Pubdate: Fri, 07 Nov 2003
Source: State, The (SC)
Copyright: 2003 The State
Contact:  http://www.thestate.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/426

NO DRUGS FOUND IN HIGH SCHOOL RAID

Goose Creek, S.C. - An effort to stem a growing drug problem at a 
Lowcountry high school netted no illegal narcotics but did get some complaints.

Fourteen officers cordoned off the main hallway of Stratford High School at 
6:40 a.m. Wednesday to search for marijuana. No drugs were found.

"Several officers did unholster their weapons in a tactical law enforcement 
approach," Lt. Dave Aarons of the Goose Creek Police Department said. 
"There was no force whatsoever. Everyone was very compliant."

However, the way the search was conducted is illegal, said Graham Boyd, 
director of the drug policy project for the American Civil Liberties Union. 
"You absolutely cannot bring police with guns drawn into a school," he said.

Boyd said police have to have individual students suspected of drug 
activity, then any action taken must target those suspects. He said 
investigators should have called individual suspected students to the 
principal's office to check their bags for drugs.

Security camera videotape of the raid was shown on national news channels 
Friday.

The only charges stemming from Wednesday's raid involved a ninth-grader who 
was charged with filing a false police report after she said an officer 
shoved her to the ground during the search, Aarons said. Principal George 
McCrackin said he, other school officials and the girl's parent reviewed 
video surveillance tapes and determined she wasn't even in that hall at the 
time.

McCrackin said he had talked with police about what he called a growing 
drug problem at the school.

"Within the last three weeks, there's been an influx of drug activity," he 
said. "I've been in this business for 34 years, and I've never seen the 
amount of activity we've experienced recently."

Aarons said he watched school surveillance tapes from four days that showed 
students congregating under cameras, periodically walking into a bathroom 
with different students and coming out moments later.

During Wednesday's raid, officers and school employees sealed off the main 
hallway. There were 107 students who happened to be in the hallway at the time.

Police told the students to sit on the floor and put their hands out, 
McCrackin said. Officers searched only book bags that the police dog 
responded to, not students, he said.

About 2,760 students attend Stratford High, the largest school in Berkeley 
County and among the largest statewide. Two officers work in the school 
full-time.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens