Saturday, July 19, 2008

Education

Drug Bust Nets 75 San Diego State Students

May 06, 2008 04:26 PM ET | Alison Go | Permanent Link

In a massive drug bust, police have arrested 96 people in the San Diego area—75 of them students from San Diego State University, law enforcement officials said today.

The undercover investigation—named "Operation Sudden Fall" and joined by federal officials halfway through—was initiated in May 2007 after an SDSU student died of a cocaine overdose. A Mesa College student also died of an accidental overdose at an SDSU frat house late February this year.

Police seized marijuana, cocaine, ecstasy pills, mushrooms, hash oil, methamphetamine, prescription drugs, brass knuckles, one shotgun, three semiautomatic pistols, and about $60,000 in cash. Undercover officers conducted more than 130 drug buys in locations like fraternity houses, student parking lots, and dorms.

Eighteen SDSU students were arrested this morning, while the rest have been taken in over the course of the past year. Those arrested include students living in campus housing and fraternities; one student was majoring in criminal justice (arrested on charges of possession of cocaine and two guns), while two others—one getting his master's degree in homeland security and the other working as a campus police community service officer—were arrested on suspicion of selling cocaine.

All arrested students have been suspended from SDSU pending review.

Tags: drugs | San Diego State University

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Reader Comments

From San Diego

Good to see a small drug operation shut down. Too bad they have not caught the main supplier yet, only a few college students selling relatively small amounts.

all those kids will still get high even after that bust. NO BIG DEAL. this is college.....

From San Diego

What a joke, the DEA got nothing. This is a minor fraternity at SDSU, not even on new or old frat row, and others are most likely much more active and connected. The frats are dirty places!!!

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About The Paper Trail

Being a college graduate and all, writer Alison Go is uniquely qualified to sift through thousands of student newspaper headlines every day to bring you the latest, most important, or just plain weirdest news from campuses across the country. Heard bigger news or a crazier story? Send tips to papertrail@usnews.com.

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