In a classic case of cat-and-mouse, the Judicial Investigation Agency (OIJ) together with the Fuerza Publica, cracked the code and sprang into action, uprooting an undercover marijuana nursery in Pérez Zeledón. This was no hasty heist; the operation was a meticulous orchestration of weeks of unwavering investigation, a saga of persistence that saw the case ultimately nestled in the hands of the Prosecutor’s Office.
A Forest of Illicit Foliage
In the shrouded secrecy of the nursery, 848 marijuana plants had been flourishing away from the prying eyes of justice. These weren’t just your regular backyard varieties. Oh no, they ranged from petite 30 cm sprouts to towering 1.8-meter giants, each basking in their illegal glory.
The Great Escape
As the drama unfolded, a mysterious figure emerged in the plot. A man, seemingly the guardian of the illicit greens, performed a grand vanishing act. He embraced the vegetation around with a desperate embrace and vanished, leaving the befuddled authorities grasping at the ethereal echoes of his presence.
A Hodgepodge of High Tech
Disguise was the name of the game, with tarps playing the lead role in this shadowy performance. Below this veil, a universe of sophistication revealed itself: an assembly of energy, lighting, and irrigation systems. All components meticulously orchestrated to bring life to this forbidden garden.
The Discovery Sequel
The thrill didn’t end there. A foray into a nearby…
The police chief of a small Kansas town has been placed on suspension on Thursday after his department conducted a controversial raid on a local newspaper last month which sparked criticism from press advocates over whether it violated First Amendment rights.
Marion Police Chief Gideon Cody’s suspension was reported Friday by the Marion County Record, the same newspaper that was raided. Marion Mayor Brogan Jones confirmed the suspension to the Associated Press on Saturday.
Police raided the newspaper on Aug. 11, seizing personal cellphones, computers, the newspaper’s file server and other equipment. Police also raided the home of Joan Meyer, the 98-year-old co-owner of the newspaper. Meyer collapsed and died at her home the following day, Aug. 12.
According to the search warrant, Cody alleges that reporter Phyllis Zorn illegally obtained driving records for local restaurateur Kari Newell. According to the Record, Newell had accused the newspaper of illegally obtaining drunk driving information about Newell and supplying it to Marion Councilwoman Ruth Herbel.
There are also questions regarding when the search warrant was approved. Bernie Rhodes, an attorney for the newspaper, told CBS News in a statement in mid-August that the three probable cause affidavits that were the basis of the search warrant were not filed in state court until Aug.14, three days after the search was conducted.
The affidavits, which were obtained by CBS News, claim to have been signed by Magistrate Judge Laura Viar on Aug. 11.
“While the affidavits purport to be signed before Magistrate Viar on the day of the illegal searches, no explanation has been provided why they were not filed prior to the execution of the illegal searches,” Rhodes said in a statement back in August.
About a week after the raid, Marion County Attorney Joel Ensey announced that there was “insufficient evidence” to justify the raid, and said he had directed police to return all seized material.
The Kansas Bureau of Investigation is conducting an independent investigation of the incident. According to the Record, Mayfield had initially been unwilling to suspend Cody until after the bureau had released its report of the investigation. A report has not yet been publicly released.
The federal Privacy Protection Act protects journalists and newsrooms from most searches by law enforcement, requiring police usually to issue subpoenas rather than search warrants.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A central Kansas police chief was not only on legally shaky ground when he ordered the raid of a weekly newspaper, experts said, but it may have been a criminal violation of civil rights, a former federal prosecutor added, saying: “I’d probably have the FBI starting to look.”
Some legal experts believe the Aug. 11 raid on the Marion County Record’s offices and the home of its publisher violated a federal privacy law that protects journalists from having their newsrooms searched. Some believe it violated a Kansas law that makes it more difficult to force reporters and editors to disclose their sources or unpublished material.
Part of the debate centers around Marion Police Chief Gideon Cody’s reasons for the raid. A warrant suggested that police were looking for evidence that the Record’s staff broke state laws against identity theft and computer crimes while verifying information about a local restaurant owner. But the police also seized the computer tower and personal cellphone belonging to a reporter who had investigated Cody’s background.
The raid brought international attention to the newspaper and the small town of 1,900 — foisted to the center of a debate over press freedoms. Recent events have exposed roiling divisions over local politics and the newspaper’s aggressive coverage. But it also focused an intense spotlight on Cody in only his third month on the job.
The investigation into whether the newspaper broke state laws continues, now led by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. State Attorney General Kris Kobach has said he doesn’t see the KBI’s role as investigating the police’s conduct, and that prompted some to question whether the federal government would get involved. Spokespersons for the FBI and the U.S. Department of Justice declined to comment.
Stephen McAllister, a U.S. attorney for Kansas during former President Donald Trump’s administration, said the raid opened Cody, the city and others to lawsuits for alleged civil right violations. And, he added, “We also have some exposure to federal criminal prosecution.”
“I would be surprised if they are not looking at this, if they haven’t already been asked by various interests to look at it, and I would think they would take it seriously,” McAllister, a University of Kansas law professor who also served as the state’s solicitor general, said of federal officials.
Cody did not respond to an email seeking comment Friday, as he has not responded to other emails. But he did defend the raid in a Facebook post afterward, saying the federal law shielding journalists from newsroom searches makes an exception specifically for “when there is reason to believe the journalist is taking part in the underlying wrongdoing.”
Television reporters and videographers from stations across the region prepare to do reports on the aftermath of local police raids on the Marion County Record, Wednesday, Aug. 16, 2023, in Marion, Kan. The raids on the newspaper’s offices and the home of its publisher received international attention and were widely condemned by press freedom watchdog groups. (AP Photo/John Hanna)
Police seized computers, personal cellphones and a router from the newspaper. All items were released Wednesday to a computer forensics auditing firm hired by the newspaper’s attorney, after the local prosecutor concluded there wasn’t enough evidence to justify their seizure. The firm is examining whether files were accessed or copied.
The five-member Marion City Council was scheduled to have its first meeting since the raid Monday afternoon.
The agenda says, in red: “COUNCIL WILL NOT COMMENT ON THE ONGOING CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION AT THIS MEETING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”
The Record is known for its aggressive coverage of local politics and its community about 150 miles (161 kilometers) southwest of Kansas City, Missouri. It received an outpouring of support from other news organizations and media groups after the raid, and Editor and Publisher Eric Meyer said Friday that it had picked up 4,000 additional subscribers, enough to double the size of its press run, though many of the new subscriptions are digital.
But the raids did have some backers in town. Jared Smith blames the newspaper’s coverage for the demise of his wife’s day spa business and believes the newspaper is too negative.
“I would love to see the paper go down,” he said.
And Kari Newell, whose allegations that the newspaper violated her privacy have been cited as reasons for the raid, said of the paper, “They do twist and contort — misquote individuals in our community — all the time.”
Meyer rejects criticism of his newspaper’s reporting and said critics are upset because it’s attempting to hold local officials accountable. And he blames the stress from the raid for the Aug. 12 death of his 98-year-old mother, Joan Meyer, the paper’s co-owner.
Meyer said that after the mayor offered Cody the police chief’s job in late April, the newspaper received anonymous tips on “a variety of tales” about why Cody gave up a Kansas City position paying $115,848 a year to take a job paying $60,000, according to a sister paper. Meyer said the newspaper could not verify the tips to its satisfaction.
Days before Cody was sworn in as chief on May 30, Meyer said that he asked Cody directly about the tips he received and Cody told him: “If you print that, I will sue you.”
“We get confidential things from people all the time and we check them out,” said Doug Anstaett, a retired Kansas Press Association executive director. “And sometimes we know they’re silly, but most of the time we get a tip, we check it out. And that’s exactly what they’re doing.”
Anstaett said he believes the state’s shield law for journalists, enacted in 2010 by the Republican-controlled Legislature, should have protected the paper. It allows law enforcement agencies to seek subpoenas to obtain confidential information from news organizations, but it requires them to show that they have a compelling interest and can’t obtain it in another way.
Former Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt, a Republican who helped write the shield law as a state senator, said the law doesn’t contemplate law enforcement using a search warrant to get information without going to court to get a subpoena. Still, he said, “The spirit of the law is that it should be broadly applied.”
Jeffrey Jackson, interim dean of the law school at Washburn University in Topeka, said he recently wrapped up a summer constitutional law course that dealt with press freedoms and the federal privacy law and told his students — before the Marion raid — that a police search of a newspaper “really just never happens.”
Jackson said whether the raid violated the state’s shield law would depend on Cody’s motives, whether he was trying to identify sources. But even if Cody was searching for evidence of a crime by newspaper staff, Jackson believes he likely violated the federal privacy law because it, like the state law, contemplates a law enforcement agency getting a subpoena.
“Either they violated the shield law or they probably violated the federal law,” Jackson said. “Either way, it’s a mess.”
Hollingsworth reported from Mission, Kansas.
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Man who made threats against Biden fatally shot in FBI raid in Utah, sources say; Six decades later, Medal of Honor recipient finally gets the recognition he deserves
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FBI agents serving a search warrant at a home in Provo, Utah, on Wednesday shot and killed a man during a confrontation, authorities said. Sources told CBS News the man had been under investigation for making threats against President Biden and several other officials. Ed O’Keefe has details.
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At least eight people were killed and dozens wounded as Israel carried out an overnight strike on Jenin, in the West Bank. The raid is the biggest Israeli military action in the area in decades, and gun battles with Palestinian militants have continued into the morning. Ramy Inocencio reports.
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HARLINGEN, Texas (ValleyCentral) — Rio CBD on Jackson Street was raided by the Harlingen Police Department on June, 6.
“All of a sudden, my door opens up, armed men, H-P-D come in. They say they have a search warrant. Guns are drawn. They start clearing rooms,” store owner, Trevor Kocaoglan said.
Kocaoglan said police then raided his mother’s home.
According to Kocaoglan, the police were notified by UPS about a package mailed to him from his supplier in Oregon that smelled like marijuana.
“The difficulty with that smell test, is that you can’t rely on it anymore, because hemp smells exactly the same way as marijuana, and hemp is legal,” Executive Director of the Texas Hemp Federation, Jay Maguire said.
Both Maguire and Kocaoglan said the incident is a misunderstanding of the law.
“There’s a lack of education around what’s legal and what’s not, because there are many different cannabinoids. The one that is the big one that is illegal in Texas still, is Delta 9 tetrahydrocannabinol,” Maguire added.
The Texas Health and Safety Code, established by House Bill 1325, says consumable hemp products are legal in Texas, as long as the levels of Delta 9 THC aren’t above 0.3%.
Kocaoglan said his products fall below that threshold and all of his shipments come with Certificates of Analysis from a DEA…
Senior ISIS leader Hamza al-Homsi was killed, and four American service members and a working dog were wounded, in a helicopter raid in northeast Syria, the U.S. military said Friday. David Martin has the latest.
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As the federal government cracks down on a deadly scourge of fentanyl entering the U.S., Jeff Pegues rode along with Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents on a raid in Tucson, Arizona to see just why the drug’s distribution is so difficult to stop.
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Ovidio Guzmán, the son of infamous Mexican drug lord “”El Chapo,”” was arrested Thursday in a military raid in Mexico. Guzman is wanted by the U.S. for alleged drug trafficking.
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U.S. forces provide military training to members of Kurdish militias at the Al-Malikiyah district in Syria’s Al-Hasakah province, September 7, 2022.
Hedil Amir/Anadolu Agency/Getty
U.S. forces have carried out a rare raid in Syria in territory held by dictator Bashar Assad’s regime targeting the ISIS terror group. CBS News correspondent Cami McCormick said the U.S. military’s Central Command would confirm only that American forces had conducted a raid in northeast Syria targeting a “senior” ISIS official, releasing no further details.
A U.S. official told CBS News senior national security correspondent David Martin the raid involved U.S. special operations forces who swept in by helicopter. The official said one person was killed and another wounded, but that the military was still working to confirm their identities. There were no U.S. casualties.
Syrian state television had reported earlier that one person was killed in the raid by airborne forces and others were captured. The operation was the latest U.S. effort to clamp down on ISIS jihadists who have been territorially defeated, but still manage to plan and carry out attacks in Syria and neighboring Iraq.
“CENTCOM forces conducted a raid in northeast Syria targeting a senior ISIS official,” spokesman Colonel Joe Buccino said in a statement sent to CBS News and other outlets, adding that more information would be provided once “operational details” were confirmed.
Syria’s state broadcaster said a U.S. airborne operation involving multiple helicopters left one person dead and saw several others captured in a government-controlled area of Syria’s northeast, which is mostly dominated by Kurdish forces who were long U.S. allies in the fight against ISIS.
The targeted village, Muluk Saray, sits only about 10 miles south of the Kurdish-held city of Qamishli, and is controlled by pro-regime militias, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a U.K.-based monitoring group that relies on an extensive network of contacts inside Syria.
Thursday’s raid was the first such airborne operation conducted in government-held territory since the start of Syria’s war in 2011, the Observatory said, adding that the person killed in the operation “had been a resident of the area for years.”
At least two people were captured alive in the operation, a Syrian and an Iraqi, the monitoring group said.
A village resident told AFP that three U.S. helicopters carried the troops in for the operation. The resident said the forces raided a house, killing one person and taking several others captive.
“They used loudspeakers to call on residents to stay indoors” during the operation, the resident said.
The resident identified the victim as Abu Hayel, whom they said was not well known in the area but believed to have been displaced from Syria’s Hassakeh province.
The United States leads an international military coalition still battling ISIS in Syria. In July, the Pentagon said it had killed Syria’s top ISIS jihadist in a drone strike in the northern part of the country. CENTCOM said he had been “one of the top five” ISIS leaders.
The July strike came five months after a nighttime U.S. raid in the town of Atme, which led to the death of the overall ISIS leader, Abu Ibrahim al-Qurashi. U.S. officials said Qurashi died when he detonated a bomb to avoid capture.
After losing their last territory following a military onslaught backed by the U.S.-led coalition in March 2019, the remnants of ISIS in Syria mostly retreated into desert hideouts. They have since used such hideouts to ambush Kurdish-led forces and Syrian government troops, while also continuing to mount attacks inside Iraq.