TOPEKA, Kan. — Two special prosecutors said Monday that they plan to charge a former central Kansas police chief with obstruction of justice over his conduct following a police raid last year on the local weekly newspaper.
Prosecutors Marc Bennett and Barry Wilkerson concluded in their 124-page report that the staff at the Marion County Record committed no crimes before former Marion Police Chief Gideon Cody led a raid on its offices and the home of its publisher. They said police warrants signed by a judge to allow the searches contained inaccurate information from an ''inadequate investigation" and that the searches were not legally justified.
Police body camera footage of the 2023 raid on Publisher Eric Meyer's home shows his 98-year-old mother, Joan Meyer, visibly upset and telling officers, ''Get out of my house!" She co-owned the paper, lived with her son and died of a heart attack the next afternoon.
Prosecutors found no evidence officers "believed they were posing a risk to Mrs. Meyer's life,'' but they allege Cody obstructed an official judicial process in the weeks after the raid. He resigned as chief last October. It wasn't clear whether officials planned to charge him with a felony or a misdemeanor, and either is possible. The criminal complaint had not been filed as of Monday.
''Small town familiarity explains but does not excuse the inadequate investigation that gave rise to the search warrant applications in this matter,'' prosecutors said in their report.
Bennett is the district attorney in Sedgwick County, home to the state's largest city of Wichita; and Wilkerson is the chief prosecutor in Riley County in northeastern Kansas. The state's attorney general appointed them after the Marion County prosecutor — who faced questions himself about the search warrants — said he had conflict.
The raid sparked a national debate about press freedom focused on Marion, a town of about of about 1,900 people set among rolling prairie hills about 150 miles (241 kilometers) southwest of Kansas City, Missouri.
Seth Stern, director of the Freedom of the Press Foundation, said in a statement that Cody should face other charges in addition to obstruction of justice.