News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Web: Playing Cops and Dealers at School |
Title: | US: Web: Playing Cops and Dealers at School |
Published On: | 2004-11-12 |
Source: | DrugSense Weekly |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-17 19:17:02 |
PLAYING COPS AND DEALERS AT SCHOOL
Out of all the heinous things that happen in the name of the drug war, one
kind of story never fails to wash a wave of nausea over me.
The stories involve a young-looking, undercover police officer who
infiltrates a high school to save it from drugs. Usually, it leads to a
headline, like one in the Knoxville News-Sentinel last week: "Drug-dealing
students busted by undercover cop." ( See
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n1590/a04.html for the whole story.)
The headline may sound noble, but the details aren't.
From the story:
"Students sold the drugs, many of which may have been taken from home
medicine cabinets, for a pittance, Police Chief Rick Scarbrough said.
"'They (students) are not as street-savvy and business-savvy as our usual
street dealers are. They almost give the drugs away.'"
Really? Why would that happen? Is that what a ruthless pusher would do?
Sounds to me like some kids are looking for friendship, social acceptance
and approval. Because police can pretend to be students looking for drugs
convincingly enough, some students pretend to be drug dealers as well as
they can. It would be a silly game, if the consequences for students
weren't so real.
The reason these stories bother me so much is that I remember high school.
I didn't use illegal drugs, and probably wouldn't have recognized many had
I seen them up close.
But it was fairly common knowledge who did use drugs. When some
self-confident, interesting new student with a hint of danger tried to
befriend me in class, would I have eventually pointed him in the direction
where I thought the drugs were? Would I have tried to get some myself and
pass it along if he or she had encouraged me?
We didn't worry about such questions back when I was in high school in the
middle Reagan years. It didn't seem like a bastion of constitutional
protection then, but we didn't even have drug-sniffing dogs in the
hallways. Now these operations happen all the time; search the MAP archives
( http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/ ) from all years using keywords like
"undercover" and "high school" to find more examples.
In fact, such undercover programs have been in use for so long in the Los
Angeles area, most of the students who have been "caught" (or is it more
appropriate to say "entrapped"?) recently are in special education classes
- - see http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n1029/a05.html
There's no question that the war on drugs is a war on young people at their
most vulnerable, but it occasionally offers a real lesson. When a new
baby-face narc comes to school, students quickly learn they can't put too
much faith in anyone, particularly the police.
Out of all the heinous things that happen in the name of the drug war, one
kind of story never fails to wash a wave of nausea over me.
The stories involve a young-looking, undercover police officer who
infiltrates a high school to save it from drugs. Usually, it leads to a
headline, like one in the Knoxville News-Sentinel last week: "Drug-dealing
students busted by undercover cop." ( See
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n1590/a04.html for the whole story.)
The headline may sound noble, but the details aren't.
From the story:
"Students sold the drugs, many of which may have been taken from home
medicine cabinets, for a pittance, Police Chief Rick Scarbrough said.
"'They (students) are not as street-savvy and business-savvy as our usual
street dealers are. They almost give the drugs away.'"
Really? Why would that happen? Is that what a ruthless pusher would do?
Sounds to me like some kids are looking for friendship, social acceptance
and approval. Because police can pretend to be students looking for drugs
convincingly enough, some students pretend to be drug dealers as well as
they can. It would be a silly game, if the consequences for students
weren't so real.
The reason these stories bother me so much is that I remember high school.
I didn't use illegal drugs, and probably wouldn't have recognized many had
I seen them up close.
But it was fairly common knowledge who did use drugs. When some
self-confident, interesting new student with a hint of danger tried to
befriend me in class, would I have eventually pointed him in the direction
where I thought the drugs were? Would I have tried to get some myself and
pass it along if he or she had encouraged me?
We didn't worry about such questions back when I was in high school in the
middle Reagan years. It didn't seem like a bastion of constitutional
protection then, but we didn't even have drug-sniffing dogs in the
hallways. Now these operations happen all the time; search the MAP archives
( http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/ ) from all years using keywords like
"undercover" and "high school" to find more examples.
In fact, such undercover programs have been in use for so long in the Los
Angeles area, most of the students who have been "caught" (or is it more
appropriate to say "entrapped"?) recently are in special education classes
- - see http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n1029/a05.html
There's no question that the war on drugs is a war on young people at their
most vulnerable, but it occasionally offers a real lesson. When a new
baby-face narc comes to school, students quickly learn they can't put too
much faith in anyone, particularly the police.
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