If you read special prosecutors’ report about last year’s raid on the Marion County Record newspaper, the abuse of power by law enforcement sounds like an immaculate deception. Officials who carted off computers and cellphones from the Record on a flimsy pretext didn’t do so out of ill will, according to Marc Bennett and Barry Wilkerson. The fact that a Marion County Record reporter had investigated Police Chief Gideon Cody? The fact that 98-year-old newspaper co-owner Joan Meyer died the day after the raid? Both dismissed as immaterial.

The damage done to journalism and journalists across the United States? Simply not the their problem. With lawsuits about the raid thick on the ground, Bennett and Wilkerson aren’t commenting further. It’s a shame, given all the loose ends and unanswered questions.

The dynamic duo did two things right . First, they lay out in exhaustive detail why Record editor and publisher Eric Meyer and reporter Phyllis Zorn committed no crimes in their everyday work of pursuing a story about restaurateur Kari Newell. But we all already knew that.

Reporting on the circumstances around the raid had been clear for ages. Second, they recommend the filing of a low-level felony charge against Cody. Unfortunately, the charge had nothing to do with the raid’s conception or execution.

It instead focuses on his request to Newell that she delete text messages between the two of them. The special prosecutors note in the 124-page report that they are not r.