Pubdate: Sat, 10 Jul 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: Seanna Adcox Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/goose+creek NAACP LEADERS BLAST DECISION ON SCHOOL RAID McMaster's Ruling Deemed An Injustice GOOSE CREEK--NAACP officials on Friday criticized state Attorney General Henry McMaster's decision not to prosecute law enforcement officers or school officials involved in the Stratford High School drug raid, calling it an injustice to the students. Lonnie Randolph Jr., president of the state conference of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said the Nov. 5 search at Berkeley County's largest high school violated students' rights and that prosecution was in order. He said McMaster's ruling had left people embittered. "Any other person who invaded one of our schools and interrupted the process of education without legal justification would have been charged with disturbing a school," Randolph said at a news conference at the Calvary Church of God in Christ, whose members include Stratford students and their parents. "Any other person who had without justification pointed a pistol at another person would have been charged with pointing and presenting a firearm. "These are all criminal offenses in South Carolina," he continued. "But the victims were only kids, and mostly African-American kids. It is regrettable that Mr. McMaster is not the attorney general for all of us." McMaster announced July 2, after seven months of studying the case, that, while police officers created a "dangerous tinderbox situation" when they rushed into Stratford's main hallway with guns drawn, such tactics were not illegal. McMaster also called the raid "grossly inappropriate" and said the tactics were "well suited for a crack house but not a schoolhouse." Still, he said, without criminal intent, prosecution was not appropriate. "The matter received extensive legal review. There was no evidence of criminal intent. Probable cause existed to conduct the search, and the motive was lawful. That is, the motive was to stop drug activity," McMaster spokesman Trey Walker said Friday. McMaster considered a host of charges, including those cited by Randolph, but said they require proof of malice. Walker said the charge "disturbing a school" does not apply to police officers conducting drug searches. Police went in with guns drawn because, just before the raid, one supervising officer told his subordinates that "where there are drugs, there are guns, so have your weapons out." NAACP leaders were not satisfied. "I don't think you conduct a training exercise on someone's children," said the Rev. Joseph Darby, a leader in the NAACP's Charleston chapter and state conference. "This was a shakedown." The Nov. 5 raid began at 6:45 a.m. when 15 officers entered Stratford's main hallway, ordering 130 students to the floor. Officers handcuffed 18 students with plastic ties. School officials opened and searched 17 book bags that police dogs reacted to. They found no drugs, and officers made no arrests. Of the 130 students, 91 were black, 36 were white, two were Hispanic and one was Asian, records show. Less than 25 percent of the school's population is black. Officials said a student suspected of selling drugs and targeted in the raid happened to come to school on an early bus from a mostly black neighborhood and that no race was targeted. That student was not in the hallway during the raid, records show. "If you have an Osama bin Laden of drugs, you target that person. This was one big net. They tried to swoop up every fish they could," Randolph said Friday. Parent Linda Smith said her son had just eaten breakfast and was walking out of the cafeteria when he heard someone yell, "Get down!" She said he thought immediately of the Columbine High School shootings and began running. That's when a police officer grabbed him, picked him up, slammed him to the ground and handcuffed him, she said. The scene was captured by school surveillance cameras and broadcast nationwide. Smith, a first-grade teacher in Berkeley County, said her initial response when her son said there was a drug search at school was "good." But her opinion changed when she watched the news that night and saw her son being pinned down. "This is not over yet," Smith said. She said her son, a rising senior, remains "apprehensive, as it relates to police and being stopped. We will do what we have to do to get him to relax." She said school officials should have acted sooner to address drug sales at the campus and singled out suspected students. "It really should not have gotten that far," she said. Randolph noted that Friday marked 136 years since the South Carolina General Assembly ratified the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which required states to grant all citizens equal protection and due process under the law. South Carolina was the 28th state to approve the amendment, which became part of the Constitution on July 28, 1868, more than two years after Congress proposed it to the states. Randolph said he could not call the observance an anniversary because "we have nothing to celebrate." Depositions in a federal civil lawsuit filed on behalf of nearly 40 students will begin later this month. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin