Pubdate: Fri, 09 Dec 2011 Source: Taunton Daily Gazette (MA) Copyright: 2011 Taunton Daily Gazette Contact: http://www.tauntongazette.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2750 Author: Charles Winokoor NO CONTRABAND FOUND DURING COYLE AND CASSIDY DRUG SEARCH Taunton -- A police drug search conducted Friday morning at Coyle and Cassidy High School failed to turn up any contraband, according to one relieved school official. "We usually do it once in the spring and once in the fall," said school principal Bob Gay, adding that "It's part of the culture of the school to ensure parents we're providing a safe environment for their kids." Gay said around a dozen law enforcement officers made up of Taunton police and members of sheriff's departments from Bristol and Plymouth counties took part in the search. He said as many as nine specially trained K-9-unit dogs sniffed lockers used by Coyle's 580 students, as well as vehicles parked outside in the school parking lot. Gay said there were no detected "hits" for marijuana or other drugs inside the building but that dogs were alerted to three parked vehicles. Two of those vehicles, after a thorough check, were determined to be drug-free. A third, Gay said, was searched and found to contain minute amounts of marijuana residue. The female student who drove the car to school voluntarily submitted to a drug test given by her personal physician and was determined to be "clean," he said. The girl was not reprimanded or disciplined, he added. The 59-year-old Gay, now in his second year as principal of the Catholic school, said parents, students and teachers are all on board with the annual searches. Gay said the policy has been in effect for at least five years. He also says students and teachers went into a lock-down mode by staying confined to classrooms during the search operation, which lasted from 9:20 a.m. to 10:10 a.m. "It's not as if we do this because we suspect something is going down; we just want to keep the kids honest," said Gay, formerly principal of North Attleboro High School for nine years. Faculty and staff, he said, are also not forewarned of the searches: "We keep it very hush, hush," Gay said. Friday's search, he said, was in line with the school's zero-tolerance policy of drugs and alcohol. Gay pointed out that a breathalyzer unit is now standard equipment for testing students for alcohol at proms and dances. Other schools in the Taunton region also have coordinated school-premises searches for illegal drugs. Last May a K-9 search was conducted at Dighton-Rehoboth Regional School by Dighton Police officers, the result of which were "two minor incidents," authorities said. Taunton Schools Superintendent Julie Hackett said it's been three years since the last unannounced drug search was conducted at Taunton High School. She said THS searches are typically coordinated by school officials and police resource officers, two of whom are assigned to the school Monday through Friday. Hackett notes that the operations involving K-9 units are a great opportunity for police in terms of training. "I think it's a good idea," she said. She declined, however, to confirm whether a drug search of the high school would be conducted during the current school year. But Gay said it's just a matter of time before another drug search is conducted at Coyle-Cassidy. "We'll continue to do it," he said, adding that "You can't just talk the talk." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D