December 7, 2003 - The Post and Courier (SC)
'It's not how my unit would have done it'
Police might have violated own regulations during Stratford
drug raid
By Tony Bartelme, Post and Courier Staff
A videotape made by the Goose Creek Police Department during
last month's raid at Stratford High School raises questions about
how police used their drug-sniffing dog that morning and whether
the department broke its own rules.
The nearly half-hour of footage shows how police and school
officials forced students to kneel on the floor, some with hands
restrained behind their backs, as a police dog passed close by,
barking and excitedly sniffing their backpacks.
Other agencies don't allow police dogs to go near children
during drug sweeps.
"We don't want people to say they were threatened by
the dog," said Cpl. Louis Reed of the Charleston Police
Department.
Reed said students could stare, make catcalls or provoke a
dog in other ways. He declined to comment on the specifics of
the Goose Creek sweep, other than saying, "It's not how
my unit would have done it."
On Nov. 5, Goose Creek police burst into a hall of Berkeley
County's largest high school with their guns drawn.
Images from the school's surveillance camera triggered a debate
locally and nationally about how police and schools crack down
on student drug use. Some parents and local officials support
what happened.
Others, including 9th Circuit Solicitor Ralph Hoisington,
said police went overboard. On Thursday, Hoisington questioned
the methods some officers used in the sweep and asked the State
Law Enforcement Division to share the findings of its investigation
with the FBI and the S.C. attorney general.
One key piece of evidence in SLED's report is likely to be
the video recorded by a Goose Creek police officer. The department
provided The Post and Courier with a copy in response to a request
under the S.C. Freedom of Information Act.
The recording begins seconds after a team of Goose Creek officers
sealed off one of Stratford's hallways. Two officers can be seen
with their guns unholstered.
"Get on the ground! Get on the ground!" an officer
yells as students fall to the floor. "Hands on your head,
hands on your head, do you understand?"
A few minutes later, a voice on a loudspeaker says, "All
right bring the dogs down."
Goose Creek Principal George C. McCrackin is heard saying:
"All right, the dogs are coming through. Just stay still."
The videotape then shows an officer entering the hallway with
a police dog. A Goose Creek police report identifies the officer
as Jeff Parrish and the dog as Major, a Czechoslovakian shepherd.
In the tape, the dog appears to be excited, yelping and jumping
up and down, its barks echoing through the hall. Parrish leads
the dog past students kneeling or sitting on the floor. The dog's
head is at the same level of some of the students who are sitting.
At one point, the dog grabs a backpack with its mouth and
shakes it. At another time, the dog jumps briefly on its hind
legs onto Parrish as they check students huddling in an alcove.
The tape shows police or school officials examining the contents
of backpacks and searching students. No drugs were found.
Students can be seen tiring from kneeling on the floor with
their hands above their heads. After nearly a half-hour, the
search ends and an officer walks down the hallway, lecturing
students:
"If you're an innocent bystander to what has transpired
here today, you can thank those people that are bringing dope
into this school. Every time we think there's dope in this school,
we're going to be coming up here to deal with it, and this is
one of the ways we can deal with it."
Echoing officials from other law enforcement agencies, Reed
said Charleston police do school sweeps much differently. They
usually involve a surprise announcement that the school is being
"locked down."
A police dog then moves through hallways, sniffing lockers
and other areas. Sometimes students are told to leave a classroom
for a few minutes while a dog is brought in to sniff around.
At all times, though, the students and dog are separated, Reed
said.
RAID Corps., a private company in Spartanburg that uses dogs
to sniff out drugs in schools across the state, also keeps its
animals away from children, said Jay Russell, the owner.
He said that while his dogs have never bitten any children,
he doesn't want to take any chances.
"You got to handle kids like kids, not criminals,"
he said.
A federal class action lawsuit filed Friday by Stratford students
and parents includes allegations that the police dog was unruly
and appeared to be unresponsive to commands. Several students
say in the lawsuit that they were frightened by the dog when
it passed by.
Goose Creek police declined to comment on the raid but did
provide The Post and Courier with the department's operating
policies for its canine team.
Those policies raise questions about whether police violated
their own guidelines.
More than 100 students were in the hallway that morning, but
the department's procedure on "illegal narcotics detection"
states, "Only after the on-scene supervisor has cleared
the area of all personnel will the canine enter and conduct an
illegal narcotics detection."
The procedure also says that if the canine handler determines
that the use of a police dog would be dangerous, he or she can
refuse to deploy the dog without risk of disciplinary action.
Goose Creek's canine unit is certified by the North American
Police Work Dog Association, said Jim Watson, the group's secretary.
Watson declined to comment on the Stratford search, but he did
say he knows Parrish and the dog Major.
"Jeff is nationally certified, and he has a helluva good
dog. He has excellent control of the dog," Watson said.
He said Major is an extremely sociable dog that "loves
to search for narcotics."
Drug-sniffing dogs often have the mentality of a 3- to 7-year-old
child, and they are trained to uncover drugs like a child plays
a game of hide and seek, Watson said. When a dog "alerts,"
or detects a narcotic, it's as if it has won the game.
"Why is a dog barking?" Watson said. "It's
not because it wants to bite someone. He just wants to play that
game."
Some dogs are trained to sit down when they detect a narcotic,
Watson and Reed said. These are known as passive alert dogs.
Others are trained to behave in a more excited fashion. Such
dogs are known as aggressive alert canines.
"The Supreme Court has ruled you can search a person
with a passive alert dog," Reed said. "We have a passive
alert dog, but we still don't search people because of the possibility
of someone saying something happened to them or that they felt
threatened."
|