Pubdate: Sat, 24 Apr 2004 Source: Greensboro News & Record (NC) Copyright: 2004 Greensboro News & Record, Inc. Contact: http://www.news-record.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/173 Author: Scott Michels Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/jameson+curry MOST STUDENTS IN DRUG STING PLEAD GUILTY BURLINGTON -- Nearly all the teens charged in February with selling or distributing drugs to undercover police officers have pleaded guilty, the Alamance district attorney said Friday. Of the 61 cases, the last of which was resolved Thursday, 58 pleaded guilty to felony charges related to the sale or delivery of a controlled substance, said District Attorney Rob Johnson. One other defendant was found guilty in a jury trial. Another was found not guilty and prosecutors dismissed a third case, Johnson said. Most of the teens who were arrested were students. Most received three years' probation and 200 hours of community service, though some with prior convictions were sentenced to jail time. Those on probation may be required to receive drug treatment, are subject to warrantless searches by their probation officers, and must avoid areas where drugs are known to be used or sold. "It was not our goal to destroy their lives. It was not our goal to cause undue distress. Our goal was to hold them accountable," Johnson said about the sting, which resulted in the arrest of 50 high school students. The students who pleaded guilty, including former Eastern Alamance High School basketball star JamesOn Curry, were charged with felonies, meaning they could be prevented from receiving some kinds of college financial aid. They'll also likely have to disclose the felonies on job applications. UNC-Chapel Hill revoked Curry's basketball scholarship. Superintendent James Merrill said Friday that the school system is working on a policy that would allow drug testing for students involved in extracurricular activities, which he said might make drugs less prevalent at county schools. "I wish I could say it is gone. But I'm too skeptical to believe that," he said. Last August, undercover officers working for the Alamance County Sheriff's Department and the Burlington and Graham police departments enrolled as students at all six county high schools and its alternative school, the Sellars-Gunn Education Center. The officer working at Western Alamance High School had his cover blown, but the other officers made drug buys, mostly of small amounts of marijuana, in classrooms and hallways, as well as off campus. On Friday, police showed video surveillance tapes of students chatting with undercover officers as they exchanged drugs and money in cars and a school bathroom. The sting was planned last spring, when Merrill asked local law enforcement for help with a drug problem in the schools. School system surveys of staff and parents indicated that drugs were a growing concern on Alamance-Burlington campuses. Other than Merrill and the school system's attorney, school system employees weren't aware of the operation while it was happening. In February, police arrested the students facing drug charges. The students were given long-term suspensions and had the opportunity, which most of them took, to continue classes at night at a special school in Graham. They can return to their regular schools next school year. Those students with previous convictions who took plea deals have generally received a few days of jail time -- usually three weekends. Others received sentences of several months, and at least one nonstudent was sentenced to 15 to 18 months in prison and five years' probation. On Friday, Johnson defended his office's handling of the cases, which has come under fire as being unduly harsh from some parents and their attorneys. He said it would have been an abuse of his authority to reduce the charges to misdemeanors. "It's not the kind of thing that you want to have to do in your community," he said about the operation. But "it is in the best interest of the community and the students to have a lengthy and strict probation." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin