Pubdate: Fri, 20 Mar 2009 Source: Holland Sentinel (MI) Copyright: 2009 GateHouse Media, Inc. Contact: http://extra.hollandsentinel.com/submitletter.shtml Website: http://www.hollandsentinel.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1145 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) STUDENTS SAY PROTEST INSPIRED BY SHOOTING, BUT FOCUSED ON WAR ON DRUGS Grand Rapids - Organizers of the third protest in a week for Derek Copp wanted to clarify their message during a march in downtown Grand Rapids on Friday, March 20. "A lot of people are saying we're just a bunch of hippies who want our bongs back," GVSU student Vanessa Crowley said. "That is not true. We are responsible citizens. We're doing the mature thing to solve the problem." That was the message projected by more than 50 students who gathered at the Grand Valley State University Pew Campus in downtown Grand Rapids Friday afternoon. While the officer-involved shooting of GVSU student Derek Copp during a drug raid inspired the march, it ultimately centered on the war on drugs, organizers said. "We want to focus on the policies that caused this to happen," GVSU student Blake Walton said, as students around him prepared to march several blocks from the campus clock tower to Rosa Parks Circle. "We aren't here to demonize or scapegoat the police." Other students also said they wanted to clarify their message, after a protest on the main GVSU campus in Allendale Township last week in which some chanted, "F--- the police!" "There was a lot of rhetoric that was ugly," Crowley said. Copp, 20, was unarmed when he was shot in the chest on March 11 by an Ottawa County Sheriff's Office deputy assigned to the West Michigan Enforcement Team, after WEMET obtained a warrant to search Copp's off-campus apartment for drugs. WEMET is a multijurisdictional drug investigation unit. Copp was released from Spectrum Health Thursday. The deputy who shot Copp - a 12-year veteran of the sheriff's office whose name is being withheld by police - has been placed on paid administrative leave while the Michigan State Police investigate the shooting. Copp's attorney Frederick Dilley said this week that Copp was in possession of no more than "a few tablespoonfuls of marijuana" when he was shot. Before the march, students handed out pamphlets titled "The Truth About the War on Drugs," citing statistics from a national drug survey that states 45 percent of the population has used an illicit drug at least once in his or her lifetime. GVSU student Crowley said the reality is that some people choose to do drugs, but it wastes taxpayers' money to devote so many resources to busting them for it. "Why don't we take the money we've spent on these failed policies and devote it to the economy?" she said. While Copp's classmates wait for answers on what led to the shooting, they say their friend maintains his "peaceful" personality. "I visited him on St. Patrick's Day and he wasn't doing so hot physically, but he's got positive thoughts," GVSU student Sara Jones said. "He told me, 'I don't want to be a victim or a hero.'" Others said they hesitated to blame police for reacting too quickly with so few details about the shooting available. "We get pissed when cops make mistakes, but then when we want them there, we want them there," GVSU student Zack McNeil said. Protesters linked arms around 1:30 p.m. and marched to Rosa Parks Circle, toting signs painted with messages such as "Stop police violence," and "Who will protect us from the police?" Shouting through a megaphone in Rosa Parks Circle, GVSU student Firman Valle also questioned who students could trust, if not law enforcement. "If our friend overdoses, we should feel confident that we can call (police) for safety. They should work for us, not against us," he said. "We should not have a reason to fear authority." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom