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Rookie cop goes undercover to bust h/s students.

SteeleyJ

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May 24, 2006
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EXETER, Calif. — On his second trip through high school, former C-student Alex Salinas got a lot of A's.

He was 22, however, and an undercover narcotics officer going by the name Johnny Ramirez. When his first semester progress report showed a 3.25 average, the baby-faced police rookie made a mental note: Stop turning in homework assignments.

Eight months later, the ruse was up, and Exeter, a bucolic citrus-growing community in California's Central Valley, was turned on its ear after a school-day police sweep ended with a dozen Exeter High students in custody on drug charges.

Some people wondered how the deception by Salinas could have gone on for so long in the small town of just 10,000 people. Others lamented that the problems of the big city had come to the quaint community of antique shops and historic murals set amid a stunning backdrop of the snow-capped Sierra Nevada.

"It's amazing we were able to keep a secret in this little town for that long," said Police Chief Cliff Bush, who had been searching for years for just the right officer to pull off the undercover ploy. "People in little towns tend to know everything about everybody."

Leading the campus sweep this month was the tall, lanky Salinas, dressed in the crisp black uniform and combat boots of the Exeter Police Department instead of the T-shirts and sneakers he had worn as Johnny Ramirez.

Still, there was no mistaking the boyish face and the wide smile gleaming with braces.

A lot of jaws dropped when they saw me," Salinas said. "They knew me as that kid at school that they hung around with, and then the next thing they're in handcuffs and I'm in a uniform."

The sting got more attention from the media than a drug bust of 12 students normally would because of something the chief now laments: It happened the same week as the debut of the Hollywood comedy "21 Jump Street," which features — you got it — undercover cops fighting crime at a high school.

Chief Bush insisted it was not a case of life imitating art.

"A day or two later I became aware of the movie," Bush said. "The last thing I would do is check movie premieres. This just happened to coincide with the movie's release."


Sending a message
There had been no major complaints about drug dealing at the 1,000-student school, which sits within sight of the police station, but Bush said he had been thinking for years about doing an undercover sting to send a message.

One day last summer, he ran into Salinas, who was weeks away from graduating from the police academy. Salinas had ridden along with Bush years earlier when the chief was still a patrolman.

Bush eventually approached Salinas with the plan. With it came a full-time job on the city's 17-member Police Department — an offer Salinas wouldn't refuse.

As Johnny Ramirez, Salinas attended Monarch football games and pep rallies. He purposely landed himself in detention so he could meet people outside of the four classes he attended before reporting each afternoon to the county drug task force headquarters for briefings and homework assignments. He made a Facebook page and forged friendships, which made the deception hard for him to bear.

"There were a few students I got to know who are good kids, and I did feel kind of bad for being their friend and then being something different," he said.

Only the principal, vice principal and Johnny's guidance counselor knew about the operation, school Superintendent Renee Whitson said.

"Even I didn't know the name he'd go by," she said.

Still, a moment of panic erupted on the first day of school last fall when a teacher pointed to the new kid and joked, "We've got a new narc on campus. They tell me he's wearing a green shirt." Johnny Ramirez's shirt was green.

Eventually students sold the new kid marijuana and cocaine, the prescription painkiller hydrocodone and the muscle relaxant Soma, police said.

"There was certainly no celebration on the day of conclusion. It was a very sad day," Whitson said. "These are our students. We hope this is the necessary wakeup call to make this positive for their lives."

As the school year winds down, the arrested students are in the midst of review board hearings. Only three are older than 18, and one student's parents were also arrested for investigation of methamphetamine possession.

In the end, large quantities of drugs were not confiscated and none of the arrests involved trafficking significant quantities, though many purchases were for amounts that exceeded "personal use," Salinas said.

Was it worth keeping an officer off Exeter's streets and on a school campus for eight months?

Yes, Chief Bush said. But he is almost embarrassed that the undercover operation has garnered so much publicity, mostly because of his own bad timing regarding the release of "21 Jump Street."

"This is what I was trying to avoid, that we busted the local Scarface at the high school," Bush said, making reference to another Hollywood movie, this one about a drug kingpin. "Turns out they were just tiny amounts, but if you've got just one kid dealing drugs at school, that's too many."

The chief hopes the arrests have a lasting impact on all students, though he does realize he might have created a problem of another kind in Exeter.

"I'd hate to be the new kid at school next year," he said. "They won't make very many friends."



http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/46881674/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/?ocid=todmsnbc11
 
Bush eventually approached Salinas with the plan. With it came a full-time job on the city's 17-member Police Department — an offer Salinas wouldn't refuse.
karma will bring this man nightmares for the rest of his life.

he literally destroyed lives, and directly caused an atmosphere of paranoia and fear among the students of that school, worsening peoples' addictions.

and he did it for money.

this self-knowledge will make him a horrible police officer. when soul-torn law enforcement is in control of pain medicine, pain becomes a much worse problem.
 
but Bush said he had been thinking for years about doing an undercover sting to send a message.

What a douche, he just did it because he felt like it? 'hey lets go spend tons of public money fucking up kid's lives!'
 
commenters on that story are calling for the anal rape of the busted kids
 
Wow how do you put that much time and effort into catchig some small time high school dealers. makes me fucking sick if I lived there and paid taxes for that I would be in uproar right now.
 
brought to you by the same state that has medical marijuana lol.... such a huge waste of money. and the poor kids that this dickhead officer fucked over are screwed. even the best letter of recommendation probably wouldnt help them get into a good school for college. sleepy town HS students are not the epicenter of drug crime in CA so why waste the money on something so stupid? Usually its a dog and pony show like they are making a difference, but where are the piles of drugs and money from the 8 month long operation? oh yeah, THERE ARE NONE!

The news release probably went something like this....

During the course of the investigation we have seized 1 ounce of weed, 3.5 grams of pure uncut cocaine, and the pharmaceutical pain killers soma and vicodin. The estimated value of the drugs seized in the school was said by police to be worth over $100,000 dollars on the streets.
 
This makes me sick.
How many unsolved rapes, murders, thefts were there during those 8 months?
Instead, they focus their resources on victimless "crime".
Disgusting.
 
yeah I wonder how much the confiscated drugs were "valued" at
 
if they'd have climbed the ladder, got to know the dealers dealers and busted an actual player..

Then maybe I could understand it, but from what I see, this is just a long expensive way to get a couple kids busted for minor drug charges. Brilliant. ¬_¬
 
Its all about publicity this police chief made the national news that is a motivator in itself.
 
He will get his just desserts one day. That is the most disgusting thing I have ever heard of. I have a story for you guys relating to this, only in this instance, it happened in the early 90's. I will laugh if people transfer there kids from that school to a private one, especially in that instance where a parent got busted because I definitely know that there are parents out there that get down on some drugs and they'd be fucking furious if they got turned in by a dumbass narc disguised as a fucking kid.

I had a friends mom tell me something similar happened at the high school we both graduated from-she graduated I think ~20 years prior to me. She said some kid that looked their age (just like the officer in the article) came in to their school and hung out with the partiers and bought drugs from time to time. She said he got several girls pregnant at the school and she knew the chief on a personal level. When the time came, he ended up busting a lot of her friends at the school as well. She confronted the chief about the officer (the officer was actually in his early-mid 20's) getting some of her friends (17 years old) pregnant. The chief tried to deny it and exploded at her in rage but she said, "well I'll send them on over to a lab for DNA testing." The undercover was promptly fired. She said he tried to fuck her as well but she had a really bad feeling about the guy so she didn't talk to him or associate herself with drug use when he was around. Intuition is a great thing. She's a really cool lady as well, I'm glad she didn't have to go through what her friends went through.

I will also say that the town I grew up in/went to high school in was similar to this one, maybe a bit bigger but not substantially so, it was only a bit bigger as it was on the suburbs of one of the biggest cities in my state. Also, the bust didn't bring any sizeable quantities as THERE ARE NO TRAFFICKERS IN A FUCKING SMALL TOWN HIGH SCHOOL. I'm not saying there has never or will never but goddamn, it doesn't make any sense as to why the police would think they are going to get some massive bust. Yeah, a dimebag here or there and maybe a Valium but nothing crazy. In fact, I talked to someone who had been teaching there for a while and he said the biggest busts were like an oz. of dirt weed and a scale and then someone I use to chill with got caught with like around 20 of his grandmothers valiums but he was giving them away, he wasn't selling them. Same trouble and all but it wasn't a regular thing for him and he certainly wasn't a dealer.

So yeah, in my friends mom scenario back in the day, the fucking jackass undercover got what he deserved.
 
A lot of jaws dropped when they saw me," Salinas said. "They knew me as that kid at school that they hung around with, and then the next thing they're in handcuffs and I'm in a uniform."
Like omg wow your such a bad ass. Way to sick it to the cool kids for picking on you when you actualy were in highschool

There had been no major complaints about drug dealing at the 1,000-student school, which sits within sight of the police station, but Bush said he had been thinking for years about doing an undercover sting to send a message.
If you want to send them a message then send in a former addict to speak to them about addiction don't send them to be locked up in a living hell.

There was certainly no celebration on the day of conclusion. It was a very sad day," Whitson said. "These are our students. We hope this is the necessary wakeup call to make this positive for their lives
To bad the kids charged will have a very hard time making a possitive change in their life due to their lock up preventing them from graduating and criminal record making it very hard for them get in a good college or land a proper job.
 
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