Kansas paper was probing ‘Gestapo’ police chief over sex claims

The police chief whose “Gestapo”-style raid on a small town newspaper has become the focus of national outrage was being investigated by its reporters over claims of alleged sexual misconduct.

Gideon Cody and every officer in the Marion Police Department stormed into the Marion County Record’s offices Friday with a search warrant where they seized computers and servers.

They also raided the home of the editor and publisher, Eric Meyer, and his 98-year-old mother Joan Meyer, the paper’s co-owner.

She died the following day of “shock and grief,” Meyer said, stressed and unable to sleep when police seized her computer and smart speaker, as well as her son’s cellphone and even his router.

He had answered the door thinking it was her Meals on Wheels delivery.


Eric Meyer
Marion County Record editor and publisher Eric Meyer, 69, said more than six anonymous sources reached out to the newspaper alleging Marion Police Chief Gideon Cody retired from the Kansas City Police Department to avoid demotion over sexual misconduct charges.
AP

Marion Police Chief Gideon Cody
Marion Police Chief Gideon Cody previously worked for 24 years at the Kansas City Police Department in Missouri, where sources claimed he had been accused of sexual misconduct, according to Marion County Record publisher and editor Eric Meyer.
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The Marion County Record, published weekly, has served the rural communities of Marion County (pop. 11,712) since 1869, and until now had never been at the center of a national battle over freedom of the press.

But as First Amendment advocates spoke out against the raid, it emerged the newspaper had been investigating Cody, 54, after receiving an “outpouring of calls” claiming he had retired from his last police post to avoid demotion over sexual misconduct allegations.

Cody joined the Marion County Police Department in late April after retiring as a captain in Kansas City, Mo., where he worked for 24 years.

Eric Meyer told The Handbasket substack his outlet had been contacted by Cody’s former colleagues about the claims of sexual misconduct, but that the six-plus anonymous sources ultimately never went on the record and reporters couldn’t obtain Cody’s personnel file.


Joan Meyer
Joan Meyer, 98, was the paper’s co-owner and had been a contributor to it for 50 years. Her son Eric Meyer said she died Saturday amid the “shock and grief” of the police raid a day at the home they shared.
Wichita Eagle

The offices of the Marion County Record.
The tiny Marion County Record serves an area of just over 11,000 people but is now at the center of a national storm over press freedoms.
ZUMAPRESS.com

The explosive claims – as well as the identities of who made them – were contained on one of the computers seized during the raids at the newspaper’s office, Meyer said.

“I may be paranoid that this has anything to do with it, but when people come and seize your computer, you tend to be a little paranoid,” Meyer told The Handbasket.

Kansas City police told The Post it could not discuss whether Cody had been investigated during his tenure on the force, citing the state’s Sunshine Law.

“This is the type of stuff that, you know, Vladimir Putin does, that Third World dictators do,” Meyer, 69, told the Associated Press. “This is Gestapo tactics from World War II.”


Kari Newell
Kari Newell, who runs Kari’s Kitchen in Marion, alleges the Marion County Record invaded her privacy while investigating her 2008 drunken driving conviction, which it denies.
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The restaurant bought by Kari Newell
Newell bought this Marion, Ks., restaurant, and her DUI record would have prevented its liquor license being renewed.
MEGA

A search warrant for the raid says it was issued over an allegation of “identity theft” by its reporters.

The claim was made by local restaurateur Kari Newell, after someone sent the paper and a member of the local council documents which showed she had a DUI, which would make it illegal for her to have a liquor license.

Newell also threw The Marion County Record’s reporters out of a public meeting held by a local congressman — which was attended by the police chief — and used a city council meeting to accuse the paper of illegally obtaining her DUI records, while admitting that she had a drunken driving record.

The paper never published her DUI details and Meyer denied acting illegally, claiming he believed they had been sent to the paper’s reporter, Deb Gruver, because of legal sparring between Newell, 46, and her ex-husband.

During the raid, Cody seized Gruver’s cellphone from her hand, injuring a finger she had previously dislocated.


A meeting in Marion County
Newell had two Marion County Record reporters removed from this public meeting in her coffee shop with the county’s congressman, which was also attended by the chief of police (right) and at least one of his officers.
Marion, Kansas Police Department

“We didn’t publish it because we couldn’t nail it down to the point that we thought it was ready for publication,” Meyer told The Kansas City Star. “[Cody] didn’t know who our sources were. He does now.”

Cody, 54, declined to respond to inquiries Monday whether allegations of sexual misconduct were filed against him while working as a Kansas City police officer, referring The Post to the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. A spokeswoman for the agency did not respond to a request for comment.

Cody worked for eight years as a patrol officer in Kansas City before being promoted to sergeant in June 2007. He later became a captain in 2014 before retiring from the department on April 22. Days later, he accepted the job to become Marion’s top cop.

As well as law enforcement, Cody describes himself as “business and leadership oriented,” and at one time ran a company selling an anti-ramming vehicle system, Road Safe Barriers.


Marion Police Chief Gideon Cody
Marion Police Chief Gideon Cody, who led Friday’s raids at the Marion County Record in Kansas, at a beach in a 2020 photo.
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The Marion Record print edition
The newspaper’s publisher and editor, Eric Meyer, says he is concerned about how he will be able to get the paper’s next print edition out without its computer equipment.
AP

Brian Karman, Cody’s business partner and colleague of more than two decades, said he knew of no sexual misconduct allegations against Cody while working for Kansas City police.

“No, not to my knowledge,” Karman told The Post, adding any accusations against Cody would be out of character for Cody.

“I’ve known him for 20 years. I’ve never heard of anything remotely involving those type of allegations.”

In a statement released Saturday, Cody’s department cited a criminal investigation in response to several inquires about an ongoing probe.

“The Marion Kansas Police Department believes it is the fundamental duty of the police is to ensure the safety, security, and well-being of all members of the public,” the department wrote on Facebook.

“This commitment must remain steadfast and unbiased, unaffected by political or media influences, in order to uphold the principles of justice, equal protection, and the rule of law for everyone in the community.

“The victim asks that we do all the law allows to ensure justice is served. The Marion Kansas Police Department will [sic] nothing less.”