Pubdate: Thu, 05 Oct 2006 Source: Ithacan, The (NY Edu) Copyright: 2006 Ithaca College. Contact: http://www.ithaca.edu/rhp/ithacan/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1759 Author: Nathaniel Weixel, Staff Writer PUBLIC SAFETY SHOWS OFF CONTRABAND COLLECTION When he joined the Office of Public Safety in 1993, Master Patrol Officer Dirk Hightchew said he knew part of his job would be to confiscate beer kegs. He never expected to confiscate a human skull stolen from a crypt. Hightchew said he entered a room on a routine marijuana complaint when he saw a human skull sitting in plain view on the student's shelf. He confiscated it and sent it to the coroner's lab for testing. Hightchew said the results determined because of its age, the skull was stolen from a crypt. "The student took it and kept it as an artifact," Hightchew said. "The skull was one of the more bizarre things I've found." In order to educate the campus about the contraband he collects, Hightchew put together a display containing the strangest items he has confiscated from students during his career. The items in the display include drug paraphernalia and illegal weapons. Hightchew said he uses the display during resident assistant training and for various educational programs throughout the year. He said all items in the display were confiscated because they were in plain view in a room that he entered as a result of a routine noise or drug complaint. "Students know that if we catch them smoking, they will only get a judicial referral," Hightchew said. "So they're usually more than happy to give us consent [to search]." The display is also used in a legal studies class and in the class Peer Advocacy: Alcohol, Drugs and the College Student, taught by Priscilla Quirk, the college's Coordinator of Health Promotion and Substance Abuse Prevention. "The display is an incredible visual of what people will go through to use their drug of choice," Quirk said. "It lets students see how people's lives are so wrapped up in drug use that they don't function in other areas of their life." Hightchew said he doesn't always confiscate weird items. Normally, he finds and takes glass marijuana pipes, water bongs - including hand-signed Tommy Chong bongs - and beer kegs. He often finds stolen college property, usually banquet tables used for drinking games. A number of years ago, Hightchew said several students took the 12-foot Ithaca College emblem that was displayed on a wall in Emerson Suites. He said the students made it all the way to the Towers before the Student Auxiliary Safety Patrol stopped them. "Everything's a trophy if it has the college name or logo on it," he said. Hightchew said one of his oddest experiences occurred during his first year on the job. He said when he arrived at a dorm to investigate a complaint of marijuana odor, he not only found students smoking, but he also found the mask for the college's Bomber mascot, an item that had been missing for years. "I had no idea what it was," Hightchew said. "The kids didn't know how it got into their room, either." Investigator Tom Dunn, who helps Hightchew with the display, said Public Safety has the right to take illegal items like weapons and drug paraphernalia, whether or not the students hand over the property. "If we find the item on a student or in the student's possession during a search, we will take it," Dunn said. Dunn said some of the confiscated weapons, including a blackjack club, a throwing star and a pair of brass knuckles with a blade are illegal to possess. Among the drug paraphernalia Hightchew has seized are two blow tubes. A blow tube is a hollow container that is stuffed with fabric softener. After inhaling marijuana smoke, a person exhales into the tube, using the fabric softener to absorb the odor, Hightchew said. "It usually doesn't work," he said. Hightchew said it's surprising what students will use to get high. For example, in the collection, there is a gas mask with a plastic bong attached to the bottom of it. Dunn said one of the more unusual items is a blue highlighter with a small marijuana pipe hidden in it. Hightchew said Public Safety subscribes to the magazine High Times in order to keep current with "what students are using to smoke these days." Other objects include a bong made from a Pyrex glass and a rubber stopper stolen from the Center for Natural Sciences, an "Instabong" kit and a hospital oxygen mask hooked up to an electric fan. Dunn said the fan was converted into a marijuana pipe and blows the smoke through a connecting plastic tube into the mask. "They look interesting," Dunn said. "But I doubt their true effectiveness." - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine