Pubdate: Fri, 14 Nov 2003 Source: Sun Herald (MS) Copyright: 2003, The Sun Herald Contact: http://www.sunherald.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/432 Author: Margaret Baker, The Sun Herald Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) COCAINE DELIVERED TO SECOND SCHOOL Cafeteria Worker Finds Drug In Box Of Meat HURLEY -- Fifteen pounds of cocaine found in a ground-meat box at East Central Upper Elementary School came from the same shipment sent to an Ellisville school, where 15 pounds of cocaine was found in a ground meat box last week. A cafeteria worker at the Hurley school found the cocaine in a box stamped Lot No. 021 early Monday morning. "Some of the ground meat was taken out, and in its place was six bricks of cocaine," Lark Christian, food service director for the Jackson County School District, said Thursday. "When she was lifting the box to put it on a shelf, she knew it felt unusual. When she went back to check that box, sure enough it had been tampered with. It was the same lot number that Ellisville had." In the Ellisville case, a delivery driver from Merchants Co., which has offices in Hattiesburg and Jackson, found the cocaine stacked in a box when he stopped at Ellisville Elementary School to make a delivery. Christian said lot numbers are stamped on the side of all boxed food. The numbers, she said, allow school officials and others to track the shipment's origin and record other information, such as when the food was manufactured. Agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration and Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement seized the cocaine shortly after it was found Monday. Jackson County sheriff's deputies also were at the school. Neither school officials nor the shipper are suspects in the investigation, Ed Dickey, DEA's resident agent in charge in Gulfport, said Thursday. "It came out of Texas," Dickey said. "The meat was not contaminated with cocaine. I wouldn't want anyone to think that the cocaine was mixed in with the ground beef." The state Department of Education notified all school districts in the state on Friday to segregate shipments bearing the 021 lot number. Christian said the Jackson County School District still has 96 cases of the 021 shipment, but they are being returned to Merchants Co. School officials checked the remaining boxes but did not find any more cocaine. Christian said elementary classes were not interrupted when the cocaine was found. "There was never any danger to the children," Christian said. "As soon as we knew there was a problem, we got the drugs off the campus." - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl