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View Full Version : Drug Raid in NC High School turns up nothing (article)


Miss Modular
Nov 11th, 2003, 12:53 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2003/US/South/11/07/school.raid/index.html

Police, school district defend drug raid
Monday, November 10, 2003 Posted: 1:41 PM EST (1841 GMT)

(CNN) -- After complaints from parents and students, police in Goose Creek, South Carolina, defended their decision Friday to send a team of officers, some with guns drawn, into a high school earlier this week for a drug raid that turned up no drugs.

The Berkeley School District north of Charleston, South Carolina, also defended its role in the incident, which has triggered outrage among some in the community.

Stratford High School students described Wednesday's incident as frightening.

"They would go put a gun up to them, push them against the wall, take their book bags and search them," Aaron Sims, 14, told CNN affiliate WCSC. "They just came up and got my friend, not even saying anything or what was going to happen. ... I was scared."

Sims said his mother was "a little angry," but his father understood and "thought it was necessary."

Lt. Dave Aarons of the Goose Creek Police Department said the raid, the first the department has done at a school, followed a police investigation into drug activity that began after a student informed school staff about drug sales on school property.

Police monitored video from school surveillance cameras for several days and "observed consistent, organized drug activity," he said. "Students were posing as lookouts and concealing themselves from the cameras."

When the principal saw more of the same suspicious activity on the school surveillance video, he asked for the officers to respond, Aarons said.

Within 30 seconds, officers had moved to "safely secure the 107 students who were in that hallway," Aarons said. "During that time some of the officers did unholster in a down-ready position, so that they would be able to respond if the situation became violent."

"The school also designated faculty to secure the hallway to keep other students from entering," Aarons said.

Anytime narcotics and money are involved he said there is "the reasonable assumption that weapons will be involved. ... Our primary concern was the safety of the students (and) everyone else involved."

'School had no knowledge that weapons would be drawn'
Aarons said "12 to 14 students" were placed in handcuffs or plastic flexcuffs "due to their failure to respond to repeated police instructions to get on their knees with their hands on their heads," after one of the lieutenants explained to the students what was going on.

A canine unit was brought in and the dog responded positively to 12 book bags, which were then searched by school officials, said David Barrow, secondary school supervisor for the Berkeley School District. But no drugs were found and no arrests were made.

"The school had no knowledge that weapons would be drawn," Barrow said. "We understand students' and parents' and the community's concerns about this particular search. We will work internally and with local law enforcement to be sure these issues are addressed."

Still, he said, the school was concerned about possible drug sales on campus, and believed action was necessary.

Jared Weeks, 14, told WCSC that police were aggressive.

"They kind of pushed us against the wall and started searching us," Weeks said. "I didn't think all that was called for."

Weeks said he was "kind of nervous," but not scared "because I didn't have anything to hide."

He said there are a lot of drugs in the school, but that this sort of raid was unnecessary. "There is certain people that you know sell drugs," he said. "They could have just searched those people."

Aarons said police believe the drug-dealing students were tipped off.

"I don't think it was an overreaction," he said of the raid. "I believe it was one tactical method by which we could safely approach the problem to ensure that everybody was safe."

He said the incident is being reviewed, as is every police operation.

AChimp
Nov 11th, 2003, 01:36 AM
Why are the kids complaining? It's not like they were shot or anything, and the guns probably didn't even have real bullets.

Parents bitch about police not doing enough, and then when they finally get off their asses and take action... well, they were supposed to take action against the other kid! Serves the kid right for looking suspicious. >:

El Blanco
Nov 11th, 2003, 12:25 PM
Someone refresh my memory: What was the ruling on random locker searches?

And didn't it occur to someone that grabbing the kids at gun point and rifling through their bags was close to that old Fourth Ammendment line?

The One and Only...
Nov 11th, 2003, 04:25 PM
The police officers around here just use dogs.

Zhukov
Nov 11th, 2003, 08:33 PM
I read through this article thinking that the people involved were around 17 years old, I was a little surprised when a 14 year old was mentioed.



On a side note, I havent seen the filth for at least a month.

ranxer
Nov 11th, 2003, 09:10 PM
they say drug use is rampant in my town, there is all kinds of reports of citizen action to fight drug houses around me.. it sucks, ive never once seen any kind of problem with drug users.

so yesterday they raided a middle school(!) and high school (with dogs) where they say the use is rampant and found NOTHING! LOL i hope they lose thier funding.. fuckin nazis don't care that every 4th adult is giving thier kids some drug to keep them calm and has a prescription to some other mind altering life correcting pharmecutical. bastards >:

i like to say 'fight the drug war, GROW YOUR OWN" dammit, don't fund those folks that are in the black market.

of course i'm too paranoid to grow anything even slightly suspicious so ill just study french and hope to emigrate to canada someday :)

kahljorn
Nov 12th, 2003, 05:23 AM
"Police monitored video from school surveillance cameras for several days and "observed consistent, organized drug activity," he said. "Students were posing as lookouts and concealing themselves from the cameras."

When the principal saw more of the same suspicious activity on the school surveillance video, he asked for the officers to respond, Aarons said. "

They made me laugh so fucking hard. They monitored people who concealed themselves from the cameras. Obviously they didn't conceal themselves very well if they could see them, which seems pretty unlikely because they usually put the cameras in high visible places(for both the "Fear" value and also the wider range of view)