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Student journalist thanks paper-thieves for bringing tons of attention to story they tried to trash

From left, University Press managing editor Kristen Grau, news editor Israel Fontoura, editor-in-chief Cameren Boatner, News Editor, contributing writer Kimberly Swan, and creative director Madison Borgel.

The editor-in-chief of a Florida student newspaper has a surprising message for whoever stole stacks of a recent issue with a controversial cover story:

Thank you.

Cameren Boatner, editor-in-chief of Florida Atlantic University’s newspaper, University Press, penned an op-ed for the paper yesterday detailing how she and a colleague discovered the latest issue stolen from racks across campus. 

The issue’s cover story, which Boatner wrote, detailed a rape allegation against FAU football quarterback Chris Robison.

“The issue we put out was not portraying things in the most flattering light,” Boatner tells FIRE. “When that happens, issues tend to end up in the trash.” 

“You don’t see a full stack of issues in the trash when people are happy.” 

Boatner’s colleague, managing editor Kristin Grau, made the discovery Sunday.

“When we’re on campus we always check the trash bins,” Boatner said. “This was the first time that she actually found something. A full stack of our issues in the trash.”

“After that, she went around campus and found that most of our newsbins were actually empty. Then we went to the police.”

Boatner is now awaiting an update from police, who told her they are pulling area surveillance footage to try and find the perpetrator or perpetrators.

“I think the biggest frustration for us is that people perceive us as a free newspaper. And technically we are,” she said. “You can go into the bins and take out a paper.”

But free papers aren’t free.

“It costs money and hard work.”

As Boatner notes in her op-ed, and as FIRE has routinely reported, you can steal a free paper

And while newspaper theft remains a pernicious problem on campuses nationwide, Boatner’s op-ed highlights the foolishness of this kind of censorship — one would-be thieves should really consider: It routinely backfires.

“This drew more attention to the story than we could have ever gotten on our own,” Boatner said. “This is a particularly stupid form of censorship because in the end, all it does is help us.”

She also said the incident has cemented her confidence in her reporting skills.

“As a journalist, I found it kind of flattering,” Boatner said, noting the piece was compelling enough “for someone to not want people to read it.”

Boatner and her crew will be reporting on updates on the investigation over at University Press. And if you haven’t yet read the story the newspaper thief (or thieves) didn’t want you to see, it’s here.

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