Pubdate: Fri, 14 Nov 2003 Source: Jefferson Post, The (NC) Contact: http://www.jeffersonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1771 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) DRUG RAIDS, GOOD...AND VERY, VERY BAD There are good, and reasonable ways to search for drugs in our schools-and some very, very bad and dangerous ones. The nation got a look at the bad side this week as videotapes of a Nov. 5 police raid at Stratford High School in Goose Creek, S.C. aired. The pictures were ugly, to say the least. At 6:40 a.m., 14 officers of the local police department entered the high school. With their weapons drawn and, at times, pointed at students, they cordoned off the main hallway, then forced students to the floor, handcuffing any who hesitated. Then drug dogs sniffed. The dogs reacted to 12 backpacks-but no drugs were found. No weapons were found. No charges were filed. At least yet, and at least not against any students. That could change, because Ralph Hoisington, a prosecutor who serves that part of South Carolina, has asked for and got an investigation by the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division. Charges of police misconduct may follow, and we think should. Let us have a dose of reality here. These officers were looking for marijuana. Though the videotapes appeared to show something like a raid on an Al-Qaida headquarters, this was about kids who may have had some illegal dried plants. There was no suspicion of regular weapons, no weapons of mass destruction, no threat of violence-and absolutely no reason these young people should have had revolvers pointed in their faces. Drug raids, unfortunately, have become part of high school life in the United States. Such events take place with some regularity at Ashe County High School. But in these cases, the officers keep their weapons holstered, their actions professional-and the results have been far more positive than those in Stratford High. In the Ashe raids, vehicles parked in the school's lot are sniffed by one or more drug dogs. The dogs also do their work inside the school, with whole classes getting checked. The process is orderly, with none of the Rambo-style hysteria exhibited in South Carolina. Students here learn there are consequences for breaking the law. Students at Stratford High could have hardly come away from this bizarre incident with much respect for local law enforcement. That is certainly not a lesson they needed to be taught. Their school and law enforcement leaders need to make sure some "heads roll" over this incident. And our leaders need to make sure nothing like this ever happens in Ashe County. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom