Pubdate: Fri, 06 Feb 2004 Source: Sentinel And Enterprise, The (MA) Copyright: 2004 MediaNews Group, Inc. and Mid-States Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://sentinelandenterprise.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2498 Authors: Katie Curnutte, and Lisa Guerriero Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) POLICE SEARCH SCHOOL WITH DOGS, COME UP EMPTY Some Students Upset, Others Call Drugs A Problem LEOMINSTER -- School officials kept Leominster High School students in their classrooms for 30 minutes Thursday as state police and drug-sniffing dogs searched the hallways. The lock down came at 8:35 a.m., when an administrator announced over the loudspeaker that students and teachers must stay in their classrooms until the search was over. Dogs alerted police to three or four lockers during the search, but police found no drugs, said Principal William Hart. Sophomore Johanna Creamer said after school on Thursday that the search was "uncalled for." "It was like a lock down," Creamer said. "That's what everyone said, they were yelling 'lock down, lock down.' It was horrible, it was uncalled for. (School officials) already deal with drugs -- they don't have to use big dogs to scare us." Some students thought the search sent the wrong message to students. "I think it's disgusting," said junior Colin Progen. "It makes us look bad." The announcement signaling the start of the lock down scared some students, said junior Vanessa Bosley. "At first we thought it was a gun," she said. "They scared us." Police and school administrators had been planning the search for months, said Assistant Principal Tom Browne. "It's an ongoing effort to provide as safe an environment as possible," Browne said. Administrators announced all students and teachers should stay in their classrooms during second period because of the search. Students in the halls were instructed to go into a classroom. They were released at the end of second period. "It didn't disrupt any classes," Browne said. The search lasted about 30 minutes, Hart said. There was no contact between the dogs and students, Browne said. Junior Amanda Schuster said she was getting a book from her locker when the announcement came over the loudspeaker. She was pulled into the closest classroom -- which was not her normal second-period class -- and sat there the rest of the period, Schuster said. Drugs are not a big enough problem at the high school to warrant a search, Bosley said. "I think it's ridiculous," she said. "It makes us feel like criminals." Not all students thought the search was a bad idea. Yanina Fusaro, a junior, said it's about time the school took serious steps to keep drugs out. "I thought it was a good idea, because lately there have been a lot of drugs and no one's been able to take control of it," Fusaro said. Fusaro's friend, Jessie Leon, a junior, said marijuana is common, but she believes ecstasy, Oxycontin and other drugs are also on school grounds. "(Drugs) are basically all around," Leon said, especially in bathrooms. Students sell and use drugs in school to fit in, or to make money, Fusaro and Leon said. Freshman and sophomore students often sell to each other, they said. "There's over a thousand people here," Fusaro said. "It's the best place to sell." Despite their support of the administration's crackdown, the girls were apprehensive about their privacy being invaded. "My locker was investigated, and I didn't have anything. It was one near me," said Fusaro, whose locker is on the first floor of the A-wing. Fusaro said she would prefer being checked for drugs upon entering the school than have dogs patrolling the grounds. The search was a hot topic of conversation during the school day. "Everyone was asking if anyone had heard anything," said junior Brad Harris. Police Chief Peter Roddy called the search "routine." "We just want to make sure everything's all right," he said. School Resource Officer Steven Creamer made several drug arrests at the high school in January, according to police reports. One netted four juveniles who were charged with various crimes, including distributing controlled substances in a school zone. There was another search about two years ago, Hart said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom