Pubdate: Mon, 10 Nov 2003 Source: Sidelines, The (TN Edu) Copyright: 2003 Middle Tennessee State University Contact: http://www.mtsusidelines.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2861 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/goose+creek Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) WHAT A SCHMUCK! There are typically two ways to do anything - the good way and the bad way. Interestingly enough, when illegal drugs are involved, the police typically seem to pick the bad way. Take recent activity in Goose Creek, S.C. Stratford High School's administration, including principal George McCrackin, believed there was a large marijuana trafficking ring in the school. The good way to handle this scenario, "Finding drugs in a suburban high school," would be a couple of police officers to bring in a dog, which should then sniff around. Officers might open up a locker for a peek and either arrest some students or, finding nothing, go home and think, "I bet some teachers were over-reacting, and there really wasn't anything going on." Of course, the police chose to do things the bad way. Fourteen officers, with guns drawn, stormed into a hallway in the school where, according to one of the officers, a lot of drug activity takes place. They immediately yelled for all students to get down on the ground, with their hands behind their backs. Officers forcibly handcuffed any students who wouldn't comply with the absolutely ridiculous situation. Then they brought in the dogs, who walked up and down the hallway. We bet you can't guess how much dope the canine officers detected. Give up? None. Not one ounce, gram, dime bag or joint. Although, and this is certainly encouraging for their efforts, the dogs did supposedly smell marijuana on 12 of the students' backpacks. Lest you think that this recount is some trumped-up attack on the inherently noble and otherwise effective war on drugs, visit www.ksat.com/news/260644/detail.html, where you can watch the school surveillance video yourself. "I was just upset knowing they had guns put to their head and a canine was barking at them and about to bite somebody," Latonia Simmons, a parent of a Stratford High student, said. "It was just awful." McCrackin doesn't think so, however. "The volume and amount of marijuana coming into the school is unacceptable," he said in an interview after the police hadn't found any drugs anywhere in the school. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin