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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NC: Authorities Speak About Drug Sweep
Title:US NC: Authorities Speak About Drug Sweep
Published On:2004-04-24
Source:Burlington Times-News (NC)
Fetched On:2008-01-18 11:50:37
AUTHORITIES SPEAK ABOUT DRUG SWEEP

When Superintendent Jim Merrill went to the district attorney in May
2003 and asked for a massive undercover operation in Alamance County
high schools, Rob Johnson was surprised. "I looked at him and said,
'Are you sure that this is something you want?'" Johnson said at a
news conference Friday. Nearly a year after that first conversation,
58 young people have pleaded guilty to selling drugs in school
hallways, restrooms, and even classrooms. Some students sold the
drugs, primarily marijuana, in designated meeting places off campus
and after school. One student won at trial and one student lost.
Prosecutors also dismissed a case this week. While Friday's press
conference at the school system's administrative building in
Burlington heralded the end of an overwhelmingly successful operation,
officials expressed a mood of relief or sadness rather than
celebration. Most said they suspect drugs remain in the schools. "I
think it has hopefully chilled it," Merrill said of drug deals on
campus. "I wish I could say it was gone." Merrill also said the
operation caused a lot of distraction for teachers as well as sadness
for students and parents.

When seniors remember their last year, the busts probably will figure
as prominently as memories captured in school yearbooks, he said. "I
regret the human expense," Merrill said. "As long as I live, this is
part of me. This is part of students." But he said the operation
created a ripple effect, an increased awareness among parents and
students about the prevalence of drugs. "If it helps even one child,
it's worth the pain," Merrill said. Just a few days after school
started in August, seven undercover officers enrolled in the county's
high schools.

The Alamance County Sheriff's Department, Graham Police Department and
Burlington Police Department all participated. Very few officials knew
about the operation, including school principals and school board
members. Armed with book-bag cameras, the undercover officers tried to
fit in and befriend students who sold drugs or knew where to get them.
Within days, some students talked to their new classmates about drugs.
Officials at the press conference countered criticism from some
parents that undercover officers talked children into selling drugs or
somehow entrapped them. "I think what shocked me was how easy it was
to purchase drugs in our school system," said Burlington Police Chief
Mike Gauldin. "I'm shocked that this operation came with the ease it
did." However, Alamance County Sheriff Terry Johnson said detectives
pulled an officer out of Western Alamance High School after an
"unintentional leak." They installed another deputy from Chatham
County, but students were too suspicious of newcomers for the
operation there to result in arrests. Even at other schools, students
went up to officers and said, "I heard you might be a cop," the
district attorney said. But that didn't stop about 50 students from
taking some part in drug deals. The district attorney also said that
he threw out at least a dozen cases before the Feb. 4 arrests.

The goal was to charge those truly involved in selling drugs or aiding
in drug deals, not those who just had them, he said. Some parents and
attorneys have criticized Rob Johnson for being too harsh on students
and branding them with a felony record. But Johnson reiterated Friday
that he believes allowing students to get off with misdemeanors would
be an abuse of his power.

Johnson also was skeptical that judges would have accepted such deals.
Despite the felony charges, he offered nearly identical probationary
sentences to students, with special conditions such as drug testing
and community service. "Some have said we were too harsh.

Some have said we were too lenient," he said. "Our goal is to hold
(students) accountable," Johnson added. "It was not our goal to take
these students and to put every one of them in prison for as long as
we could and throw away the key." Merrill said teachers generally are
supportive about the bust, saying they are relieved that "something is
finally being done." School board members also remain supportive of
the operation months after the arrests.

Many said they hoped the bust would make students think twice before
selling drugs on campus. "Everything was done aboveboard, and it was
simply done to protect the students," board member Todd Baker said.
Like many school officials, he said he feels sadness for those
arrested. Board member Brenda Brown Foster said "something had to be
done," and she "can't think of any other tactic that would have worked
better." "I'm hoping that we never have to do this again," she said.
School board chairman Tom Lambeth said he guessed time would tell
whether drug activity decreases on campus, but parents and teachers
gave him largely positive and grateful feedback. "I really have a very
heavy heart for all those kids and I regret this was necessary," he
added. The district attorney also said he did not want to have to do
this again. Besides causing controversy, the operation created extra
work and expense. The operation required the full-time attention of
one of his assistant district attorneys for months, as well as the
seven undercover officers.

And the State Bureau of Investigation in Raleigh had to rehire a
retired forensic chemist to test the drugs. Johnson said he did not
know how much the operation cost in total. Sheriff Terry Johnson said
after the press conference Friday that although the undercover
operation is over, investigators are still making arrests. "We are
continuing to follow leads on off-campus suppliers," he said. The most
shocking arrest was of Graham High School teacher and coach Heather
Renee Sweat-Melancon, the result of allegations she sold and used
drugs with students. Her case is still pending. Although the arrest
occurred after a tipoff by two students not connected to the
undercover operation, Graham Police Chief Milford Miller said there is
some relationship. "We raised awareness of the problem of drugs in the
schools," he said. Meanwhile, students, teachers and administrators
are trying to recover and get back to the business of learning.
Merrill said he had not planned any new drug programs or school
policies, though the "inordinately high number of athletes" arrested
has caused him to consider random drug testing for students involved
in extracurricular activities. Baker said the school board would have
to talk about whether more is needed now that the operation has come
to a close. "I haven't had a chance to sit back and digest it, and
take a deep breath and look ahead," he said.
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