Pubdate: Sat, 07 Mar 2009 Source: Fayetteville Observer (NC) Copyright: 2009 Fayetteville Observer Contact: http://www.fayobserver.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/150 Author: Venita Jenkins Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?237 (Drug Dogs) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) DRUG SEARCH SUSPENDED AT ROBESON SCHOOL LUMBERTON - Robeson County deputies were ordered off the Magnolia Elementary School campus last week after lawmen began a drug search at the school. The search, authorized by the school's assistant principal, took place after drugs were found at the school. Investigators also are looking into whether a 13-year-old boy was drugged, possibly with Ecstasy. The boy became ill after eating some candy at the school Feb. 13, said Lt. Kathy Torre with the Sheriff's Office Juvenile Division. Investigators have not determined whether the student had Ecstasy in his system. The search was prompted by drug incidents that have occurred at the school and the possible drugging of the student, Torre said. A week prior to the student becoming ill, marijuana and pills were found in a container at the school. In a separate incident in January, a marijuana cigarette was found in the boy's bathroom. There also have been incidents where students have shown up on campus under the influence, Torre said. Magnolia Elementary School is a kindergarten through eighth-grade school. A deputy and a detective with the Juvenile Division were conducting the sweep Feb. 25. About 20 minutes after they started, the lawmen were told they would have to remove their drug-sniffing dog from the campus, Torre said. "The principal started sending the kids back inside the school," Torre said. "We were kind of puzzled. He said that he got a call and told us that that dog had to be off campus. We were trying to take steps, during our investigation, to warn the students about what would happen if they participate in any type of crime. We have sent school resource officers out. The last part was the use of the dog. There is a problem out there." School officials ordered the dog removed because the principal and assistant principal did not follow protocol, said Al Kahn, a spokesman for the school system. The Central Office was not notified that the dog would be on campus. "It is not a written policy, but they all supposedly know they are not to do certain things whether it is written or not," Kahn said. "And this is one of those things." There were also concerns about the more than 800 students being out in the cold during the search, Kahn said. Sheriff Kenneth Sealey said he plans to meet with Superintendent Johnny Hunt. "We are going to do what we can to help the principal and the school board," Sealey said. "We know that they have policies and procedures that they have to follow. We are trying to find out what happened and whether it was followed." Drug in candy? The 13-year-old boy who became ill appeared as if he was under the influence of a drug when he was at the school Feb. 13, according to a Sheriff's Office report. He was picked up from school and taken to his grandparents' home. He was later taken to Southeastern Regional Medical Center. Investigators were notified about the incident by 911 dispatchers. They met the mother at the hospital, Torre said. "The mother said her son had eaten some candy and that he thought that something was in the candy," Torre said. "He started feeling differently after he ate the candy. Then he started getting sick." Toxicology tests done on the boy the day he was admitted to the hospital came back negative, Torre said. "Other tests could have been done following that, but we have not seen them," she said. The school resource officer talked with several students who described pills that have been passed around the school, Torre said. The deputy spoke with a pharmacist who said the description of the drug sounded like Ecstasy, she said. "We are just trying to beef things up and help the principal get things under control," Torre said. "We want to find out who is responsible for bringing the drugs on campus." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin