News (Media Awareness Project) - US MA: Teens Busted In 'Sneaky Sting' |
Title: | US MA: Teens Busted In 'Sneaky Sting' |
Published On: | 2006-04-09 |
Source: | Boston Herald (MA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-14 08:11:28 |
TEENS BUSTED IN 'SNEAKY' STING'
A Falmouth High School drug sting that netted nine arrests is raising
eyebrows among defense attorneys who wonder whether planting a
23-year-old undercover cop looking for drugs and peddling a sob story
is entrapment.
"It seems a little cruel," said Hub lawyer Norman Zalkind. "If I were
the parents of these kids, I would want to stop them from dealing the
drugs. But I wouldn't want to put them in a position of getting this
woman to basically seduce them, getting them caught and facing
serious problems."
Nine high school students were arrested at home Friday after
undercover officer Kaitlin Keane posed as a high school student for
four months. Keane told students her mother died, she had an absentee
father and she needed drugs to dull the pain. Since January, she
bought marijuana 31 times and ecstasy once from students, police
said. The teens, ages 14 to 17, face 40 drug-related charges in all.
Defense attorney Elaine Whitfield Sharp called the tactic "sneaky,"
adding, "The way they've gone about is not the way to go about it."
A Falmouth High School drug sting that netted nine arrests is raising
eyebrows among defense attorneys who wonder whether planting a
23-year-old undercover cop looking for drugs and peddling a sob story
is entrapment.
"It seems a little cruel," said Hub lawyer Norman Zalkind. "If I were
the parents of these kids, I would want to stop them from dealing the
drugs. But I wouldn't want to put them in a position of getting this
woman to basically seduce them, getting them caught and facing
serious problems."
Nine high school students were arrested at home Friday after
undercover officer Kaitlin Keane posed as a high school student for
four months. Keane told students her mother died, she had an absentee
father and she needed drugs to dull the pain. Since January, she
bought marijuana 31 times and ecstasy once from students, police
said. The teens, ages 14 to 17, face 40 drug-related charges in all.
Defense attorney Elaine Whitfield Sharp called the tactic "sneaky,"
adding, "The way they've gone about is not the way to go about it."
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