Chattanooga Times Free Press

5 Brainerd students hospitaliz­ed after taking undetermin­ed substance

- BY ROSANA HUGHES AND MEGHAN MANGRUM STAFF WRITERS

Five Brainerd High School students were taken to a hospital Wednesday morning after they ingested an undetermin­ed substance and began showing “concerning physical symptoms,” said Chattanoog­a Police Chief David Roddy.

Authoritie­s would not say what the symptoms were but said they were not in line with typical overdose symptoms, Roddy said. The conditions were not life-threatenin­g and all five students were stable by Wednesday afternoon.

“Whether any children had an adverse reaction to taking medication, or some type of unknown substance, that’s what we’re working on,” Roddy said. “… When you’re looking at prescripti­on medication, or if you’re looking at illicitly produced

“… When you’re looking at prescripti­on medication, or if you’re looking at illicitly produced medication, the markings aren’t always indicative of what it is.”

– CHATTANOOG­A POLICE CHIEF DAVID RODDY

medication, the markings aren’t always indicative of what it is.”

Police received reports at about 10 a.m., and the school was placed on a soft lockdown to keep students in place as police began investigat­ing the issue.

Dozens of emergency responders and law enforcemen­t officers, including Chattanoog­a Police, Hamilton County Sheriff’s office, officials with the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion and even the Ringgold Police Department initially responded to the situation.

Multiple K-9 units were brought to do a sweep of halls, rooms and backpacks.

“You have to work through where they possibly came from, what’s the source or how it was distribute­d,” Roddy said.

Roeland Bencosme, a ninth-grader at Brainerd, said students were kept in third block for almost four hours.

“They had an email sent to the teachers. [My teacher] said … there were drugs in the school somewhere, and I heard some police officers talk about how they found a bag of pills in the girls’ bathroom,” Roeland said.

He also said that the K-9 units searched students’ backpacks and possession­s.

“They had German shepherds. They would tap the backpack and the dog would sniff it and stuff, and they would walk out,” he added.

Parents were called and notified of the lockdown, but were told they didn’t need to be concerned, according to Roeland’s mother, Sarah Bencosme. The message told parents no one was in immediate danger, she said.

“We did get a second phone call letting us know it was nothing in the school making kids sick. That made me think it was maybe something kids brought into the school. Somebody poisoned someone or it was drug related or something like that,” Bencosme added.

Dismissal was postponed at the school, despite Hamilton County dismissing schools early due to weather and road conditions, while law enforcemen­t was investigat­ing, said Jill Levine, chief of the Opportunit­y Zone learning community that contains the high school.

She said that the school was in continuous communicat­ion with Superinten­dent Bryan Johnson while first responders were at the schools.

The district declined to release names, grades or other informatio­n about the students.

Staff writer Mark Pace contribute­d to this report.

Contact staff writer Rosana Hughes at rhughes@timesfreep­ress.com or 423- 757-6327 with tips or story ideas. Follow her on Twitter @HughesRosa­na.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? A Chattanoog­a police vehicle blocks the entrance to Brainerd High School on Wednesday. The school was on lockdown for several hours as K-9 units performed a sweep of the interior.
STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH A Chattanoog­a police vehicle blocks the entrance to Brainerd High School on Wednesday. The school was on lockdown for several hours as K-9 units performed a sweep of the interior.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? Chattanoog­a Police Chief David Roddy speaks about his department’s response to Brainerd High School Wednesday after multiple students there fell ill.
STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH Chattanoog­a Police Chief David Roddy speaks about his department’s response to Brainerd High School Wednesday after multiple students there fell ill.

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