Pubdate: Tue, 15 Jun 2010 Source: Times & Transcript (Moncton, CN NK) Copyright: 2010 New Brunswick Publishing Company Contact: http://timestranscript.canadaeast.com/onsite.php?page=contact#B Website: http://timestranscript.canadaeast.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2660 Author: Craig Babstock POLICE TARGET DRUG TRAFFICKING IN SCHOOLS Friday's Arrests Part of Ongoing Operation Codiac Regional RCMP's Drug Section is targeting drug trafficking at local high schools in an attempt to keep students safe. "If we can get young people on the right track early, society benefits from that," says Const. Chantal Farrah. "We want to put them on the right path to be responsible adults in the future." Two officers from the drug squad arrested three Moncton High School students Friday at lunchtime as part of this ongoing operation. The teens were seen smoking marijuana just off school property, prompting the investigators to intervene. Farrah says the Drug Section has long focused attention on high schools in Moncton, Riverview and Dieppe to try to curb any illegal drug activity at those schools. She says they do investigations at random times, much like the way the Traffic Enforcement Section holds random checkstops on Metro Moncton roads. Last week, officers investigated the area around Moncton High School at Church Street and Mountain Road and Mathieu-Martin High School in Dieppe as part of this ongoing operation. It was near Moncton High where they encountered the three youths smoking marijuana on their lunch break. "They were consuming marijuana in plain view in a parking lot across from the school," says Farrah, adding there were many other students there with them. The two police officers moved in to arrest the three teens, who are all 16, but the situation became unruly. "One became very aggressive and started swearing at the officers and started fighting with the officers," she says. While others were being belligerent with police, no one else jumped in and police were able to arrest the rowdy teen, along with the other two. They confiscated marijuana, and also seized two sets of brass knuckles and a retractable metal baton. "Those are all prohibited weapons; no one can have those," says the constable. Two of the youths were already on undertakings to the court for unrelated matters. Police released all three accused and they will appear in court at a later date to face charges of possession of drugs, possession of prohibited weapons and resisting arrest. Farrah says marijuana is the most frequent illegal drug used by high school students, while police occasionally encounter ecstasy and LSD use. A New Brunswick Department of Health 2007 survey of students in Grades 7, 9, 10 and 12 backs this up, reporting that 25 per cent of teens surveyed reported using marijuana at least once, while 11 per cent reported using it more than once a month. According to the survey, 4.8 per cent of students have tried magic mushrooms, 4.4 per cent have tried ecstasy and 3.4 per cent have tried LSD. Farrah says many people who use marijuana have the attitude that it's harmless, which likely explains why teens are smoking up in the middle of the day. But she says the reality is that marijuana use is bad for your health - it's much more potent these days than in decades past - it promotes organized crime and is illegal. Also, using pills such as ecstasy is dangerous because they're made of chemicals and manufactured in clandestine drug labs. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake