News (Media Awareness Project) - US MN: 6 Chaska Middle Schoolers Charged In Drug Case |
Title: | US MN: 6 Chaska Middle Schoolers Charged In Drug Case |
Published On: | 2007-02-24 |
Source: | Minneapolis Star-Tribune (MN) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-17 09:54:57 |
6 CHASKA MIDDLE SCHOOLERS CHARGED IN DRUG CASE
The Accusations Involve The Sale And Possession Of Marijuana At
Chaska Middle School East.
In an unusual case, drug charges were filed Friday against six
seventh- and eighth-graders, accused of selling and possessing
marijuana at Chaska Middle School East.
Two 12-year-olds and a 13-year-old were charged with fourth-degree
marijuana sale, a felony. Police said they had been able to document
four sales ranging between $3 and $10 that occurred in the school.
The case stands out to officials who work in Twin Cities area schools
or with juvenile crime because of the allegation of students selling
marijuana in a middle school.
Janet Cain, the assistant Carver County attorney who handles juvenile
cases, said she had "never seen a case like this involving kids that
age. In 13 years, I can't recall one case."
Likewise, in Minneapolis, the park police officers who serve as
liaison officers in the city's schools haven't encountered drug sales
at the middle school level, said Lt. Linda Bergstrom, who oversees the unit.
"Issuing marijuana tags for possession isn't unusual," she said.
"We've been blessed, so far, that we haven't had selling at that level."
In the case charged Friday, two other students, both 12, were charged
with possessing small amounts of marijuana, a petty misdemeanor. A
sixth child, 12, was charged with possessing drug paraphernalia, also
a petty misdemeanor.
A parent and fellow students reported the alleged drug use to school
officials last week.
Principal Jim Bach has said the students could be suspended or
expelled, adding that drug use at the school hasn't been a problem.
Chaska police Sgt. Jon Kehrberg agreed. "At the middle school, it's
rare," he said. "At the high school, it's not out of the ordinary anymore."
The most recent national survey by the National Institute on Drug
Abuse, released in December, found that in 2006 12.2 percent of
eighth-graders said they had, at some point, smoked marijuana, down
from an all-time high of 19.2 percent a decade earlier.
The same survey found that 39.6 percent of eighth-graders said it
would be "easy" or "very easy" to obtain marijuana. That also
represented a steep decline from 1996, when 54.8 percent gave that answer.
The Ramsey County Attorney's Office also reported that marijuana
cases involving such young children have been rare over the years.
Meanwhile, St. Paul police are continuing to investigate a pot bust
on Monday in which federal agents arrested a Washington state couple
for allegedly transporting 157 pounds of marijuana in their truck's
converted gas tank.
A decision not to press charges by federal officials, who said it was
below the level they present to prosecutors, had some local and state
law enforcers wondering aloud.
But attorney Fred Bruno, who isn't involved in the case, said that
the amount of marijuana found in the gas tank would "raise just about
every eyebrow in the state judicial system, but maybe not many in the
federal system."
The suspects were released and their whereabouts are unknown, but the
case still could be presented to the Ramsey County Attorney's Office
for possible charges.
Staff writer Paul Gustafson contributed to this report.
The Accusations Involve The Sale And Possession Of Marijuana At
Chaska Middle School East.
In an unusual case, drug charges were filed Friday against six
seventh- and eighth-graders, accused of selling and possessing
marijuana at Chaska Middle School East.
Two 12-year-olds and a 13-year-old were charged with fourth-degree
marijuana sale, a felony. Police said they had been able to document
four sales ranging between $3 and $10 that occurred in the school.
The case stands out to officials who work in Twin Cities area schools
or with juvenile crime because of the allegation of students selling
marijuana in a middle school.
Janet Cain, the assistant Carver County attorney who handles juvenile
cases, said she had "never seen a case like this involving kids that
age. In 13 years, I can't recall one case."
Likewise, in Minneapolis, the park police officers who serve as
liaison officers in the city's schools haven't encountered drug sales
at the middle school level, said Lt. Linda Bergstrom, who oversees the unit.
"Issuing marijuana tags for possession isn't unusual," she said.
"We've been blessed, so far, that we haven't had selling at that level."
In the case charged Friday, two other students, both 12, were charged
with possessing small amounts of marijuana, a petty misdemeanor. A
sixth child, 12, was charged with possessing drug paraphernalia, also
a petty misdemeanor.
A parent and fellow students reported the alleged drug use to school
officials last week.
Principal Jim Bach has said the students could be suspended or
expelled, adding that drug use at the school hasn't been a problem.
Chaska police Sgt. Jon Kehrberg agreed. "At the middle school, it's
rare," he said. "At the high school, it's not out of the ordinary anymore."
The most recent national survey by the National Institute on Drug
Abuse, released in December, found that in 2006 12.2 percent of
eighth-graders said they had, at some point, smoked marijuana, down
from an all-time high of 19.2 percent a decade earlier.
The same survey found that 39.6 percent of eighth-graders said it
would be "easy" or "very easy" to obtain marijuana. That also
represented a steep decline from 1996, when 54.8 percent gave that answer.
The Ramsey County Attorney's Office also reported that marijuana
cases involving such young children have been rare over the years.
Meanwhile, St. Paul police are continuing to investigate a pot bust
on Monday in which federal agents arrested a Washington state couple
for allegedly transporting 157 pounds of marijuana in their truck's
converted gas tank.
A decision not to press charges by federal officials, who said it was
below the level they present to prosecutors, had some local and state
law enforcers wondering aloud.
But attorney Fred Bruno, who isn't involved in the case, said that
the amount of marijuana found in the gas tank would "raise just about
every eyebrow in the state judicial system, but maybe not many in the
federal system."
The suspects were released and their whereabouts are unknown, but the
case still could be presented to the Ramsey County Attorney's Office
for possible charges.
Staff writer Paul Gustafson contributed to this report.
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