Pubdate: Fri, 16 Feb 2007 Source: Charleston Daily Mail (WV) Copyright: 2007 Charleston Daily Mail Contact: http://www.dailymail.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/76 Author: Kelly L. Holleran PRATT ELEMENTARY PRINCIPAL CLEARED OF DRUG CHARGE David S. Anderson, a former Pratt Elementary School principal, says he can now move forward with his life after he was found not guilty of knowingly possessing cocaine. Anderson, 43, expressed relief when Magistrate Marva L. Crouch read the verdict. "I just wanted to tell the truth and let it be heard," Anderson said after Thursday's jury trial in Kanawha Magistrate Court. "I have good friends, a wonderful family, and I will move on." Anderson's friends were calling people on their cells immediately after leaving the courtroom, excitedly informing them of the verdict. "We are ecstatic. We are so happy," said Jamil Lambert, a teacher at Pratt who had worked with Anderson for about a year before his arrest. "The truth speaks," said Kristina Elson, a former Pratt teacher who was with Anderson the night of his arrest. Anderson was charged Oct. 14, 2006, after Charleston Police Detective J.F. Taylor said he found .2 grams of cocaine in Anderson's back left pocket. Anderson admitted that the cocaine was found on his body, but testified he did not knowingly possess the substance. A person he was taking home from a bar had planted the drug on him, Anderson said. Anderson and some fellow educators had gone out to eat at Bennigan's restaurant Oct. 13, according to witness testimony. After the dinner, a few of them went to an American Federation of Teachers function. After that, some of the teachers and the former principal went to Vandalia's, a Charleston bar. Anderson and Elson left there to go to another bar, they testified. A man at the bar repeatedly approached Anderson, asking him for a ride home. Anderson knew the man through his brother, the principal testified. Anderson said he kept refusing to grant the ride, but reluctantly gave in as he left the bar, he and Elson testified. "When we were leaving, the guy was outside and just hassling us," Elson said. "When we were walking outside to our car, he (Anderson) did agree because he's a good guy and would do anything for anyone." That is when Anderson's troubles began, the witnesses said. Anderson tried to drop the man off at a friend's house behind the Marriott, but the man refused to get out of the car, Anderson testified. "I pulled up, put the car in park and he refused to get out. He said he didn't think his friend was home," Anderson said on the witness stand. Anderson was also planning to take Elson home, and she was in the car while the situation was happening. "(Anderson was) trying to get him out of the car, but he wouldn't get out. He had a handful of things he wanted us to hold. He said, 'Walk with me so I know you won't leave me,'" Elson testified. So Anderson got out of the car and told Elson to stay in the car and lock the doors while he walked the man to the house, according to testimonies. "I thought, 'If I walk him to his friend's house, he'll leave me alone,'" Anderson said. Taylor, who was circling the block in his Charleston police cruiser, had noticed Anderson's vehicle in the parking lot of the Washington Manor housing complex and pulled in there to see what was happening. Taylor walked up to Anderson's car and found Elson sitting in the passenger seat, he said in his testimony. As he was talking to her, he saw Anderson walking about 15 feet away from two other people who were known drug users in the area, Taylor said in his testimony. He approached Anderson to ask if he owned the vehicle sitting in the parking lot, and at that point Anderson "made actions toward his rear pocket that made me suspicious," Taylor testified. Taylor asked Anderson to put his hands up, but he kept lowering his hands toward his back left pocket, Taylor said. "I went immediately to that pocket because that is where he was reaching," Taylor testified. In that pocket, Taylor found the package of cocaine. But Anderson testified he did not know the cocaine was in his pocket. The man "handed me some stuff, took off running, then I turned around and saw the police officer. I stuck it (the stuff) in my pocket," he testified. Some of the items Anderson stuffed in his pocket included the cocaine and the other man's license, which Taylor also found in Anderson's pocket, Anderson said in his testimony. Although Taylor had not requested to see Anderson's license, Anderson testified he was reaching in his back pocket to show the officer proof of his identity. Taylor arrested Anderson, who was later released from South Central Regional Jail on his own recognizance about 11:30 a.m. Oct. 14. Anderson's lawyers argued that .038 grams of cocaine was found in the plastic bag, which is not enough to sell or get high on, they said. Authorities had called the weight .2 grams --which was the weight of the cocaine with the plastic bag, lawyers said. Anderson was tested for drugs two or three days after his arrest, and no drugs were found in his system, according to paperwork submitted by defense attorney Bill Forbes. Kanawha County school board members suspended Anderson without pay after they learned of his arrest. It's unclear what will happen with his job now. His arrest was the impetus for a decision by the board of education to expand the current policy that subjects only bus drivers and mechanics to random drug tests. Under proposed revisions that were discussed Thursday at a board meeting, all employees would be subject to random tests. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin