Source: The News Observer (Raleigh, N.C.) Pubdate: 9 Jan 1998 Website: http://www.news-observer.com/ Contact form: http://www.news-observer.com/feedback/ Author: Nicole Brodeur: Note: Nicole Brodeur's column appears Wednesday, Friday and every other Sunday. Editors note: Our newshawk writes: I think it would be a good idea to send a note to the columnist, Nicole Brodeur. Perhaps she could be persuaded to write a few more columns about drug war attrocities. And remember, with columnists, flattery will get you everywhere. SCHOOL STING WAS A BUST FOR EVERYONE Thank you, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, for confirming what a lot of us already knew: Operation Checkup was a poorly executed farce from its beginning in 1995 to its very sorry end this week. Wake County Sheriff John Baker had good -- albeit overly ambitious -- intentions in wanting to clean up drug activity in public schools. His department trained undercover agents to look and act like drug-hungry teenagers, and then set them loose in 12 high schools. Three months later, they dragged 75 students in for processing. It was fitting that the last sting-related case was closed with the acquittal of Ricky Tholen, 19, a former Garner High School student. Tholen's case proved that, in their zeal to save young lives, Baker and his agents ruined some, too. Tholen had dreams of becoming a professional photographer and had never brokered a drug deal until an undercover agent assigned to Garner High badgered him daily to "hook him up" with some marijuana. Tholen testified that the undercover agent "was so persistent, it was beginning to distract me. ..." In order to appease him, Tholen found someone with marijuana to sell and arranged a deal. It is not a crime to know your surroundings, to know who has what and to know who will do what. Rather, it's a survival skill. Tholen simply knew where to go for what the agent wanted. But when he agreed to serve as the middleman and make a hand-to-hand exchange of money for drugs, there went his future. Tholen was charged with a felony, suspended from school and forced to shelve his plans for college, because he couldn't return to Garner High School until his case was settled. It took two years for that to happen -- two years in which Tholen married, had a son and went to work as a house-painter. It's a good life but not the one that could have been. "I wanted to go to college," he told the court. On Wednesday, the young man who wanted to stand behind a camera was instead sitting in front of several, a witness in his own drug trial. As for the dealer that Tholen contacted for the undercover agent? Probably still out there, doing the very damage Baker sought to stop. And high school students are still using drugs, as they did before Baker's agents came through, before Tholen and others like him -- high school kids more eager to help a friend than to think too far into the future -- knew what would hit them, and hit them hard. The legacy of Operation Checkup is a tangle of ironies that essentially knocked some good kids off track and largely missed the troublesome kids Baker and his agents were aiming for. One last irony: When the undercover agents were chosen for Operation Checkup, they had to swear they had never used heroin, cocaine, LSD, mescaline, Ecstacy or peyote. Experimentation with marijuana, however, was forgiven. Too many young people had smoked pot to make not having done so one of the criteria.