Pubdate: Thu, 13 Nov 2003 Source: Spartanburg Herald Journal (SC) Copyright: 2003 The Spartanburg Herald-Journal Contact: http://www.goupstate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/977 Author: Pamela Hamilton, Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/goose+creek COMMUNITY SPLIT OVER DRUG SWEEP AT LOWCOUNTRY SCHOOL GOOSE CREEK -- This small community just a few miles north of Charleston is split on whether police went too far last week when they conducted a high school drug sweep with their weapons drawn. More than 100 Stratford High School students were crouched in a hallway, some were restrained with plastic handcuffs, while 14 officers and a drug dog searched for drugs. None were found and no drug arrests were made. Some parents are angry over the treatment of their children -- captured on surveillance video and seen repeatedly on national television news programs. Others, including some students and the school principal, say the sweep was a necessary evil to combat a growing drug problem at the school. The aggressiveness of the officers has brought scrutiny from several civil rights groups including the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which says black students were targeted in the search. State police and other outside agencies have been asked to investigate the incident. "I personally think it went too far," said 17-year-old Jeff Carver, one of the students in the hallway while police searched book bags. "They didn't have to point guns and things. They didn't even find nothing." Carver, who stood up during the raid after he heard a dog barking, was sent to the principal's office for disobeying orders and suspended for three days. A dozen students who police say disobeyed orders were restrained. "I'm angry," parent Sharon Smalls said at a Berkeley County school board meeting Tuesday. "My child was slammed to the ground with a gun to his head. Someone has to take responsibility." Stratford High School seems an unlikely place for drugs. It is nestled among trees near the end of a winding road lined with upscale homes. The town of Goose Creek has 29,000 residents and a median family income of $45,919 -- well above the state median of $37,082. But two arrests for drug distribution have been made at the school three months into the year. That's half as many were made during the entire 2002-2003 school year. And while no drugs were found during the raid, a dog reacted to narcotics residue in some book bags. Senior Monique Gonzalez says she saw students during the raid running from campus, dumping drugs along the way. "There were kids throwing pills and things in the bushes. People were taking bags out and throwing them on the ground," said Gonzalez, who was standing less than 200 yards from the school during the raid at a shopping center where students hang out. Principal George McCrackin has said he asked the Goose Creek police to come to the school to curb an "influx of drug activity." "I think it was awesome," said Kristal Totolo, one of about 2,600 students who was not in the hallway during the raid. "I feel 10 times safer knowing that the principal cares about it. He's not letting it go." Robin Stout of Summerville says she's among the small group of parents who support the principal 100 percent. Stout says between the time her son graduated from Stratford in 1997 and when her daughter began ninth grade this year, she thinks drug use has increased. "If I was going to place blame, it would have to be on the kids that have been bringing drugs to school," Stout said. "I wouldn't blame the school. I wouldn't blame the police department." The way the raid was conducted was decided by the police department, said city spokeswoman Casey Fletcher. "This was a one-time specific operation to address a specific documented problem," she said. "Anytime that there is drug activity going on, the police officers believe that there's a reasonable expectation that there may be a threat of violence." Other schools had been through drug sweeps, but officers never unholstered their guns, said Pam Bailey, district spokeswoman. "If the principal or the district had known that the tactics that were used were going to be used in this drug sweep, then the principal would not have requested that assistance," Bailey said. Because of the public criticism of the raid, the State Law Enforcement Division is investigating how officers handled it. The police department also is doing an internal review. "We're not going to try to justify," Fletcher said. "We're just going to put the facts out there. It's up to other investigative bodies like SLED to decide what they think of these actions." The SLED investigation could take up to two months, longer if it is necessary to interview all students detained in the hallway, prosecutor Ralph Hoisington said. The U.S. attorney's office will be kept updated, he said. Two representatives from the American Civil Liberties Union are in Goose Creek this week talking to parents and students and have not decided whether to file a lawsuit, said Anjuli Verma, an ACLU spokeswoman. The raid also has drawn criticism because some say black students were targeted. "I really felt it had a lot to do with prejudice because it was in an area where mostly black children were," said Theresa Jenkins, who lives in nearby Summerville. While less than a quarter of the school's students are black, most of the kids in the hallway where the drug sweep was conducted were black. "The search seems to have been conducted in a part of the school frequented by African-American students who ride buses to school," the state NAACP chapter said in a news release. "There was no reported effort to search arriving personal vehicles, the predominant mode of transportation for white students." The NAACP also criticized the overall handling of the raid and said it would await the outcome of the SLED investigation. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin