Midlands school officials are taking note of last week’s dramatic
drug sweep at Goose Creek’s Stratford High, where officers charged
into school with guns drawn, frightening students and infuriating
parents.
The nationally televised footage of children cowering on the
hallway floor made Lexington 3 spokeswoman Judy Turner Fox feel
“nauseous.”
“I’m sure it was very emotional for the students, for the parents
and for the faculty,” she said. “ ... That is not a scenario that
any of us ever wishes to be involved in.”
But Turner Fox and other local school officials are hesitant to
say a Goose Creek-like search could never happen in the
Midlands.
Fourteen officers and one canine unit responded to a tip of drug
use at Stratford High. Law enforcement didn’t find any drugs or
weapons.
Most local districts use drug-sniffing dogs to do unannounced
searches throughout the school year, regardless of whether they’ve
received a tip.
“We do it to be proactive and send a message that we don’t
tolerate drugs,” Lexington 2 spokeswoman Venus Holland said. “It’s a
visibility issue.”
Local school officials try to minimize disruption by evacuating
students first. They say they would expect law enforcement to
respond with weapons drawn only if there was an imminent threat,
such as a hostage situation.
“There is an appropriate way to do this and an inappropriate
way,” Lexington-Richland 5 spokesman Buddy Price said. “We feel like
the procedures we have in place are appropriate and working.”
Holland said there could be other factors in the Goose Creek
situation that the public doesn’t know about, such as weapons or
gang involvement.
“I hate to second-guess Goose Creek. It’s easy to be a Monday
morning quarterback,” she said.Ridge View High parent Ann Humphries
was stunned when she saw the Goose Creek scene.
“That was extremely frightening,” she said. “To see it on video
was graphically shocking.”
Humphries said she doesn’t want to judge law enforcement’s
actions since she wasn’t there, but said she would hate to see such
a dramatic display of force in her child’s school.
“A better approach would have been more low-key because that
could panic an entire school and community,” she said.
Local districts say they strive for a more quiet approach.
For instance, Richland 2 has drug-sniffing dogs scour hallways
when students are in class. The students are then called into the
hallway so the dogs can check classrooms.
If the dogs find something in a locker or book bag, that student
is called to the office.
“We want to minimize disruption,” district spokesman Ken
Blackstone said.
Blackstone said school resource officers also help because they
get to know students personally and know how to best handle the
situation in school.“We don’t ever want to infringe upon someone’s
rights unnecessarily, but you have to balance that with safety,”
Blackstone said.
Reach Sweeney at (803) 771-8385 or nisweeney@thestate.com.