured in the Tracker’s Equipment Search and Seizure ([link removed]) category. Here’s what else we’ve documented through the years:

Total search and seizure incidents in the Tracker from 2017 to today: 93 ([link removed])

While in Marion, entire computer towers were taken from the newsroom, most often it’s journalists’ handheld devices, like phones and cameras, that are seized by law enforcement. Cellphones, such as the three taken from Record journalists, are included in 49 search and seizures ([link removed]) in the Tracker.

Search warrants, including the two in Kansas, were used in 11 search and seizures ([link removed]) in our database; four ([link removed]) this year alone.
Searches and seized equipment of journalists across the U.S., by state. — U.S. Press Freedom Tracker

One of those search warrants was executed this May in Florida, when independent journalist Tim Burke awoke to the sound of FBI agents banging on the door of his Tampa home. By the time the raid ended approximately 10 hours later, agents had seized virtually all of the electronics in his newsroom.

In an interview this month, Burke told us that the seizure of his electronics has made it impossible for him to continue his journalistic work.

“It’s very difficult for me to do most of the things that I do as a journalist without my contacts that are on my phone or without the video editing softwares that are on my computer,” Burke said. “I just want to get back to doing this thing that I’ve dedicated my life to.”

Read: FBI raids home, office of independent journalist on hacking allegations ([link removed])


** In the news
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“Tracking and Defending Press Freedom in the U.S. ([link removed]) ” Our director of advocacy and I join “News in Context” podcast host and journalism professor Gina Baleria to discuss the Record search warrants and the importance of a free press for us all. Give it a listen.

Media giants raise First Amendment concerns over raid on Kansas paper ([link removed]) : Axios uses the Tracker database to put events in Kansas in larger perspective. “Zoom out: Tensions between local newsrooms and local law enforcement officials have escalated in recent years, per data from the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker. In 2020, dozens of journalists across the country were arrested and targeted by police during nationwide George Floyd protests.” (We documented 133 ([link removed]) arrests of journalists during BLM protests that year)

Upcoming event ([link removed]) : Those in the New York area are invited to a reception, film screening and panel discussion on the report, “Covering Democracy: Protests, Police and the Press” on Sept. 26 in Manhattan. Hear how Tracker data informed recommendations, prepared by Joel Simon and the Knight Institute, to protect press freedom and the right to record at future protests.

Best,
Kirstin McCudden
Managing Editor, U.S. Press Freedom Tracker

Pursuant to the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker’s Privacy Policy ([link removed]) , please note the addition of the bolded portion of the language that follows: “FPF’s internal analytical logging involves logging, for up to 30 days, two bytes of the IP address, as well as the referrer page, time stamp, page requested, user agent, language header, website visited, actions taken while on the page (such as selecting particular search filters or clicking particular buttons), and a hash of all of this information.”
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