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Amid Radford cover-up, more stolen papers nationwide, newspaper theft appears on the rise

The newsroom of Radford University's student paper, The Tartan. (Courtesy Dylan Lepore)
Are more student newspapers going missing again after ? It sure seems that way.
in Virginia, in which university administrators appear to be actively concealing the identity of a Radford employee caught emptying campus newspaper racks ā as well as numerous other recent cases of newspaper theft nationwide ā is bringing renewed attention to the crime of stealing student newspapers.
Radford wonāt ID employee it knows stole copies of The Tartan
Last month, ²ŻŻ®ŹÓʵAPP¹ŁĶų reported on the approximately 1,000 copies of The Tartan, Radfordās student newspaper, that went missing in mid-September.
The Tartanās cover story, about a recently deceased Radford professor named Steve Tibbetts, included a photo of the Tibbetts family standing in front of a street sign bearing the Tibbettsā name. The signage also happened to indicate the street was a āDead End.ā
reveals administrators lamented the āinsensitivityā of The Tartanās photo choice via email just before the papers went missing.
Ironically, itās highly unlikely Tibbettsā family was offended in any way ā given that Tibbettsā widow provided the photo to The Tartan to use.
But itās Radfordās continued efforts to conceal the identity of the employee seen on surveillance footage stealing papers from several racks that has garnered nationwide attention ā including a critical weigh-in from .
Radford has repeatedly refused to release the perpetratorās identity, calling the matter a confidential āpersonnel issue.ā
āThe universityās strategy, if you can call it that,ā The Washington Post wrote, āis tailor-made to prolong Radfordās embarrassment, calling into question its leadershipās judgment.ā
Tartan editor Dylan Lepore told ²ŻŻ®ŹÓʵAPP¹ŁĶų the paper is girding for a fight, and awaiting a response to its open records request for more information on the employeeās identity.
āTheyāre just stonewalling us,ā Lepore said of the universityās actions, adding that despite Radfordās highly unusual efforts, heās undeterred. The Tartan is mulling legal action, talking with several different organizations Lepore says are āvery interestedā in helping the group find a lawyer.
āMe, as the editor-in-chief, Iām not going to let this go, or back down from it, or leave this case unsolved.ā
Lepore said he independently consulted FIREās Spotlight Database to confirm that Radford indeed promises its students and student press freedom of speech. Radford is also a public university, so it is constitutionally obligated to uphold the First Amendment protections of freedom of speech and the press.
In addition to resources from ²ŻŻ®ŹÓʵAPP¹ŁĶų and offers of legal help, Lepore said heās also gotten support from a wide swath of the Radford community, including students, faculty, and alumni.
āIāve gotten phone calls [and emails] from professors I had a few years back that are just like, āWeāre with you all the way. Weāre still looking into this. Keep us updated.ā And they keep bringing this up in their faculty senate [meetings],ā Lepore said. āIāve got the English department, the math department, and the communications department all on my side.ā
āBut I havenāt heard anything from the administration.ā
Lepore also said The Tartan will continue to report on the cover-up even though some Tartan staffers have expressed fresh fear about going up against the school.
āSome have concerns,ā Lepore said, adding that some of his writers arenāt journalism majors and may not know their rights as reporters. āIām trying to educate them on how it works. Iām like, āGuys, The Tartan is 100% fine. We didnāt steal the newspapers.āā
āEven my mom asked me, āCan the school kick you out of the university?ā,ā Lepore said with a laugh. āI was like, āIf the school kicks me out, then we have a case on our hands.āā
Despite no prosecution, stealing āfreeā papers is illegal
Complicating matters in the Radford case is that local authorities declined to prosecute the employee because, unlike some states, Virginia has no state or local law specifically banning the theft of āfreeā newspapers, and the Virginia Attorney Generalās office apparently that free papers canāt be stolen.
But, as FIRE has repeatedly explained ā specific law or no ā stealing āfreeā newspapers is a crime. The editions are personal property belonging to the publication, printed at considerable expense, and intended to be given away one at a time. Take more than your fair share, and thatās theft. As my colleague (and former Student Press Law Center staffer) Adam Goldstein explained in March, when thieves stole 500 newspapers at the University of South Carolina, the legal reasoning is clear when you ācompare newspapers to any other property thatās intended to be given away one at a timeā:
If you take a bucket of Halloween candy, or a pallet of toasters that a bank was going to give away with a new account, or a carton of ketchup packets from a fast food restaurant, it isnāt a defense that the owner was going to give them away anyway. They were giving them away because they got a benefit in giving them out in small numbers to many people. Taking them all at once deprives the owner of that benefit.
Timeline of 2019 student newspaper thefts
FIRE and the Student Press Law Center have each covered theft of student publications since the early 2000s. The SPLCās Newspaper Theft Resources page shows an overall decline in newspaper thefts between 2000 and last year; however, the recent rash of reporting on the crime suggests an uptick may show up in the SPLCās next update.
Here are the student newspaper thefts ²ŻŻ®ŹÓʵAPP¹ŁĶų has tracked in 2019:
February
March
April
September
October
Have one to add? Contact us at fire@thefire.org.
FIRE has great resources for student journalists, including tips on what to look for if you think your newspaper may be being censored, and information on āNew Voicesā legislation that makes it illegal to censor student journalists.
If you find newspapers stolen on your campus, are a student journalist being asked to submit stories to administrators for prior review, or are otherwise being silenced, submit a case to ²ŻŻ®ŹÓʵAPP¹ŁĶų.
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