The police chief who led an August raid on a small weekly newspaper in central Kansas has resigned, just days after he was suspended from his post, a City Council member confirmed Monday.
The police chief who led an August raid on a small weekly newspaper in central Kansas has resigned, just days after he was suspended from his post, a City Council member confirmed Monday.
City Council Member Ruth Herbel confirmed to The Associated Press that the mayor announced Chief Gideon Cody’s resignation at Monday’s City Council meeting.
The announcement comes days after Cody was suspended for reasons that were not made public, and weeks after a local prosecutor said that there wasn’t sufficient evidence to justify the search of the Marion County Record.
Cody did not immediately return a telephone message seeking comment about his resignation.
The mayor also did not respond to a text and phone call about it.
The public announcement of Cody’s resignation was initially reported by the Marion County Record and the Wichita Eagle.
Cody’s departure comes after recently obtained body camera video from the search of the newspaper shows that an officer rifled through a desk drawer of a reporter who was investigating its chief.
The video then shows the officer beckoning Cody over to look at the documents he’d found.
The AP obtained the body camera video Monday through an open records request.
Cody then says, “Keep a personal file on me. I don’t care,” the video shows.
He’s briefly seen bending over, apparently to look at the drawer, before the other officer’s clipboard blocks the view of what the chief is doing.
Cody obtained warrants for raids on the newspaper’s offices, the home of its publisher and Herbel’s home by telling a judge that he had evidence of possible identity theft and other potential crimes tied to the circulation of information about a local restaurant owner’s driving record.
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USA — mix Central Kansas police chief resigns after leading raid on small weekly newspaper