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News (Media Awareness Project) - US MI: Fur Flies Over Proposed Drug Dog Search At Ll Wright
Title:US MI: Fur Flies Over Proposed Drug Dog Search At Ll Wright
Published On:2006-12-20
Source:Ironwood Daily Globe (MI)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 19:11:54
FUR FLIES OVER PROPOSED DRUG DOG SEARCH AT L.L. WRIGHT

IRONWOOD -- A cancellation of a proposed demonstation and locker
search using drug dogs at Luther L. Wright High School has school
officials fuming.

Citing a "no-tolerance" drug policy, Ironwood Schools administrators
and board members want the district's schools drug free. At Monday
night's school board meeting, members expressed anger when they heard
the Dec. 1 demonstration had been canceled without any "apparent
explanation" by Gogebic County Prosecuting Attorney Richard Adams.

However, Adams -- in a telephone interview after the meeting -- said
he was opposed to "using the dogs for a blanket walk through
students' lockers," and said he explained his reasoning in a March
10, 2005, letter to Luther L. Wright Principal Tim Kolesar following
a similar request last year. (Adams did not attend Monday's school
board meeting).

After considerable discussion at the meeting, school board members
voted to have superintendent Jim Rayner draft a letter to Adams,
asking him for the procedure of how to place a drug dog in a school.

"If you stand in the halls long enough, you can even learn the names
of the drug dealers," said school board president Steve Thomas. "We
have to be proactive with this."

Thomas and other school board members also want Adams to give a
response within a certain amount of time to their questions regarding
the procedure for bringing the dogs to the school -- something the
high school did for about five years, up until about two years ago
when the Ironwood Public Safety Department no longer had a police dog
- -- according to Kolesar, who said the school planned on using dogs
from either the Gogebic County Sheriff's Department, the Hurley
Police Department or the Michigan State Police for the Dec. 1 demonstration.

According to Adams, however, the issue is not so much about procedure
but is veiled in complex legalities which impact on student's privacy rights.

"I told them: 'No, you don't do a blanket search. It does not set a
good message to the students,'" Adams said. "The courts are already
on line questioning the use of dogs in the schools at all."

"Blanket searches are not allowed."

Adams said the Hurley Police Department was asked to do the demo, and
they thought it was authorized.

"When they found out it wasn't, they said 'No. They wouldn't do
it,'"Adams added.

Adams said Michigan State Police officials also told him they would
not allow their dogs to be used in the demonstration.

In his letter to Kolesar, Adams said: "...I do not want to develop
factual scenarios that could curtail our use of drug dogs by the courts."

Adams did specify he would approve the use of dogs if (Kolesar) "has
reasonable suspicion and targets the lockers that the suspicion leads
directly to."

"The other approach I would feel comfortable with is doing a demo
with the implied message that the real thing could be happening
without advance notice," Adams said. "This could sufficiently disturb
the local druggies to help keep drugs out of the school, without
disturbing law abiding kids who should be learning that we respect
them and their spaces."

"As your school policy indicates that the school would permit the use
of police personnel and dogs to help in any investigation, I believe
that our policy relates to a specific investigation based upon
reasonable suspicion, not a blanket walk through of all lockers."

In an interview today, however, Kolesar disagreed and felt the school
should be able to go through lockers under most circumstances, and
still wants a demonstration to be conducted.

Kolesar readily admits there are drugs in the middle and high school,
and even at the elementary school level. He points to policy in the
student handbook which gives the administration the right to expel
students for drugs even if law enforcement does not get involved.

"Those dogs could help us, if there are any drugs in our building,"
Kolesar said. "It's a matter of zero-tolerance. We don't ever want
students to even think about drugs being in the school.

"This is a drug-free and weapon-free school. I tell students: 'There
are consequences to your actions. I have a big sign in my office
which reads: 'Choose wisely.'"
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