Newsrooms Raided for Suspect Info

RENO, Nev. (AP) -- Sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Reno's three
television stations and its newspaper on Wednesday for copies of an interview
with a man accused of opening fire on Interstate 80.

``I'm not declaring war on the media,'' said District Attorney Richard
Gammick, who requested the warrants.

``We know what the press privileges are and we're not trying to violate those
at all. It's my belief that once a newsperson goes up and interviews a
defendant in the jail about the crime, they become a witness.''

KOLO-TV News Director Ed Pearce said he was surprised and puzzled by Gammick's
move.

``Our feeling is it's an illegal warrant. It violates the federal privacy
protection act of 1980.''

Reno Gazette-Journal Publisher Sue Clark-Johnson and Executive Editor Ward
Bushee, who at one point were threatened with arrest, agreed to lock its
reporter's notes in the publisher's office until a subpoena was issued.

Gammick said he deliberately kept the wording of the search warrants narrow in
an effort to keep the demand within legal limits.

Gammick said similar television interviews in the past had been erased before
his office was able to review them despite his request that the footage be
retained until they could be subpoenaed.

His office turned to search warrants on Wednesday because a subpoena can be
served only after a court date is set.

``We cannot issue subpoenas until we have a place to subpoena things into,''
he said.

No time has been set for an initial appearance by the alleged sniper,
Christopher Merritt. He was arrested in Las Vegas Monday night -- about 12
hours after allegedly shooting one man in the chest and hitting five other
vehicles on the outskirts of Reno, forcing the interstate closed for five
hours.

Merritt gave a series of interviews to the media, including The Associated
Press. On Wednesday, Merritt told AP the sniper attack was intended to be a
``practice run'' for a cross-country murder spree.

``The original purpose was just to maim, injure and kill people, because I
wanted to I guess,'' Merritt told AP in an interview that was tape recorded
and videotaped by deputies, which were conditions set by police prior to the
interview.

Pearce said that on the advice of the station's attorney, he turned over a
copy of the jailhouse interview with Merritt, but told the deputies that the
attorney believes the warrant could open the district attorney's office, the
sheriff's office and the officers themselves to legal action.

KRNV-TV sent a copy of its interview to District Judge Edward Dannan, who
signed the warrant, and KTVN-TV turned over a copy to its attorney.



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