CHILDREN AND THE LAW
...Delinquency Matters
......School-Related Issues
.........Search: School Personnel
11 Cards On This Topic:
  • Although school search of 13-yr.-old's underwear unreasonable and violated 4th Amendment, school officials protected from liability through qualified immunity.
  • Search of student by school authorities constitutional if reasonable under all circumstances.
  • Minor found with knives at school not entitled to individualized suspicion before she could be searched with others suspected of smoking; search neither unreasonable nor unreasonably conducted.
  • Standard to determine legality of search by public school official is reasonable suspicion.
  • Trial court correctly denied M's motion to suppress drugs found via established school policy designed to prevent students who left and returned against school rules from bringing in harmful objects.
  • When a school official independently decides to search a student and then does so, T.L.O. standard applies, even if police provide the information justifying the search and are present when it occurs.
  • M's admission that he had knife in backpack provided school authorities with reasonable suspicion to justify intrusion into his backpack regardless of any anonymous tip.
  • Police officer on 2-yr. assignment as resource officer at M's school was a school official for purposes of Fourth Amendment, and search of M was justified by reasonable suspicion he was engaging in conduct that violated school rules.
  • Unlike in other public places, school officials need not articulate specific crime violated to detain outsider for limited purpose of determining whether presence justified on campus.
  • On campus search of suspect student for dangerous weapons was reasonable, even constitutionally compelled in light of all students’ right to safe, secure and peaceful campus.
  • Exclusionary rule inapplicable to school authorities in high school disciplinary proceedings.