'This is supposed to be a free
country, not a police state.'
Danny Partin | parent
GOOSE CREEK - State police are
investigating why officers charged into a crowded high-school
hallway with guns drawn in a drug sweep.
Videotape from Stratford High School surveillance cameras showed
students sitting on the floor Wednesday while officers with guns
drawn looked for drugs.
Charleston-area prosecutor Ralph Hoisington asked the State Law
Enforcement Division to look into possible police misconduct in the
operation.
He called for the probe Friday after consulting with Berkeley
County Sheriff Wayne DeWitt.
No drugs were found in the early morning sweep that included 14
officers and one drug dog. Some students were cuffed during the
raid.
"I don't think there's anything wrong at all with law enforcement
addressing a problem in a high school, but I have serious concerns
about the need for restraining students and drawing weapons,"
Hoisington said. "I don't want to send my child to a school and find
out guns are drawn on them. I certainly don't want them hogtied as
part of a sweeping investigation."
The only charges stemming from Wednesday's raid involved a
ninth-grader who was charged with filing a false police report after
she said an officer shoved her to the ground during the search,
Goose Creek police Lt. Dave Aarons said. Principal George McCrackin
said he, other school officials and the girl's parent reviewed video
surveillance tapes and determined she wasn't even in that hall at
the time.
McCrackin said he had talked with police about what he called a
growing drug problem at the school.
"Within the last three weeks, there's been an influx of drug
activity," he said. "I've been in this business for 34 years, and
I've never seen the amount of activity we've experienced
recently."
Aarons said the guns were drawn as "a matter of officer
safety."
"I don't think it was an overreaction," he said. "Anytime you
have qualified information regarding drugs and large amounts of
money, there's a reasonable assumption weapons are involved."
Police handcuffed students who failed to "respond to repeated
police instruction," Aarons said.
The scene captured on the school video surveillance cameras was
played much of the day on national news channels.
"I'm absolutely outraged," said Danny Partin, whose stepson
attends Stratford but was not in the hallway during the search.
"This is supposed to be a free country, not a police state."
Parent Nathaniel Ody went to the police department Friday
afternoon to file a complaint. He said his son, a senior basketball
player, was pulled from another part of the school Wednesday and
placed in the hallway in restraints. He said his son was compliant
but was handcuffed anyway.
"I'm appalled," he said. "To just take a bunch of innocent kids
and put them in restraints, and then not even find anything, is
ridiculous."
Sweeps happen periodically at high schools, at principals'
request, but this is the first time restraints were used, said Dave
Barrow, supervisor for Berkeley County high schools.
"We understand students, parents and community concerns about
this particular search," Barrow said.
Some area residents sympathized with the officers. "I'm sure
students were frightened, but the harm they're in with drug dealers
is far greater than the police coming in," said Goose Creek resident
Judy Watkins. "I trust them to do what's right. I appreciate what
they did."
Graham Boyd, director of the drug policy project for the American
Civil Liberties Union, says the search was illegal. "You absolutely
cannot bring police with guns drawn into a school," Boyd said.
Boyd said police have to have individual students suspected of
drug activity, then any action taken must target those suspects. He
said investigators should have called individual suspected students
to the principal's office to check their bags for drugs.