Pubdate: Thu, 16 Jan 2003 Source: Press-Enterprise (CA) Copyright: 2003 The Press-Enterprise Company Contact: http://www.pe.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/830 Author: Richard Brooks, The Press-Enterprise Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) Forum: Drug Policy Forum of California http://www.drugsense.org/dpfca/list.htm FIRST-GRADER BRINGS MARIJUANA TO SCHOOL YUCCA VALLEY: A 6-Year-Old Shows Pot to Students; His Father and His Father's Girlfriend Are Jailed. A 6-year-old boy surprised teachers and landed his dad in jail by bringing pot to his elementary school in the desert town of Yucca Valley. "He brought a baggie of marijuana, a pipe to smoke it in, and a lighter," San Bernardino County sheriff's Sgt. Fred Gonzalez said Wednesday. "We are talking about maybe a tenth of an ounce. . . . He knew what people did with that and he wanted to show classmates." A teacher noticed Tuesday's informal show-and-tell session at Yucca Valley Elementary School, Gonzalez said. From there, it was by-the-book: The contraband was confiscated. Administrators were notified. Sheriff's deputies were summoned. A judge signed a search warrant, allowing deputies to inspect the family's home along the 7100 block of Sioux Avenue. Officers reported finding other smoking pipes, cigarette wrapping papers and marijuana residue. That same day, the boy's father and the father's live-in girlfriend went to jail. The boy is with his mother, said Deputy District Attorney Laura Ozols. Douglas Evan Ballard, 41, and Heather Peterson, 32, were booked into Morongo Basin Jail for investigation of child endangerment. Bail was set at $100,000 apiece. Ballard also is accused of being a felon in possession of ammunition and was out on bail, facing other charges, including failure to appear. He previously was convicted of child endangerment. "We've never had a case like this before," said Patricia Jensen, child welfare coordinator for Morongo Unified School District. "I've never had a . . . child in first-grade bring marijuana to school before." In accordance with district policy, the child has been suspended from school for five days, pending an investigation by the principal, said Jensen. Where it goes from here apparently is anyone's guess. "That's something we're doing right now," said Jensen. "Investigating our options." Several school authorities emphasized they've never encountered a child so young who has been caught with pot. But a former teacher now on the district's school board said she remembers older kids -- usually teenagers -- creating a stir with some of the things they haul to school. "Parents would die if they knew what their children brought to show-and-tell," said Phyllis Swinnerton, who spent 50 years as a teacher and school counselor in San Bernardino Mountains schools before she retired and joined the Morongo school board. "Usually it is pot or alcohol," she said. "They get into the alcohol cabinet at home and put it in a Coke bottle and bring it to school that way." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake