Search
and
Seizure:
Cops,
School
District
to
Pay
Students
$1.2
Million
in
Goose
Creek
Raid
Settlement
4/7/06
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle-old/430/goosecreek.shtml
Goose Creek, South Carolina,
became instantly infamous on November 5, 2003, when 14 members of the Goose
Creek Police were caught on videotape terrorizing a hallway full of predominantly
black students at Stratford High School in a search for drugs at the behest
of the school principal. The video, captured by school surveillance
cameras, showed police yelling and ordering stunned students to the floor
at gunpoint and subjecting them to a drug dog search. Police came
up with no guns and no drugs.
|
|
early morning high school raid: no drugs or guns found |
|
Reaction to the raid was
fast and furious as outraged parents were joined by national drug reform
groups including Students
for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP), the Women's
Organization for National Prohibition Reform (WONPR) and Alabama activist
Loretta Nall, then carrying
the banner of the US Marijuana Party (and now running for governor of Alabama
under the Libertarian banner) in holding demonstrations, stoking media
interest, and demanding that justice be done. Principal George McCrackin
resigned and the Goose Creek Police modified their drug raid policies.
But that didn't satisfy the
demand for justice, which crystallized in lawsuits filed by 59 students
and their families against the Goose Creek police and the Berkeley County
School District. On Tuesday, a federal judge gave his approval to
a preliminary settlement of the case in which the police and the school
district agree to pay $1.2 million for violating the rights of the students
subjected to the drug raid.
Under the proposed settlement,
there would be two classes of students awarded damages. The first
class would be those who filed suit or required medical or psychological
treatment, while the second class would be other students in the hallway
at the time. Fritz Jekel, an attorney for the students, told the
Associated Press he estimated students in the first group would get $11,370
and those in the second group $6,025. But those figures could change
depending on the size of the two classes of awardees. Lawyers for
the students will receive another $400,000, making the total pay-out $1.6
million.
|
|
|
SSDP's Dan Goldman and a Stratford High parent
|
"Part of it was about money,
and the other was about what kind of court order they'd be subject to in
order to prevent this kind of thing from happening again," said Graham
Boyd, director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Drug
Law Reform Project, which participated in the lawsuits. But money
was only part of it, Boyd said in an interview with MTV News -- the case
was about constitutional rights.
"In this case, the school
principal had some sketchy information about a kid who was selling marijuana
in the hallway of this school," Boyd said. "The information was that
the kid was black, and the principal's response was to go to the city police
and say, 'Let's do a police action on this thing.' The city police
had just gotten trained on SWAT tactics for taking down a crack house,
and so you had cops with bulletproof vests and guns hiding in stairwells
and closets when students arrived at school. Whether the police or
a school want to search or seize a person, it has to be done in a manner
that's reasonable," Boyd said. "There was no reason to suspect any
single person in that hallway, yet every single person in there was forced,
with no choice, and seized by police in a completely unreasonable manner."
Now, it appears that the
Goose Creek Police, the Berkeley County School Board, and the good taxpayers
of Berkeley County will pay out the nose for ignoring the constitution.
-- END --
Issue #430
-- 4/7/06
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Not
Bombs
(Evidently)
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to
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Feature:
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Feedback:
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Over
Drug
Violations
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Search
and
Seizure:
Cops,
School
District
to
Pay
Students
$1.2
Million
in
Goose
Creek
Raid
Settlement
|
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