Pubdate: Fri, 13 Dec 2013 Source: Press-Enterprise (Riverside, CA) Copyright: 2013 The Press-Enterprise Company Contact: http://www.pe.com/localnews/opinion/letters_form.html Website: http://www.pe.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/830 Author: Sarah Burge Drug Arrests PERRIS AND MENIFEE STUDENTS SNARED BY UNDERCOVER DEPUTIES About two dozen students were arrested Thursday morning, Dec. 12, at high schools in Menifee and Perris as part of a semester-long undercover drug investigation in which deputies posed as students, authorities said. Deputies descended on the campuses of Paloma Valley High School and Perris High School during second period to make the arrests, Riverside County sheriff's officials said. Lt. Paul Bennett said deputies identified a total of 25 students, two of whom are adults, suspected of selling drugs. Officers served 22 drug-related arrest warrants on campus Thursday. Three suspects weren't in school Thursday and are still at large, he said. The adult students Serina Ramirez, 18, and Erick De La Cruz, 19 were arrested at Perris High School. They were booked into the Southwest Detention Center in French Valley. The minors were booked into Juvenile Hall. Two deputies - a woman at Perris and a man at Paloma - had been posing as students since the beginning of the school year in an attempt to ferret out drug dealing on campus. Over the course of the investigation, deputies seized drugs including marijuana, cocaine, crack cocaine, methamphetamine, hashish and various prescription pills, the release said. Bennett said most of the drug buys were for small amounts of marijuana. Officers also served search warrants at the Menifee and Perris homes of two of the students arrested, Bennett said. After school at Paloma Valley, the drug bust was the talk of campus and rumors were flying. Some students were convinced they knew which classmate was the undercover deputy. Other students feared there were other undercover deputies and even wondered aloud about a substitute teacher who struck them as suspicious. The students said officers came into classrooms with photos of the teen suspects and handcuffed them in front of everyone. Anthony Rodriguez, 16, said the officers weren't on campus for long. "They knew who they were looking for and exactly how to get there," he said. Trevor Steinrichter, 16, said police showed up in his history class. "Scary. I saw my friend get arrested," he said. Bruce Hollen, 16, said it was disturbing to think a deputy was posing as a student. "You think you can trust people you just never know," he said. Jonathan Greenberg, superintendent of the Perris Union High School District, said the Sheriff's Department approached the district earlier this year proposing an undercover operation. Greenberg said he had no reservations. "It was a question of what we could do to assist them," he said. "This is a very well-researched program," he added. "The people in it are all professionals." Greenberg said there were only three district officials who knew about the investigation. No one on the two campuses was told. He said he informed school board members Wednesday night. The Sheriff's Department has been conducting undercover drug investigations on high school campuses for the past few years. Last year, the investigation focused on Chaparral and Temecula Valley high schools in Temecula. About two dozen students were arrested. One of those arrests, of a special education student with autism, has prompted a lawsuit against the Temecula Valley Unified School District. In 2011, undercover deputies posed as students at Vista del Lago High School in Moreno Valley and Elsinore High School in Wildomar. And in 2010, there was a similar sting at Palm Desert High School. The Los Angeles Police Department pioneered undercover drug busts in high schools decades ago. But the department discontinued its program in 2005 after Los Angeles Unified School District officials noticed an increasing number of students arrested were in special education and that police typically found very small amounts of marijuana. District officials feared the program was failing to catch the serious drug dealers. Bennett said the deputies selected to go undercover this year received additional training about special needs students, in addition to training about avoiding entrapment. He said all of those arrested this year are "mainstream students" in general education classes. Greenberg said undercover operations are helpful but are just one part of an "overall strategy" to keep drugs off campus. For example, the district also brings drug-sniffing dogs to campus, he said. He said he was aware of the controversy in Temecula, but believes most parents support these kinds of operations. Outside Paloma Thursday afternoon Thuy Olbert, a parent, said she didn't object to an undercover drug investigation, but questioned how effective it would be at eliminating drug activity at school. "I highly doubt it's going to stop it," she said. "I'm just glad my kid wasn't one of the ones who got arrested," she said with a laugh, "because he'd be dead!" - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom