I dunno that crack would bother me so much. But the lockdown part would be traumatic. I guess they have to do it, incase the little sh*thead eats all the crack to not get caught since that would probably kill him. There were TONS of drugs at the highschool I went to (this was in NY) - and this was about 15 years ago, so drugs don't really bother me too much.
I don't ever remember anyone bringing a gun. Knives, yes. One kid once pulled out a knife to show it off to me, and I said, "Put that f***ing thing away before you hurt yourself." So he put it away. I didn't think to tell anyone. And it didn't bother me so much, because if he got into an altercation with it, he'd have just hurt the people in the fight. Guns would be more upsetting, since bullets fly pretty far so there is more of a chance of innocent bystanders getting hit. I'd probably turn someone like that in, just because I am fairly self-serving.
But yeah, I'd have been traumatized by the lockdown too. Also, one thing about police dogs is that they bark their f***ing brains out. So for us, with our sensitivities, that can heighten the trauma of a stressful experience. I know a couple of years ago, there was a house on the market in our neighborhood, and the cops showed up to someone breaking into it. Mind you, this is a really exclusive neighborhood, so the police response time is pretty instantaneous, and, on the whole, the neighborhood is extremely quiet. I woke up because I thought my husband had let the dogs out in the middle of the night and they were barking. Well, our dogs were inside and the police dogs were barking. They brought in cops, K-9, fire, medics, etc. because the person who got caught was high and threatening suicide. So they were there ALL DAMNED NIGHT!! ! Surprisingly, the only people who were awoken by this were me (and my husband because I woke up) and my next door neighbor that I know is a really light sleeper as well. The noise was A LOT more traumatizing than the fact that it happenned.