Pubdate: Sat, 03 May 2008 Source: Oshawa This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 Oshawa This Week Contact: http://www.newsdurhamregion.com/news/oshawa Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1767 Author: Adam Mercer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?237 (Drug Dogs) COURT DECISION WILL DOG SCHOOLS The Supreme Court of Canada recently ruled on a case that started in Sarnia with regard to the use of police dogs to find drugs in a school gym that had some school bags in it. The court has ruled the search was illegal and as a result the evidence does not count and the kid is innocent. This means there will never be another dog in any school in this country. The dogs need to go into the Supreme Court building because the judges missed a few things in their deliberations. Quite frankly the kid in Sarnia was holding a rather large amount of drugs as he had five bags of marijuana and 10 magic mushrooms. Rather than have the student face the music, it made more sense to challenge the right of the police and their dog to be in the school. The main thrust of the decision from the Supreme Court is that there was no prior indication of wrongdoing on the part of the student body and as a result the dogs should not have been in the building to start with. News flash folks: There are drugs in high schools. School administrations have been hesitant to do much about drugs in schools up until now because they have all been waiting to see what would happen with this case. There isn't much hope now. In the school environment it is pretty difficult to "prove" a kid is high unless he admits it and even then there isn't a whole lot that can be done about it. Usually the kid is sent home for the day and usually it is left at that since if she is high already it isn't too likely that she is going to be caught for possession anyway. There have been incidents where kids have actually been seen dealing drugs but they take off in the midst of the situation being investigated by school officials and at that point the "evidence" is gone. Since nothing can be proven, it is difficult to even suspend the kid for a day or two, never mind trying to get him out of the building more permanently. Drugs are already a problem in high schools. Parents seem to want to believe that it is some other kid who is getting high in the school yard before class, but the truth is that it is somebody's kid. Believing it "can't be mine" is the kind of delusion that is usually shattered in a very emotional and shattering way. In order to learn and retain new information, most people have to be clean and sober. This fact alone should have kept the courts from making a decision that will almost certainly be interpreted by administrators across this country that they cannot use one of the most effective tools available to find drugs in bags, lockers, pockets and all the other hiding places that a large building might provide. This is a bad call, plain and simple. The messages about drugs are confusing enough as marijuana has been de-criminalized and now schools can't search for them. At least cigarettes, that don't have the hallucinogenic properties of marijuana, are controlled in some way by the law. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin