Dayton Daily News

Springboro teacher, son face drug charges

Pair accused of running traffickin­g operation out of their home.

- Contact this reporter at Mark.Gokavi@coxinc.com.

For months, residents in Springboro’s Settlers Walk neighborho­od complained about high schoolage children stopping by a residence in the first block of Christman Drive.

Those complaints led to a May search warrant and seizure in which marijuana, LSD and other items were taken from the home

of Springboro fifth-grade teacher Amy Panzeca, according to Warren County Common Pleas Court documents.

Panzeca, 48, and her 15-yearold son were apprehende­d Monday evening. Panzeca was arrested at a relative’s home on Sesame Street in Springboro.

On Tuesday, they both had court appearance­s on charges for what prosecutor­s said was a drug-traffickin­g business with 20 to 30 customers from Springboro and other area cities. Prosecutor­s said more arrests and

charges are likely.

Court documents allege Panzeca allowed both the sale and use of drugs in her home.

“During this past school year, we are alleging that she allowed her son to sell marijuana and LSD from her home, allowing adults to provide LSD to juveniles in her home as well as allow her son and his friends to consume LSD and marijuana in her home,” Warren County assistant prosecutor Derek Faulkner said during Panzeca’s arraignmen­t Tuesday.

Panzeca, a teacher for more than 20 years at Five Points Elementary, bonded out of Warren County Jail on her own recognizan­ce. During Panzeca’s arraignmen­t Tuesday, Judge Daniel Oda II ruled Panzeca did not need to be detained or monitored.

She has been charged with fifth-degree felony permitting drug use and misdemeano­r endangerin­g children and contributi­ng to the unruliness of a minor. She is scheduled for a pretrial hearing Aug. 31.

Panzeca’s son is being held in the Warren County Juvenile Detention Center on felony charges of drug traffickin­g, possession of LSD and possession of marijuana. The boy, who denied the charges, is scheduled for a further detention hearing Aug. 28.

“I understand why something like this would shock members of the community,” Warren County Prosecutor David Fornshell said. “When the initial report came to me from the (Warren County) Drug Task Force, certainly, I was shocked.”

Springboro school district officials said Panzeca has been placed on paid administra­tive leave and that a longterm substitute will take over her classes, which start later this week. Panzeca had a base salary of $72,623 in 2016, according to this newspaper’s I-Team’s Payroll Project.

“We know that there are allegation­s at this point,” said Springboro school district communicat­ions coordinato­r Scott Marshall. “But we take those very seriously.”

The district did not immediatel­y make Panzeca’s personnel file available, but Marshall said he didn’t think she’d had any major infraction­s. Marshall said parents and students would be contacted about the teaching change.

Fornshell said this was the first time in his 6-plus years that an allegation was made about drugs being sold at a teacher’s home.

“(Panzeca) was aware that drug traffickin­g was going on and was aware that drug use was going on and was aware of that fact for several months,” Fornshell said. “This juvenile was traffickin­g LSD to somewhere between 20 and 30 students, most of whom attended Springboro High School,” he said.

A search warrant affidavit and return indicate law enforcemen­t stopped vehicles that had been at Panzeca’s house and located LSD and marijuana in those vehicles. A Snapchat photo allegedly shows Panzeca’s son taking Xanax and LSD, according to court documents.

A confidenti­al informant let police know that a party was to take place on May 19, the day law enforcemen­t served one warrant. They seized several items that day and during a later search, according to a second search warrant return.

Those included drug parapherna­lia such as a grinder and a bong, marijuana, LSD, four iPhones, several computers, storage devices, a shipping package, bank statements and several credit cards.

Defense attorney Andrea Ostrowski said Panzeca — who pleaded not guilty — is not a flight risk, has relatives and ties to the community and that she cooperated with police.

Fornshell said parents of teenagers must be vigilant.

“There’s probably a lot of parents out there that would have had zero concerns about their kids spending time at the Panzeca home, so to speak, because of her being a fifth-grade teacher in the district,” he said. “We understand why there’s shock out there that something like this could happen.

“(People have) had her as a teacher and some of the comments out there have been very positive in terms in what type of teacher she has been to students,” Fornshell added. “But I think it also demonstrat­es there can be a complete different side to people that others aren’t aware of.”

 ?? MARK GOKAVI / STAFF ?? Amy Panzeca pleaded not guilty during her arraignmen­t Tuesday in Warren County Common Pleas Court.
MARK GOKAVI / STAFF Amy Panzeca pleaded not guilty during her arraignmen­t Tuesday in Warren County Common Pleas Court.
 ?? MARK GOKAVI / STAFF ?? Amy Panzeca’s home in the first block of Christman Drive in Springboro was raided by members of the Warren County Drug Task Force on the evening of May 19.
MARK GOKAVI / STAFF Amy Panzeca’s home in the first block of Christman Drive in Springboro was raided by members of the Warren County Drug Task Force on the evening of May 19.

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