Police in a central Kansas town raided the local newspaper’s office Friday and seized computers and employees’ personal cellphones – an action that advocates say violates federal laws protecting the media.

Law enforcement officers with the Marion (Kan.) Police Department and the Marion County Sheriff’s Office on Friday took the Marion County Record’s computer file server, other computers and phones, along with other equipment, the Record reported.

A search warrant, posted online by non-profit news site the Kansas Reflector, was signed by Marion County District Court Magistrate Judge Laura Viar. The search warrant was approved by the judge citing probable cause that violations related to identity theft and unlawful acts concerning computers were committed. Police were approved to search for devices that were used to access the Kansas Department of Revenue records website and documents and records pertaining to Kari Newell.

Newell is a Marion restaurant owner who during a city council meeting on Aug. 7 accused the Record of illegally obtaining information about her, the newspaper reported.

Interest in the incident rose as word about it spread Saturday, with The New York Post and The Guardian US, a domestic edition of the U.K. newspaper, picking up the story.

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The federal Privacy Protection Act protects against most searches of journalists and newsrooms by law enforcement, requiring police usually to issue subpoenas. “Legal experts contacted by the Record termed the raid unheard of in America and reminiscent of what occurs in totalitarian regimes and the Third World,” the Record reported.