Pubdate: Mon, 04 Jan 2016 Source: Press-Enterprise (Riverside, CA) Copyright: 2016 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 JUST SAY NO TO HIGH SCHOOL DRUG STINGS A disgraceful, unjust chapter in Riverside County law enforcement may be behind us. For the second consecutive year, the Sheriff's Department has not engaged in undercover drug stings in Riverside County schools, a welcomed development given how frivolous and even abusive such efforts have been. From 2010 to 2013, the department placed undercover deputies at multiple high schools in the county. Posing as students, the deputies attempted to buy drugs to set the stage for mass arrests of teenagers, presumably for their own good, or something like that. In total, 85 students were arrested. The locations of the investigations were Palm Desert, Temecula Valley, Chaparral, Rancho Vista Continuation, Paloma Valley and Perris high schools. Something is wrong when our tax dollars and law enforcement resources are devoted to setting up students in the interest of our quixotic War on Drugs rather than educating them. Perhaps the most obscene example of this was the 2012 bust of an autistic teenager at Chaparral High in the Temecula Valley Unified School District. The teenager was reportedly befriended by an undercover officer dubbed "Deputy Dan" by other students who thought it obvious the "student" was an officer. The officer pressured the teenager to purchase marijuana on his behalf on two occasions, giving him $20 to do it. On Dec. 11, 2012, the teenager was one of 21 others arrested at school and expelled. Charged in juvenile court, his expulsion was later overturned and he only had to do some community service. But that a teenager could be subjected to any of this calls into question the integrity of our policing and educational systems. Catherine Snodgrass, the teen's mother, filed a lawsuit against the school district. Late last year, Superior Court Judge Raquel Marquez determined the district is protected "because they were cooperating with police and because California Government Code 820.2 protects public employees who are making routine policy decisions." While this is unfortunate -- those responsible for these setups ought to be held accountable for them -- at least the Sheriff's Department reports that such efforts haven't occurred since 2013. That such a thing could happen in our own communities, with the participation of our schools and law enforcement, should be a lesson to the public to never put too much trust in government. Given too much power and too much leeway, abuses will occur, and harm will be done. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom