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From our October 12, 2000,
edition.
Dog
finds shotgun at local high school
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
A
17-year-old Clarendon High School student was expelled and charged with a
third degree felony last week for bringing a gun to school.
Chief
Deputy Butch Blackburn says the Donley County Sheriff’s Department
received a call from the school requesting a deputy last Tuesday
afternoon, October 3.
The
gun had been found in the boy’s vehicle by school officials and Clarence
Patterson of the Interquest Detection Canines, a dog service CISD uses to
randomly search for narcotics and weapons, Blackburn said.
The
boy was arrested for possession of a firearm on school property, and his
.12 gauge Winchester shotgun was seized as evidence. He was released on
$1,000 bond.
Blackburn
said the student stated he had been hunting the day before and had come
down with a stomach bug. He reportedly went home vomiting and was still
not feeling well when he went to school the next day. The deputy said the
boy thought he had taken the gun out of his car.
Dead
dove and spent shotgun shells were also found in the student’s vehicle,
Blackburn said.
“He
usually cleans out his car every time he goes hunting,” the student’s
mother said this week. “But he was just so sick he came straight in the
house this time.”
Clarendon
School Superintendent Monty Hysinger could not comment on the specifics of
the student’s case but did confirm a gun had been found on campus.
In
addition to narcotics, the trained dogs smell gunpowder residue, Hysinger
said. When a dog alerts on a vehicle, the superintendent says the
procedure is the dog’s trainer will notify the principal, who will get
the student. The student is then asked to open the vehicle, and if the
student will not give permission, law enforcement and parents are
notified.
“You
can’t overlook things that the law says you have to enforce,” Hysinger
said.
Carrying
firearms on school property violates local district policy as well as
state and federal laws. Hysinger said the law also requires students found
with weapons to be expelled. He could not comment on what disciplinary
action the school took against the student.
The
mother said her son was suspended for three days, and an expulsion hearing
was held with the superintendent and CHS principal Larry Jeffers last
Friday. At that time the student was given a form of expulsion called the
Alternative Education Program (AEP) for four weeks. He has been banned
from UIL activities and can’t come within 100 feet of the school, she
said.
The
student’s mother also said that they were told the boy’s case would be
kept confidential but that by Thursday people knew about it in Wellington
and Stinnett. She believes the school violated the confidentiality rule
and said the boy did not give permission for his vehicle to be searched.
The family has retained the services of an attorney, she said.
“It
was just an innocent, innocent mistake,” the mother said. “It could
happen to anybody. I just wish it was over.”
The
boy’s parents have appealed to the CISD Board of Trustees. A special
meeting has been called for this Friday, October 13, at 1:30 p.m. in the
CISD Administration Building.
“I
think he has been punished enough,” the mother said.
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