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Newly released video shows the 98-year-old mother of a Kansas newspaper publisher confronting police officers as they searched her home in a raid that has drawn national scrutiny, at one point demanding: “Get out of my house!”
Video released by the newspaper shows Joan Meyer shouting at the six officers inside the Marion, Kansas, home she shared with her son, Marion County Record editor and publisher Eric Meyer. Standing with the aid of a walker and dressed in a long robe or gown and slippers, she seems visibly upset.
“Get out of my house … I don’t want you in my house!” she said at one point. “Don’t touch any of that stuff! This is my house!” she said at another.
The raids of the newspaper and the homes of the Meyers and a city council member happened on 11 August, after a local restaurant owner accused the newspaper of illegally accessing information about her. Joan Meyer died a day later. Her son said he believes that the stress contributed to her death.
A prosecutor said later that there was insufficient evidence to justify the raids, and some of the seized computers and cellphones have been returned. Meanwhile, the initial online search of a state website that the police chief cited to justify the raid was legal, a spokesperson for the agency that maintains the site said on Monday.
The Kansas Bureau of Investigation continues to examine the newspaper’s actions.
Legal experts believe the police raid on the newspaper violated a federal privacy law or a state law shielding journalists from having to identify sources or to turn over unpublished material to law enforcement.
Two state lawmakers, the Kansas house Democratic leader, Vic Miller, and Democratic state representative Jason Probst, a former newspaper reporter and editor in Hutchinson, said they plan to pursue legislation dealing with search warrants next year but are looking for other ideas as well.
“I don’t want this to fade away until we’ve addressed it,” Miller said during a statehouse news conference.
The raid on the Record put it and its hometown of around 1,900 residents about 150 miles south-west of Kansas City in the center of a debate about press freedoms protected by the first amendment to the US constitution and Kansas’ Bill of Rights.
Eric Meyer said the newspaper plans to file a lawsuit over the raid of its offices and his home.