The police chief who oversaw the sharply criticized raid of a local news outlet in Kansas alleged a reporter was “either impersonating the victim or lying about the reasons why the record was being sought” when she accessed the driving records of a local business owner, according to previously unreleased court documents.

The allegation is the first public reporting and suggestion of evidence that may have led to the Aug. 11 raid. Led by Marion Police Chief Gideon Cody, police officers raided the Marion County Record and seized computers, personal cell phones, a router, and other equipment from the newspaper. Police also carried out raids at two private residences, including the home of the paper’s co-owners.

A signed search warrant, which was later withdrawn by the county attorney, said police were looking for information related to local restauranteur Kari Newell who had accused the paper of “illegally obtaining drunken-driving information about her and supplying it to a council member,” according to Meyer, who wrote about the incident in an article.

But the newspaper’s attorney Bernie Rhodes told USA TODAY on Sunday that the paper did not break any state or federal laws when reporter Phyllis Zorn obtained Newell’s record through a public state website.

“Zorn had every right, under both Kansas law and U.S. law, to access Newell’s driver’s record to verify the information she had been provided by a source,” Rhodes said in an email. “She was not engaged in ‘identity theft’ or ‘unauthorized computer access’ but was doing her job.”

All seized items were released Wednesday after Marion County Attorney Joel Ensey withdrew the police department’s search warrant. The attorney had said, “insufficient evidence exists to establish a legally sufficient nexus between this alleged crime and the places searched and the items seized.”

The incident has since received widespread criticism and sparked debate over press freedoms after several news organizations condemned the police department.