
A local paper gets searched by police. Tragedy ensues.
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Brooke Gladstone
On this week's on the media, a small town whodunit filled with divorce, corruption and backstabbing. The mystery who is behind the brazen
Jessica McMaster
attack on a local newspaper, KSHB 41 senior investigator Jessica McMaster continues to push for answers after police raided the small town newspaper, the Marion County Record.
Eric Meyer
I don't know whether he feels that way about all journalists or not. I think this was targeting me personally. Me. This, this hatred goes back decades.
Joanne Meyer
The judge ordered it. On what reason?
Jessica McMaster
It was brought to my attention today that my private and personal information that was illegally obtained, obtained by a local reporter.
She started talking to me and, you know, she was very stern that police did the right thing and that the truth was going to come out.
Brooke Gladstone
It's all coming up after this. On the media is brought to you by Progressive Insurance. Insurance isn't one size fits all. That's why drivers have enjoyed Progressive's name your price tool for years now. With the name your price tool, you can tell them what you want to pay and they'll show you options that fit your budget. So whether you're picking out your first policy or just looking for something that works better for you and your family, they make it easy to to see your options, visit progressive.com, find a rate that works for you with the name your price tool. Progressive casualty insurance company and affiliates price and coverage match limited by state law. From WNYC in New York, this is on the media. I'm Brooke Gladstone.
Michael Oinger
And I'm Michael Oinger. In August of 2023, police in Marion County, Kansas, brandishing a search warrant, raided the offices of the local paper and the home of the newspaper's editor and publisher. Seizing computers and cell phones. The story made national headlines and caught the attention of Brian Reed. You might remember him as the host of the hugely popular podcast s town, a serial and this American life production. Now he has his own show in collaboration with the public radio station kcrw. It's called question everything. And according to its tagline, the show looks into, quote, how the truth gets buried, distorted and denied and the ways people are fighting to make matter again. The Maran county raid was squarely in their wheelhouse and it's a great OTM story. So this week we're handing over the hour to Brian to tell this small town who done it. Filled with divorce, corruption and backstabbing. The mystery who was behind this brazen attack on a local newspaper.
Brian Reed
It was the summer of 2023 and the Maran County Record had been making a lot of enemies. There was the new police chief who'd come to town under suspicious circumstances from Kansas City, who the paper had been investigating. There was the local restaurant owner who'd recently kicked Marion County Record reporters out of a political event at her cafe. And then there was the mayor of Marion, who had just shared this post on Facebook. The real villains in America aren't black people. They aren't white people, they aren't Asians, they aren't Latinos, they aren't women, they aren't gays. They are the radical journalists, teachers, and professors who do nothing but sow division between the American people.
Eric Meyer
I have that posted on the wall in my office.
Brian Reed
This is Eric Meyer, editor and publisher and owner of the Marion County Record, a weekly newspaper. Before this, he worked at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and also taught journalism at the University of Illinois. Marion's a town of less than 2,000 in rural Kansas. There aren't too many people there with that resume.
Eric Meyer
I don't know whether he feels that way about all journalists or not. I think this was targeting me personally. This hatred goes back decades.
Brian Reed
The animosity from the mayor. His name is David Mayfield. Eric says that dates back to at
Eric Meyer
least 2003, when he was city administrator, not mayor. And we had an outbreak of cyanobacteria, blue green algae that affected the reservoir, which is the water supply for Marion.
Brian Reed
The paper got a tip that the town was taking water from the reservoir even though the Kansas Department of Health had not said it was safe.
Eric Meyer
And we asked about it, and the mayor denied that. We then got proof that they actually had been doing it. And then the mayor said, oh, well, I didn't say that because I knew it was safe, because I took my rowboat out to the reservoir and rowed to where the water comes in. There was no algae around it. And we responded, but the al. The toxin in the algae is invisible. Well, that's just, you know, he didn't like that. I was also there when the mayor and the city's economic development director, both of them got divorced, and they are now married to each other. The economic development director took city money and set up a business by giving them a loan to purchase inventory with. The company was called up in smoke, and it was a cigarette shop. And after they opened, their inventory mysteriously vanished in a burglary, by the way. They were set up in a building that she owned and rented to them. We reported this when my father had a sudden cardiac arrest and would have died had there not been an EMT who lived a block away reportedly the woman who is now the mayor's wife went around to several people saying, too bad he got there that quick. She's denied this.
Brian Reed
The blood is clearly bad between Eric, the mayor, and his wife. When I reached out to Mayor Mayfield, he wrote me that none of the, quote, false information you have been spoon Fed by Mr. Eric Meyer is true. His wife, the former economic development director, told me it's crazy that she would wish death on Eric's dad, that she and Eric's dad were neighbors for years and got along okay. Though she did say her relationship with the newspaper was a constant battle. Plus, she said, I can assure you my husband has not been in a rowboat anytime since I've known him. The most recent thing Eric says Mayor Mayfield was mad at him in the paper about was that they'd been covering opposition on the city council to an ordinance the mayor wanted passed, a local government thing having to do with bond approvals that he'd been trying to squeak through without people noticing. That was the story du jour when the mayor had shared that Facebook post. Watchdog journalism. Pissing off people in charge. People like the police chief, the restaurant owner. The mayor is a tradition in Eric's family. His dad's mom, his grandma worked for the Wichita Eagle and was disappointed she had to take mandatory retirement at age 65 because she missed out on covering the Vietnam War. Then Eric's dad and his mom, they both worked at the Marion county record. The record's 155 years old. Eric's parents worked at it for decades before buying the paper in 1998 to stop it from being sold to a conglomerate. And then there's Eric, their only child.
Eric Meyer
I had started out there when I was a kid, you know, stapling and assembling jobs. And then I became the darkroom technician and took all the pictures and developed the films and became the engraving technician.
Brian Reed
So you literally, you have journalism in your blood. Like this is a family profession. In 2020, Eric decided to move back home full time to Marion. By this point, his father had died, and he wanted to give his mom a hand running the paper. She was 95.
Eric Meyer
I lived with her. I helped her with stuff. She was still working for the paper. She had a weekly column of, you know, the recollections. 15 years ago, 30 years ago, 45 years ago, stuff from the paper.
Brian Reed
Which brings us back to the summer of 2023. It's Friday morning, a little before 11.
Eric Meyer
I was sitting right where I'm sitting right now at a computer at my mother's house. And there was a ring at the doorbell. And I looked up and I looked out a window here, and I could see there were a couple of uniformed officers out there.
Brian Reed
There's body cam footage of this from
Eric Meyer
the police, so I went to the door. Eric Meyer?
Joanne Meyer
Yeah.
Michael Oinger
Good morning.
Joanne Meyer
Hey.
Eric Meyer
We're local law enforcement and they said we're here to serve a search warrant on you. Here with a search warrant to take a look at your digital devices. And we want your cell phone and your laptop and your desktop and anything you've used. And if you don't provide them, we're
Brian Reed
here to take them in. The video, Eric's standing in the doorway in an oversized T shirt and shorts. A bit disheveled, a bit discombobulated. The cop hands him the warrant.
Eric Meyer
Okay, you're more than. More than welcome to read through that. It's all in there.
Brian Reed
Eric scans the document. It says there's probable cause to search his and his mom's house because of allegations of identity theft and unlawful use of computers. It doesn't give any more details about those supposed crimes, and it doesn't mention the newspaper. But Eric suspects it must have something to do with their reporting. So, thinking quick on his feet, he goes into journalism professor mode.
Eric Meyer
Okay, I'm going to object to this on the grounds of the Kansas Shield Law. Okay, you can do that, sir.
Brian Reed
Eric knew that when police want info from a reporter, what they're supposed to do is subpoena it. Here. Whatever the Marion police were after, they had not done that. Eric had not gotten a subpoena. And yet, waving around their search warrant, the officers walk through Eric's house and start rifling through his things, shield law be damned. He tries to keep it cool.
Eric Meyer
I understand. Which judge ordered it? I was simply. I'm going to inform you that I think that you're doing something wrong and make a formal objection to it, but you're going to get a suit back against false search.
Jessica McMaster
That's okay.
Eric Meyer
You understand that. And try to do it in as even tempered a manner as I can so that you can't say that I resisted arrest or resisted whatever.
Brian Reed
Though he did get some choice words in there.
Eric Meyer
Okay, I understand. You're not people who are involved in this, Albert. You are in big deep.
Joanne Meyer
Right. Okay.
Jessica McMaster
Okay.
Brian Reed
Eric knows he needs a lawyer fast. But the police have already confiscated his cell phone with all his contacts. So he picks up his mom's landline and dials the Marion County Records Office where his employees are. But they're not answering he starts to worry. Are the cops over there, too?
Eric Meyer
I couldn't get through. Anyone there? Please answer the goddamn phone.
Brian Reed
The police won't say what Eric has supposedly done wrong. But he starts running through theories in his head about what could be behind this. Of course, the mayor comes to mind. He clearly was not happy with the paper. But there was also the police chief. His name was Gideon Cody, listed prominently at the top of the search warrant. He was the one who applied for it. And he was in charge of the officers who were now raiding Eric's house. Chief Cody was new to town. He just started in the position a few months earlier.
Eric Meyer
Now, you have to understand, he had been a captain of police in Kansas City, Missouri, earning almost $120,000 a year. He was one year away from retirement there. He took a job in Marion, Kansas, at $60,000 to be the chief of a town of 1900 people. Something didn't make sense there.
Brian Reed
And when the record had published Gideon Cody's name, Reporting that he'd be Marion's
Eric Meyer
new police chief, we got inundated with calls from people he had worked with previously who said that he had a terrible record. In fact, they called him the worst officer they had ever served with. Wow. And I'm talking about dozens of letters that we got. That he was about to be demoted by the Kansas City police. And that he was coming here because if he stayed there, he was supposed to be demoted to sergeant from captain. And his retirement would forever be limited by that. So he needed to leave before he got demoted.
Brian Reed
Eric and his team had been looking into this, of course, Investigating the new police chief's past. But they hadn't published any of the reporting yet. They were still trying to get people to go on the record and nail it down. So is that why the police were coming after them? Because they were investigating their new chief? Certainly seemed possible. Nervous about what's happening to his staff over at the records office, Eric calls a friend.
Eric Meyer
Can you go over? You're here in your house. Can you go to the record and tell them that I need them to talk to me right now. And I can't get through to them. I have two police here seizing my ears. I later learned that they'd been escorted out of the building and told to stand outside in 100 degree heat.
Brian Reed
Your staff. Your staff had been.
Eric Meyer
Yeah, okay, yeah. And had their phones ripped away from them.
Brian Reed
So the cops were over at the newspaper office.
Eric Meyer
There were at least five of them there.
Brian Reed
Five cops at the office. At one point, there were seven cops at his mom's house. After handing over his devices, Eric leaves his and his mother's house, and he races over to the office. It's also been raided. Computers taken, folders torn through, all with a search warrant listing the same alleged crimes, identity theft, unlawful use of computers, and the same lack of details about them. Though there was one line that gave another hint as to who might be responsible for this. In the list of items police were supposed to seize from Eric's house and from the office, number four read, quote, documents and records pertaining to Carrie Newell. Carrie Newell was a local business owner. She ran a restaurant inside the old Elgin Hotel in the center of town and a coffee shop across the street. Not long before this, the record had been leaked. Some documents pertaining to Carrie, which they also had not yet reported on. They'd done some looking into them, but decided they didn't warrant a story. And on its face, at least, this seemed like it could be the most likely explanation for what was happening. Because Eric knew that Carrie knew that the paper had this info about her because she complained about it at the most recent town council meeting.
Jessica McMaster
It was brought to my attention today that my climate and personal information that was illegally obtained, obtained by a local
Brian Reed
reporter, and Eric had stood up to defend himself and the paper in front of the council.
Eric Meyer
We did not obtain any. Someone sent it to us. We actually consulted an attorney as to whether it was privileged information, whether we were in difficulty because we possessed it. Our attorney's advice was no.
Brian Reed
Kerry Newell had also just hosted an event for a congressman at her cafe and refused to let record reporters attend, which was a whole situation. So these are the possibilities, Mayor Mayfield, Police Chief Cody Kerry Newell, that are running through Eric's mind as he tries to figure out who behind these raids, what they're about. Though he was about to be distracted by a situation that was escalating with the police back at his house. We'll hear about that in a second. This week on the New Yorker Radio Hour, I'll talk with RB star Alicia Keys about growing up in New York City and what it takes to deal with the music business.
Eric Meyer
Man, the music business.
Brian Reed
Let the record show. Alicia Keys just went. Alicia Keys on the New Yorker Radio Hour from wnyc.
Eric Meyer
Listen, wherever you get your podcasts,
Michael Oinger
This is on the Media. I'm Michael Oinger. We're jumping right back into the episode of KCRW's Question Everything. Here's the host, Brian Reed.
Brian Reed
Eric's running back and forth between the records office where his employees are freaking out, and his house where his 98 year old mother is freaking out. Her name's Joanne.
Eric Meyer
I'm an only child. She moved to this house the day before I was born. So she'd lived there for 70 years. I was 70 at the time. She was very upset to have these cops and they stood there for two and a half hours, just stood guard over her for two and a half hours. She got very upset about that. I was trying to calm her down.
Brian Reed
To be fair, your mom does seem pretty fiery in the video I've watched.
Jessica McMaster
Thank you.
Joanne Meyer
I'm not dumb.
Jessica McMaster
Thank you.
Joanne Meyer
I may be 90 some years old, but I know what's going on. And what's going on is illegal as hell.
Brian Reed
Joanne is in a nightgown, leaning on her walker.
Joanne Meyer
You're all going to get in trouble.
Brian Reed
Berating the cops as they occupy her living room. At this point, Eric is gone, heading to the paper's office.
Joanne Meyer
I worked at newspaper for a good many years. I volunteered newspaper for a good many years. The first time I've ever seen anybody allowed to do an illegal thing or orders to hear any illegal. Alexa.
Eric Meyer
She was very upset about it. She was demanding of her rights. She was trying to reach me at one point. You can hear my cell phone ringing in the evidence bag sitting on the table.
Brian Reed
Joanne glares at the cops, questioning them. Why are they here? On what authority? The judge ordered it.
Joanne Meyer
A cop says the judge ordered it. On what reason?
Michael Oinger
That's all.
Joanne Meyer
What?
Brian Reed
I don't have access to all that. That was another odd thing about the search warrant. Eric knew who the normal judge was in the 8th Judicial District, which included Marion. But the signature on this warrant, it didn't look like that. Normal judge. Eric and Joanne talk about it as the cops are hunting through their house. The county attorney, the city officials, they all should have known it's against the law to allow a raid of journalists this way. And if not them, a judge absolutely should have known not to approve this.
Joanne Meyer
I want to know what reason she did it. I don't have. This is my house. I own this house.
Brian Reed
I understand that your mother's very upset. In the video, she's yelling at them, swearing. She's slamming her walker. Had you ever seen her like that?
Joanne Meyer
No.
Eric Meyer
She's usually very calm.
Joanne Meyer
Don't you touch any of that stuff.
Brian Reed
Ma', am, you the.
Eric Meyer
She knew that rating someone who was involved in news gathering was wrong. If 98 years she hasn't convinced people of this town that she's an honorable person who doesn't do things wrong. Why the Heck are they standing in her house?
Joanne Meyer
We were respected people. Oh, it's just plain terrible.
Eric Meyer
I tried to reassure her at some point. I said, I think they've. They've grossly overstepped what they can do legally. This is going to be on the front page of the New York Times.
Brian Reed
You had a sense that something big was happening, like beyond the normal scope of what happens in Marion, Kansas.
Eric Meyer
And I tried to tell her, I tried to help her. I said, bullies usually get caught when they do the one thing too many. And they've done it. They've gone one step too far. And her answer to me was, yeah, but I won't be alive to see it. Finally, okay, we're leaving.
Brian Reed
The police leave. But that doesn't make Joanne feel any better.
Eric Meyer
Oh, she wouldn't eat that evening. She wouldn't go to bed. She sat in her chair. She was still sitting in her chair at 5:30 in the morning. At 6:30 in the morning, she'd gone to bed. Finally, a little afternoon, I went in and I heard that she'd stirred and gotten up and gone to the bathroom. She came back to her bedroom and I said, you really need to eat something. You haven't had anything to eat since Thursday noon. And she says, I don't know. I don't feel to. And she died in the middle of that sentence. The coroner listed the stress of this raid as a contributing cause for her death.
Brian Reed
The coroner's report says Joanne died a natural death from sudden cardiac arrest. He describes the anger and the upset she felt from the raid leading up to it.
Eric Meyer
I'm not a crier. I'm somebody who was raised by my mother too, and my father, to, you know, you react to a situation by doing what you can to correct the situation. And so I tried to do what I could.
Brian Reed
And he figured what he could do is put out the next issue of the Record.
Eric Meyer
I have to arrange for a funeral. I have to put out a newspaper, and by God, I'm gonna put out the newspaper. There is no frigging way that I'm going to let them seize our equipment and keep us from publishing.
Brian Reed
That week, the raids were on a Friday. Eric's mom died the next day. On Saturday. On Sunday, Eric went to the records offices and worked three days straight, pulling all nighters and without any of their computers or electronics, only some crappy old desktops they had collecting dust in a junk room. He and his staff got an issue to the printers at 5:30 in the morning on Wednesday. And what did you Publish.
Eric Meyer
The top story was the story of the raid. And with a headline that says seized but not silenced.
Brian Reed
Eric was right when he told his mom that the New York Times would cover what the police were doing that day in their house. Raid of small Kansas newspaper raises free press concerns was the Times headline. Police officers and Marion. CNN also covered it. The Washington Post, the BBC, npr, pbs, Fox News, national press organizations like the Committee to Protect Journalists. It was a big international story, but there was also a journalist much closer to home. TV reporter Jessica McMaster. And it was her who would eventually get to the bottom of who prompted this raid and why.
Jessica McMaster
I wasn't familiar with Marion at all. That's not actually even part of our coverage area over here in Kansas City. What piqued my interest there was all this chatter on social media about who was behind this.
Brian Reed
A refresher on the suspect list. There was the mayor of Marion who'd been clashing with Eric Meyer and the newspaper for years and had just made a nasty post online about journalists. There was the local restaurant owner who was also mad at the paper about their reporting and whose name was included on the warrants. There was the judge maybe who appeared to be a fill in for the normal district judge and who signed off on the search of the newspaper. And then there was the man who carried out the raid, Gideon Cody, the new chief of the Marion police.
Jessica McMaster
That's what really triggered my interest was that we had this former police captain over here, where we live in Kansas City, who had gone over to Marion, was only on the job for a couple of months and the next thing you know, a newsroom was being raided.
Brian Reed
Jessyca focused on investigative stories for the regional TV station kshb. She's busted open cases of local corruption and incompetence. Elected officials taking taxpayer funded vacations on the city Council of Independence, Missouri After a seven year old boy was murdered in 2015, Jessica exposed failings at the Kansas Department for Children and Families that led to new legislation being passed to protect kids. So this former Kansas City police officer running a department that had just plundered a newspaper, it caught her attention. Jessica emailed Gideon Cody's office asking him to explain why he'd done this. After all, it's not legal for cops to raid a newspaper. Police Chief Cody responded with a statement
Jessica McMaster
saying, I believe when the rest of the story is available to the public, the judicial system will be vindicated.
Brian Reed
Jessyca wanted to know what the rest of the story was. She wanted to tell it to the public. So Monday morning After the Friday raids, Jessica and her cameraman make the two hour drive from Kansas City to Marion. It's her first time there.
Jessica McMaster
Just to give you an explainer on what this town looks like, you have the newspaper and right across the street you have the courthouse. And across the street from there is the sheriff's department. Up the road from the newspaper is the Elgin Hotel. And across the street from that is Carrie Newell's cafe.
Brian Reed
Carrie Newell, she's the restaurant owner whose name had been mentioned on the search warrants for Eric's house and for the Marion County Records Office. Carrie had beef with the Record in the weeks leading up to the raids over some documents they'd obtained about her. She'd even complained about it at a city council meeting. As Jessica is checking into the Elgin Hotel, the old hotel downtown, the owner of the place gets to chatting with Jessyca. Turns out she's a friend of Kerry Newell's.
Jessica McMaster
She started talking to me and, you know, she was very stern that what police did was the. That they did the right thing and that the truth was gonna come out and that if I spoke to Carrie Newell, I would find out the truth.
Brian Reed
What did you make of that?
Jessica McMaster
I knew there was more to the story. It didn't make me think necessarily that anyone at the newspaper staff had committed a crime. I could tell that people were confused about the rights of the free press in this country. And there wasn't a general understanding that what police did was extreme.
Brian Reed
So Jessica goes to chat with Eric, who's still grieving his mom while grinding to get a paper out without his computers. Reporter to reporter, they talk. And he tells Jessyca the reason Carrie Newell seemed to be mad at the Record.
Jessica McMaster
They received a tip that gave them her driving information.
Eric Meyer
A person by the name of Pam Mogg said, you know, she's been driving illegally for many years. I've got proof of it.
Brian Reed
I hadn't really appreciated until I dug into this story how much the experience of running a small town newspaper can be like shooting a reality show for Bravo. People are always trying to drag you into their little feuds and you have to figure out what's worth looking into, what could actually be newsworthy and what's just gossip mongering. In this case, the source, Pam Mogg, a former 911 dispatcher, DMed1 of Eric's reporters a screenshot of a driving record for Kerry Newell, indicating that Kerry had a drunk driving conviction that she'd never resolved. It was from 15 years earlier. Meaning if you trusted this tip, Carrie, a well known local business owner, had been driving without a valid license for more than a decade.
Eric Meyer
The first thing you do is verify that it's actually true. You know, this is a cell phone snapshot of a document that was sent very low res over Facebook.
Brian Reed
But it's real. A record reporter checks it out in a state database. Is that a story though? Eric thinks maybe if the cops know she's driving without a license and are letting it slide. But then Eric's team gets a new tip from someone else.
Eric Meyer
The kid who mows the lawn for the husband of Carrie Newell, lawnmower boy
Brian Reed
tells them Carrie Newell and her husband, they're going through a divorce. This leak about Carrie driving illegally, it came from her ex.
Jessica McMaster
It was her ex husband who gave her driving information to her now ex best friend who gave it to the newspaper.
Brian Reed
Oh yeah, Pam Mogg, the 911 dispatcher who ratted Carrie Newell out. She was Kerry Newell's ex best friend.
Jessica McMaster
So what it really is is this messy divorce, this very personal feud between an ex husband and an ex friend.
Eric Meyer
So I decide that we aren't going to use this.
Brian Reed
The whole thing was such a nothing burger of a story that Eric didn't even bother contacting Carey Newell about it. Why then, Jessica wondered, had Kerry been so mad at her ex best friend and her ex husband? Sure, but at Eric and the paper when they didn't even run with the story? Where did this whole idea of identity theft come from? Whatever the reason, this is the story that's getting spit out of the rumor mill in Marion. In those early days that Carrie Newell had filed a complaint about the paper with the cops and triggered the raid of Eric's home and newspaper office for accessing her personal driving information. Other news outlets start pointing to this as a likely explanation.
Jessica McMaster
For me personally, as a journalist, I don't know any of these players. I know that there's very clearly some of that small town riffs, if you will, going on. But I have no idea what's true, what's not. And so I wanted to talk to Gideon Cody.
Brian Reed
After all, even if Kerry Newell had lodged a complaint with the police, it was Police Chief Gideon Cody who decided to respond with multiple raids. Meanwhile, this is still all on that Monday. After the Friday raids, there's been a development. The Kansas Bureau of Investigation, the statewide law enforcement agency, kbi, it's called for short, has taken over the Marion County Record case. That proves to be an obstacle when Jessyca tries to get Giddy and Cody to talk.
Jessica McMaster
KSHB, 41 Senior investigator Jessica McMaster continues to push for answers after police raided the small town newspaper, the Marion County Record.
I did stop by Gideon Cody's office and tried to speak with him.
Brian Reed
By now it's Tuesday.
Jessica McMaster
Tuesday morning, after not returning our calls and emails to request an interview, our I team showed up at Marion Police Department to ask chief Gideon Cody a few questions. As we tried to get in that went about how you thought it would, he kind of shifted responsibility to kbi, saying, I can't talk to you about their case. That would get me in all kinds of trouble. But KBI says that they weren't the one who issued the warrant. So can you tell me why instead of issuing us at peanut, KBI will
Brian Reed
be angry at me if I start talking about their case? At this point, Jessica does not leave with her questions answered.
Jessica McMaster
What would drive a person to do something like this? How did he not have awareness that this was going to become such a problem for him? Because he seemed so confident in the beginning. He just seemed to lack any fundamental knowledge of how big of a problem this was going to be for him.
Brian Reed
So Jessica wonders, was there something more to know about Gideon Cody and Carey Newell? It was time to see if Kerry would talk.
Brooke Gladstone
This is on the media. I'm Brooke Gladstone with the final part of Brian Reed's investigation into the raid on a Marion county newspaper. Here's Brian.
Brian Reed
Jessica wants to talk to Carrie Newell about why she filed that complaint with the police about any connection she might have to Chief Gideon Cody. But Kerry's not returning her calls. As the weeks go on, Jessyca is filing regular nightly news reports about what's happening in Marion. Hustling back and forth from Kansas City, scarfing down one meal a day.
Jessica McMaster
A significant update tonight as we follow through with our coverage of the raid on a Kansas newspaper, KSHB 41 News.
I team obtained this video surveillance from the newspaper's cameras. Marion County District Court released the list of items seized from the newspaper. You'll see os triage digital data. This is a clone of the newspapers. For the I team, I'm Jessica McMaster, KSHB 41 News.
Brian Reed
I remember following Jessica on Twitter during this time and she'd update her followers about the latest documents her team had gotten their hands on or how she was quickly brushing her teeth in a parking lot before rushing to an interview.
Jessica McMaster
I think there's an impression, especially on tv, that I wake up and somebody's gonna do my hair and makeup. No, I can barely get my teeth brushed and get out the door. That's after I get my kids to school and everything else.
Brian Reed
But still no response from Kerry. Then Jessica remembers the woman she met on her very first day in town. The owner of the Elgin Hotel, who's friends with Kerry, who'd actually urged Jessyca to talk to Kerry to get the whole story. So Jessica calls the hotel owner and convinces her to make a plea on her behalf for Kerry to please do an interview.
Jessica McMaster
How I looked at this was, you know, when I look at accountability, I really look at that with the people in power. Yes, Carrie Newell is a local businesswoman, but she didn't have the power to raid anybody. And so going after her in the same way that we would, the police department for committing this act, I just wouldn't do that.
Brian Reed
And the hotel owner, Carrie's friend, she's successful. She gets Carrie to invite Jessyca to her cafe.
Jessica McMaster
Kerry's cafe has this beautiful front porch before you walk into her coffee shop. And so we were sitting there in a couple wicker rocking chairs, and we were just chatting.
Brian Reed
How did she seem when you sat down with her?
Jessica McMaster
Nervous. Nervous like she seemed like a woman who had been battered a bit, you know, on the Internet.
Brian Reed
In the TV report Jessica later made about this, Carrie Newell plays aloud voicemails she's been getting from angry callers since Joanne Meyer's death.
Jessica McMaster
Carrie Newell, I hope you end up
with fail
Joanne Meyer
up kill off.
Jessica McMaster
What are they saying?
Calling me a killer nonstop.
Brian Reed
Did you have, like, a top of mind question? Like, what did you want to know from Keri Newell?
Jessica McMaster
I wanted to know her level of involvement with this investigation. And what I really wanted to know was how it started. Because what people had believed was that Carrie was mad. Took this to Gideon Cody. He did her a favor and launched this raid.
Brian Reed
Chief Cody hadn't been in town long, but people had noticed that he and Carrie Newell had become pretty fast friends. In fact, some people speculated that maybe they were more than friends, with Carrie going through a divorce and all. But as they sit down on the porch of her cafe, Carrie tells Jessica that was not true. Their relationship was platonic, and the way people thought these raids started. Carrie says that's also not true. Carrie tells Jessica one day, shortly before
Jessica McMaster
the raids she mentioned she got a missed call from Giddy and Cody, and he sent her a text message.
Said, this is Chief Cody. I need you to contact me back as soon as possible. We believe you've been the victim of a crime.
Brian Reed
So Carrie called Chief Cody back.
Jessica McMaster
I'm like, what are you talking about? And he said, well, I believe that. I believe that somebody's stolen your mail.
Brian Reed
Kody told her someone had gotten a hold of her driving records and then gone to a state website and they
Jessica McMaster
accessed your case files and had downloaded that information. I said, who is they? And he said, phyllis Soren, a reporter
Brian Reed
for the Marion County Record.
Jessica McMaster
This just infuriated you?
Yeah, of course it did.
Brian Reed
Jessica confirms with Carrie, were you driving
Jessica McMaster
on a suspended license?
I was.
Brian Reed
But for Carrie, that still wouldn't justify the paper committing a crime against her, like the police chief was now telling her that they had.
Jessica McMaster
I asked her, did you file a complaint? And she said, yes, I did. Because after he called me and told me this happened, he told me he needed something in writing from me, he
Brian Reed
directed her to file the complaint.
Jessica McMaster
According to Kerry, yes.
Brian Reed
This is completely at odds with what Chief Cody has been saying. He told the Washington Post in an interview, quote, how am I supposed to look the other way when I have a victim who says, are you going to do anything about this? As Kerry says to Jessica in her wicker chair on the porch, I think
Jessica McMaster
people very much believe that I filed a complaint. I demanded that the raid happen, that I was in cahoots with the chief.
She told me she had no idea that there was going to be a raid.
Kody did say that he was seeking a warrant. In my pea brain, I did not. In no instance did I equate that to a raid.
Her biggest reason for wanting to sit down with us, I think, is that she was tired of the narrative being controlled by Gideon Cody, that he was just looking into a tip.
Brian Reed
Jessica asked Carrie to see the texts Cody sent her during this whole back and forth to verify what she's saying. Carrie says she doesn't have them anymore. Unfortunately, a little odd, but a week or so later, Jessyca gets a hold of an affidavit from Giddy and Kody.
Jessica McMaster
And sure enough, it was in his affidavit that he called Carrie Newell and informed her that she had been the victim of a crime, that some journalists with the Marion County Record had obtained her information. He told her this was illegal and that they didn't have any right to access that information.
Brian Reed
Five weeks after she first strode into Marion, Jessica has a big story.
Jessica McMaster
Senior investigator Jessica McMaster dug deeper. She uncovered a series of events that led to that high profile raid.
Brian Reed
Finding that a story that went global started with a bitter divorce and small town feuds.
Jessica McMaster
After the unprecedented raid, Carrie Newell has been called a killer, a fascist, even Hitler but now she wonders if she's a pawn. What do you wish people knew about all of this?
The truth.
Brian Reed
Gideon Cody orchestrated the raids. But why? Why did he do it?
Jessica McMaster
Well, you know, the newspaper had told us we had been investigating Gideon Cody. We were working on a story about him. They told me that the first day I was there.
Brian Reed
This, remember, was a possible explanation that had gone through Eric's head as the officers were foraging through his house. Pretty quickly after Gideon Cody started in his new job in Marion, the Record had learned that he was not going to be the most forthright police chief.
Eric Meyer
There had been a procedure where every week in all the towns in our area, Hillsborough, Peabody, so on, they'd give us a little blotter narrative of what their officers had done for the past week, along with copies of the offense reports and the accident reports, which are open public documents. And they'd give it to us every week. He refused to do so.
Brian Reed
When they first reported that Cody would be Marion's new chief of police, the paper had been bombarded with warnings about him from people who knew Cody during his time as a cop in Kansas City, where Jessica's from. And according to Eric, the allegations they were hearing, they were bad.
Eric Meyer
Demeaning comments about female officers, sexual harassment, running over a dead body at a crime scene, a person who had leapt to his suicide, and he ran over their body. He reportedly told that when he was accused of sexual misconduct that they were gonna transfer him to the dispatch section. And we have a quote from him saying that I'm just gonna find the skinniest and prettiest dispatcher and wow, he was not a good guy.
Brian Reed
Eric's team hadn't published this yet. They were still reporting, but they had started putting some of the allegations to Cody.
Eric Meyer
He threatened to sue, had his attorney call us, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Brian Reed
So that's the beef that was ratcheting up between the newspaper and the police chief at the very moment when Carrie Newell's ex best friend sent her driving info to the Record. Here's something else, though, that Jessica discovers a kicker, if you will. When Eric's reporter got the tip about Kerry's suspended license, Eric worried that maybe the way Kerry's driving record had been obtained by her ex husband or by her ex best friend, who again, had been a 911 dispatcher, that maybe they'd gotten it illegally somehow. And so instead of publishing the info on Kerry, Eric alerted the police. Eric was the one who told Chief Cody about the fact that Kerry's driving record was Circulating around. And Chief Cody then used it and Kerry to go after Eric.
Eric Meyer
This wasn't about searching for anything. This was about trying to embarrass us, trying to harass us. This was intimidation, pure and simple. They bragged before the raid that this was going to be the biggest raid in the history of Marion County.
Brian Reed
At this point in Jessica's investigation, the county attorney has rescinded the warrants, saying they weren't valid. An officer who'd been sent the day of the raids to Eric's and his mom's house, who'd refused to go in because he knew it was wrong, has resigned from the department in protest. The Record and other outlets are now publishing their findings about Gideon Cody's time at the Kansas City PD Allegations of sexual harassment, of running over a corpse. The record based their reporting on conversations with seven of his former colleagues. But Cody is still in office, still presiding over the Marion police, a powerful position in a town of 2,000 people. Eric is starting to consider his recourse. He's looking into suing the city and Cody. And then one night, as she's getting ready for bed, Jessyca gets a call from Kerry Newell.
Jessica McMaster
I just remember it was late. And she said, well, you asked me if I had that text message with Gideon Cody where he said that, you know, the newspaper had committed a crime against me, and I told you I didn't have them anymore. And she said, the reason I don't have that text message anymore is because the police chief asked me to delete those. And I thought, oh, boy.
Brian Reed
After Joanne Meyer died and the raids blew up into a national story, Chief Cody had asked a key witness to delete text messages between her and him to destroy evidence that he had initiated the raids. You got out of bed?
Jessica McMaster
I got out of bed. And I asked her, well, what was in your text messages? And she says, it was nothing. She said that he didn't want her. She kind of indicated to me that he was a little flirty with her at times, that if people got their text messages, he didn't want them to get the wrong impression because she sent him a smile emoji. The way she was explaining it to me was like she wasn't sure that it was that big of a deal, but that she wanted to be honest with me. Since she withheld that information from me earlier. I assured her this is a big deal. Anytime a police chief asks a witness to potentially delete evidence, that's a big deal. Potentially a criminal deal. It also highlights that there's some level of dishonesty with this police chief. So on its face, it was just bad. It didn't look good for Kody. And she says, but you can't tell anybody this. I want this off the record. I just don't want anybody to know. And so I went to bed. And by the next day, she changed her mind.
Brian Reed
How did you verify that this had happened if she deleted the messages?
Jessica McMaster
I did say to her, have you had any discussions about this? Did he send you a text asking you to delete the text, things of that nature? And she says, no, I don't have anything like that. And then she called me a day or two later, and she said, cody just called over here to the cafe. I'm gonna talk to him about these text messages.
Brian Reed
Kerry starts texting with the chief. Says she's worried she might get in trouble for deleting the text messages like he asked.
Jessica McMaster
He text messaged her back, saying something, you know, quit being paranoid. He says, our phones are moot. He used the word moot. And then he confirmed what she told me on the phone earlier, saying that he didn't want people to get the wrong impression because she sent him a smile emoji. Boom.
Brian Reed
Jessica has it scoop number two new tonight.
Jessica McMaster
A key witness in the raids on a Kansas newspaper accuses Marion Police Chief Gideon Cody of asking her to delete text messages.
According to Newell, she deleted the text messages at the chief's behest.
I did make mention that I didn't know the necessity of that because there was nothing inappropriate in the text messages.
Newell says the chief asked her to delete their alleged text messages after the raids, as rumors began to circulate about Newell and Kody's relationship, which Newell says is platonic.
He said it just kind of removes the element of people being able to ask. I did delete those messages against my better judgment and instantly regretted it.
Brian Reed
What did you think when you saw that reporting from Jess?
Eric Meyer
First of all, I thought Jess had got a good story. I mean, that was that she'd gotten something that we hadn't been able to get. I suspected that there had been much communication that went on this way, the destruction of messages. I had assumed this all along because we'd made an open records request for these messages, and we got stonewalled. We're still suing on that open records request, but it was nice to have the admission that Cody had told her to destroy it.
Brian Reed
Within days of Jessica's report, Chief Cody resigned. Prosecutors charged him with obstruction of justice, a felony. He's out on bond, living in Hawaii, last I heard. His trial is set for August. He didn't respond to my multiple requests for comment. Jessica, were these criminal charges a result of your reporting?
Jessica McMaster
Yes, it was. This is the only thing that they got him on.
Brian Reed
The charges were for pressuring Kerry Newell to delete the texts, not for the raids themselves.
Jessica McMaster
The prosecutors really acknowledged that he didn't do this. Right. They were stern in their report to, but kind of drew the line saying, does it amount to something criminal? They decided it didn't. But then the one thing that they stuck with were these deleted text messages that we heard the story on. And that's what they've charged him in relation to with that low level felony. And in the end, this was the only thing that Kody was held accountable for. So it does feel good that we did our job right, that we dug further and we looked into things. Even if it's not being held accountable directly for the raid, it's something Eric feels differently.
Eric Meyer
I was surprised that they did not charge him with more.
Brian Reed
For a long time, I saw this story as a triumph of local journalism. Yes, the people in charge in this small town had perpetrated a terrible violation of their local press. Yes, Joan Meyer had died in the midst of it all, tragically. But the reason the police and local leaders had done this, presumably, was because the Record wasn't just doing police blotters and graduation notices. It was covering them tough. Tough enough to spur them to attack it in this egregious way. And then when that happened, a regional reporter, Jessica, came into this town that's outside her coverage area. And just because she cared and is a skilled, dogged reporter, she did force some accountability. It was imperfect, it was sad. But in some backwards way, I found it reassuring. Then, as time went on, I started to second guess that I felt depressed about how fragile local journalism is, how vulnerable. For a long time, Eric was mired in all these drawn out legal fights against the city and the county. They're expensive and onerous. One of his reporters quit after the whole ordeal. His mom is dead. And Jessica, infuriatingly, was laid off. KSHB eliminated her position in April 2025 due to budget cuts. Meanwhile, Chief Cody was sunning on a beach somewhere in Oahu. Maybe. But now, as more time has gone on, the pendulum seems like it has maybe started to swing back. Jessica got rehired to do investigative reporting for a newish online outlet, Straight Arrow News. She's been covering ICE the. The Marion County Record has continued to have an outpouring of support from around the country. Eric told me they have three veteran journalists who've come to Marion to report this summer just in exchange for housing. And in November, Marion county settled with Eric and others, agreeing to pay over $3 million to him, his mother's estate, the Papers Publishing Company, the city's former vice mayor and some of the papers reporters. And the sheriff's office issued a public apology for his role in the raid.
Eric Meyer
I do ironically think, and one of the reasons that I haven't probably reacted in great tears or anything else is that I also know my mother. And when you're 98 years old, you kind of have a feeling there's not much time left for you in the world. You're not going to make your mark on anything. To be able to go out at age 98 and have your death mean something, that would be something she would have appreciated big time.
Brian Reed
What does her death mean?
Eric Meyer
The raid attracted attention, but it attracted attention among, you know, people like you, people who are journalism fans and journalism interest people. The video of her objecting to it put the human face on the story, made the general public understand it made people say, I want to be just like her when I'm 98 years old. That kind of stuff. They could relate to it. They could see the human impact. I mean, it's an abstract quantity to say, well, we raided a newspaper and that may cause a chilling effect on future coverage. To here's this woman in her walker trying to stand up against seven cops in body armor.
Joanne Meyer
Why are you gonna be in trouble? You take my computer that personally.
Brian Reed
I think that's the right image to carry with us from what happened in Marion.
Joanne Meyer
Thank you. I may be 90 some years old, but I know what's going on. And what's going on is illegal as hell.
Brian Reed
The image of Joanne Meyer going out with a fight got power.
Joanne Meyer
They've got power. Oh, we've got power. We're gonna put out the newspaper.
Michael Oinger
Brian Reed is the host of Question Everything. If you like this story and you want to hear more like it, check out Brian's show wherever you get your Podcasts. On the Media is produced by Molly Rosen, Rebecca Clark Callender and Candice Wong, with help from Ella Walsh. Travis Mannon is our video producer.
Brooke Gladstone
Our technical director is Jennifer Munson with engineering from Jared Paul. Eloise Blondio is our senior producer, and our executive producer is Katya Rogers. On the Media is produced by wnyc. I'm Brooke Gladstone.
Michael Oinger
And I'm Michael Owinger.
Podcast: On the Media (WNYC Studios)
Date: July 3, 2026
Host: Brooke Gladstone, Micah Loewinger
Guest Storyteller: Brian Reed (“Question Everything”)
In this gripping episode, On the Media hands over the reins to Brian Reed, host of "Question Everything," for an in-depth exploration of the shocking 2023 police raid on the Marion County Record, a small-town Kansas newspaper. The episode unravels a tangled web of local political feuds, personal vendettas, and journalistic perseverance—ultimately investigating who orchestrated the unprecedented raid and why. Through interviews, first-hand accounts, and investigative reporting, the story becomes a case study in power, press freedom, and the fragility of local journalism.
| Time | Segment | |----------|------------------------------------------------------------------| | 00:01 | Introduction: Marion County Record, initial raid summary | | 03:32 | Eric Meyer on decades-old animosity with local officials | | 07:20 | Family history of the Record | | 08:03 | The raid at Eric and Joanne Meyer’s home | | 14:22 | City council meeting, Carrie Newell voices complaint | | 19:05 | Police leave; Joanne traumatized | | 20:28 | Joanne's death—stress as a contributing factor | | 21:47 | Paper publishes “Seized but not silenced” front page | | 22:45 | Jessica McMaster begins her investigation | | 28:15 | How the leak of Carrie Newell’s records really happened | | 33:45 | Jessica finally interviews Carrie Newell | | 36:14 | Carrie says Chief Cody directed her to file complaint | | 40:34 | Eric had warned authorities about the leak | | 42:03 | Discovery: Chief Cody told Carrie to delete texts post-raid | | 44:12 | News: Cody’s obstruction charge stems from destroying evidence | | 48:46 | Legal settlement, Marion Record’s legacy, and national impact | | 50:07 | Final reflections; iconic moment of Joanne standing up to police |
“They’ve got power. Oh, we’ve got power. We’re gonna put out the newspaper.”
– Joanne Meyer (50:33)