Pubdate: Wed, 26 Dec 2001 Source: Union Leader (NH) Copyright: 2001 The Union Leader Corp. Contact: http://www.theunionleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/761 Author: Denis Paiste JUSTICES THROW OUT SCHOOL DRUG CASE School officials may not act as agents of the police without following the same constitutional standards for search and seizure, the state Supreme Court affirmed Monday. Chief Justice David Brock, with Justices Joseph Nadeau and Linda Dalianis concurring, upheld a lower court ruling that suppressed evidence against Joseph Heirtzler on charges of possession and distribution of a controlled drug. The state had appealed. Heirtzler, then a 17-year-old Londonderry High School student, was charged in December 1998 after school officials conducted an interrogation and search. Rockingham Superior Court Judge Patricia Coffey threw out the evidence because school officials had not read Heirtzler his Miranda rights. Yesterday, Rockingham County Attorney Jim Reams said he was disappointed by the ruling. "I don't agree with it, but it's the law, so I'll live with it," he said. "We don't think that the school was acting on the government's behalf or for the government's benefit." The case against Heirtzler has not gone to trial yet. "We'll have to review the remaining evidence to see if we have enough to go forward and make our charging decision based on what evidence we have left," Reams said. The Supreme Court ruling, released Monday morning, said the state's appeal did not challenge the trial court's finding that school officials failed to comply with procedural safeguards required when the state interrogates and searches a criminal defendant. Therefore the court limited its review to whether an agency relationship existed between the school and police. In its review, the Supreme Court said the record upheld the trial court's finding of fact that there was an "agency relationship" between Londonderry school officials and police. County Attorney Reams said he would send school districts in Rockingham County a model agreement between police and school officials to clarify their roles so school officials do not inadvertently become deputies. "Hopefully those kind of agreements will eliminate this kind of confusion," he said. In Heirtzler's case, a school teacher noticed him pass what appeared to be a folded piece of tinfoil to another student. The student removed something from the tinfoil, put it in a piece of cellophane and passed the folded tinfoil back to Heirtzler, according to the Supreme Court opinion. The teacher notified Londonderry police officer Michael Bennett, who was assigned as school resource officer for Londonderry High School. Bennett passed on the information to assistant principal James O'Neill for action. "O'Neill and another assistant principal, Robert Shaps, called the defendant to the office, questioned him and asked if they could search him," the court said. "The defendant complied with the search request and a piece of paper wrapped in tinfoil was found in his cigarette pack. After further questioning, the defendant stated that the piece of paper might be LSD." At that point, the school officials contacted police. "Because O'Neill and Shaps were acting as agents of the police and failed to comply with the procedural safeguards required when the state interrogates and searches a defendant, the trial court granted the defendant's motion to suppress," the Supreme Court wrote. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake