Pubdate: Wed, 07 Mar 2001 Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Copyright: 2001 Cox Interactive Media. Contact: 72 Marietta Street, NW, Atlanta, Ga. 30303 Website: http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/ Forum: http://www.accessatlanta.com/community/forums/ Author: Craig Schneider, Staff THE KID WAS A MAN, WITH A BADGE Undercover Drug Sting At Harrison High Fooled Everyone Students knew him as Brent Smith. He was the tall, good-looking transfer student who lived with his mom and dad. And he liked drugs. When the 24-year-old undercover sheriff's deputy enrolled at Harrison High School in November, intent on busting its drug trade, not even the principal knew his identity. And when he came in from the cold Monday, the student who fooled them all had netted 27 people, 13 of them Harrison students, on drug possession and sales charges. The story of how he did it came to light Tuesday through interviews with law enforcement officers, school officials and students. In his four months inside Harrison High, the Cobb County deputy attended a full slate of classes, went to parties and football games, and became close to many students. But not too close. "I knew I had to fit in, make the kids trust me and then turn around and take them to jail," the deputy said. Police withheld his name because he is expected to continue undercover work elsewhere. A meeting last summer between police and two top Cobb school administrators set the sting in motion. The drug problem at suburban west Cobb's Harrison High --- where SAT scores far exceed the state average --- was no worse than other Cobb schools, authorities said. But the Marietta/Cobb/Smyrna Narcotics Unit had an "in" at Harrison. The school safety officer there had several leads and suspects. Within three weeks of his arrival, the new student with the contagiously jovial demeanor was scoring drugs. "A lot of it came to me," he said. He was acting out an alias he had rehearsed for three months. Police rented a house in a subdivision near the school and sent in a fake mother and father, both police officers. Principal Jill Kalina remembered first noticing the new student at a school basketball game in November. Enrolled in a broadcasting class, he was videotaping the game. "He was very attractive. The girls were gathering around him --- the new boy on the block," Kalina re-called. For the first couple of months, he stayed under the radar of school officials, pulling decent grades but hating trigonometry. Jason Paffenback, 16, remembers seeing him working out in the school gym. "He was trying to buy (drugs) from everyone. He would come up and ask where he could get it," said Jason, a junior. Quiet conversations in school led to drug deals in nearby parking lots or homes. None occurred at the school. State law jacks up the penalty for selling in a drug-free school zone. By January, the deputy was doing two drug deals a day. His studies suffered. After a string of absences from school, his parking permit was revoked and the school social worker called his home. His "mother" told the school official that her son was in jail for drugs. The calls stopped. By that time, he was exhausted. He would finish his school day, socialize with students, engage in drug deals. Then he had to do his homework. After that, he would write reports to his supervisors and debrief them. Eventually he gained the trust of student drug dealers, who led him to bigger deals with outside suppliers. Some of them were eventually busted. Undercover drug stings at schools are not unusual. They happen all over the country, said Charlie Fuller, a retired Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agent. This was about the fifth one in Cobb since 1985, authorities say. The last previous operation was about six years ago. This sting shocked students and parents at Harrison. "I think it's dumb selling drugs. But I don't think they should do an undercover --- get everybody to trust him and then rat them out," said junior David Odom. It also bothered Joe Dobson, parent of a Harrison student. "There are drugs at every school. It has to be taken care of," Dobson said. But "it's a little discomforting to think that the police are invading the schools now . . . really, it's kind of an entrapment, in my opinion." Barbara Bradley, vice president of Harrison's parent-teacher association, said parents were assured that no kids were entrapped by police. With that assurance, she supported the sting. "Maybe it will make other students think twice about it," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake