Pubdate: Tue, 27 Jan 2004 Source: Post and Courier, The (Charleston, SC) Copyright: 2004 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.charleston.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567 Author: Tony Bartelme Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/goose+creek DISTRICT SAYS RAID AT SCHOOL JUSTIFIED Suit Response Partly Blames Students Students at Stratford High School were partly to blame for any wrongdoing by police and school officials during November's controversial drug sweep, attorneys for the Berkeley County School District said in a formal response to a lawsuit. The response maintains "any injuries or damages" suffered by the students ... resulted in part from their "own acts of comparative negligence, carelessness, recklessness ..." Asking a federal judge to toss out the suit, the district also denied that Goose Creek police illegally restrained students and pointed guns in their faces, violating their constitutional rights. The students are not entitled to any money because the raid was "justified at inception and reasonable in scope," the district maintained. Parents of some students and their lawyers were floored by the district's stance. "I don't see why my son should be blamed," said Kim Lynnette Harris, whose 16-year-old son, Dejohn McKelvey, was in the hallway the morning of the raid. "He was an innocent bystander, probably like all of the 107 students that were there that day," she said."An absolute outrage," added Ron Motley, a lawyer coordinating the lawsuit for the students and families. He compared the situation to a drunken driver running over someone and then blaming the pedestrian for getting in the way. "I can't wait to tell a jury this," he said. The district's response stems from a federal lawsuit filed in December by 18 Stratford students and their families. The lawsuit alleged that Goose Creek police pointed guns at students and used other illegal search and seizure tactics, violating the students' constitutional rights. Another federal lawsuit coordinated by the American Civil Liberties Union also has been filed and makes similar allegations. The lawsuit's other main targets, the Goose Creek Police Department and the town of Goose Creek, have yet to file responses to the court. More than 100 students were detained during the raid. School and police cameras captured officers bursting into the school hallway and ordering students to the floor. An officer with a drug-sniffing dog searched students' backpacks and belongings, but no drugs or weapons were recovered. The incident spawned international headlines, state and federal investigations, community protests and the recent resignation of longtime Stratford Principal George McCrackin. District officials declined to comment Monday, referring questions to their attorneys. Duke Highfield, one of the district's attorneys said, "We're not playing a blame game here. We're simply responding to the allegations made in the complaint." The district's 16-page response denied specific allegations by students that police acted improperly. For instance, in the lawsuit, Harris's son, Dejohn McKelvey, said he was reviewing class notes when an officer pointed a gun in his face so close that he could barely see the gun barrel. The boy said he was then pushed to the floor and restrained. In its response, the district acknowledged "only that Dejohn McKelvey is a student at Stratford High School," and denied his allegations. "I'm not happy about the situation," Harris said, adding that she recently pulled her son out of school because of the disruption the raid caused. "There were 107 students, and they are going to deny that they did something wrong? C'mon." The district's response stated that the students were lawfully restrained, and that because of this, the district wasn't liable for any damages. That prompted Motley to comment: "If you say pointing a Glock at someone's head is a lawful restraint, then you must have grown up in Nazi Germany." The district also maintained: - - Any injuries suffered by the students were caused by the negligence "of some other party or parties over whom the defendants had no supervision or control." - - That McCrackin didn't plan, order and "execute the search." - - Students were partly to blame for what happened and that a jury should determine a percentage of responsibility and reduce any damages by that amount. The school district "may say this is a technical defense, but for the life of me, I don't know how it helps their arguments," said Jack Cordray, another attorney for the students. "They try to teach children to be accountable for their actions, but when they are called to account, they deny responsibility and point to others, including children." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin