Pubdate: Wed, 11 May 2005 Source: Morning Journal (OH) Copyright: 2005 Morning Journal Contact: http://www.morningjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3569 Author: Matt Suman POLICE SEARCH LORAIN SCHOOLS LORAIN -- Police conducted drug searches at both Lorain Admiral King and Southview high schools yesterday and found small amounts of marijuana in two lockers at Admiral King. Small amounts of marijuana were found in the lockers of two Admiral King students and a trace amount was detected in another student's car. Nothing was found in the lockers at Southview, according to schools spokesman Dean Schnurr. School officials suspended the Admiral King students for 10 days and will recommend expulsion, Schnurr said. The students may also face a criminal charge from Lorain police. Police Lt. Jim Rohner said yesterday he was not familiar with the results of the search or if any criminal charges were filed. School officials identified the owner of the vehicle with a trace amount of marijuana and are still investigating that case. Six drug-sniffing dogs, three at each school, searched the lockers and parking lot at Admiral King and lockers at Southview. ''We like to do both schools at the same time,'' Schnurr said. This prevents students at one school from calling friends at the other school to warn of the drug search. The searches were completed in approximately two hours. Six dogs were used because school officials didn't want the searches to take all day, Schnurr said. Results of the search show drugs are not as problematic in the high schools as the public may perceive, Schnurr said. ''Due to high profile-incidents, the perception is that Lorain City Schools has more of a problem than exists,'' Schnurr said. ''Surprise searches like these which yield almost no offenses go a long way to show we have good kids at Lorain City Schools.'' Rohner said since the Lorain Police Department does not have its own drug-searching dogs, the school resource office brought them in from other areas. Two dogs were brought in from the Lorain County Sheriff's Office, and one each from the Office of Veterans Affairs, as well as Amherst, Oberlin and Richland police departments, Schurr said. Schnurr said the dogs were brought in at no cost to the school district because the search provided training for the officers from the respective departments. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh