STUDENT SEARCHES AND SEIZURES: LEGAL STANDARDS,
POLICY, AND PROCEDURES
Randall RanesAdministrator, Student ServicesBakersfield City School District
Presentation Goals
1. Use applicable law to enhance school safety and fulfill the duty to protect
2. Be fully empowered to act appropriately in areas of search and seizure3. Fulfill job responsibilities without violating a student’s civil rights 4. Avoid the consequences of acting outside the law and policy in the area
of search and seizure5. Identify the factors giving rise to a “reasonable suspicion” 6. List the legal rules that justify a student search7. Describe the legal rules to determine if a search was reasonable8. Limit searches to areas likely to contain suspected contraband (limit
scope of a search)9. Define, compare, and contrast between individualized suspicion and
generalized suspicion10. Describe parameters for accepted procedures for the seizure of
property and the detention of students
Search Defined
Search – A governmental (e.g., school) intrusion into an area in which a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy (Terry v. Ohio, [1968] 392 U.S. 1, 88 S.Ct. 1868, 20 L.Ed.2d 889)
Seizure Defined
Seizure (of property) includes a meaningful interference with a person's possessory interests in that property
Seizure, within the meaning of the Fourth
Amendment, includes the willful detention or willful taking of both a person and thing (U.S.C.A. Constitutional Amendment 4)
Something is “seized” when school officials confiscate or take it away from a student; a student is “seized” when detained
Fourth Amendment - Privacy
Fourth Amendment (U.S. Constitution)“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures. . .”
The fundamental element protected by the Fourth Amendment is the reasonable expectation of privacy to which each person is entitled (Katz v. United States [1967] 389 U.S. 347, 88 S.Ct. 507, 19 L.Ed.2d 576)
Which Individuals Are Protected by the Constitutional Guarantees?
Citizens/persons
Anyone directly affected by a state law (Kentucky Finance Corp. v. Paramount Auto Exchange, 262 U.S. 544, 43 S.Ct. 636, 67 L.Ed. 1112 [1923]).
Note for School Staff: Although the Fourth Amendment was written with general public in mind, the courts have held that other segments of the population (e.g., public school students) may have the legal rules applied differently.
Is Privacy Important in Today’s World?
Secure in their person Secure in their house
Secure in their papers and effects
Student Searches and Contraband
All student searches involve contraband
Contraband includes all substances that law, school policies and rules forbid students to possess
Diligent enforcement of conduct rules for all students is a way for schools to prevent injuries from negligent (or intentional) actions of a student with dangerous contraband (e.g., a weapon)
Contraband Illustrated
Illegal items Illegal for everyone to possess (e.g., marijuana, methamphetamine) Illegal for students to possess (e.g., tobacco,
alcohol)
Items that are not illegal to possess but are dangerous and cannot be brought onto school property (e.g., knife)
Items board policy prohibits even though not otherwise dangerous or illegal
(e.g., cell phones, beepers)
General Definition of Student Search
A student search is any action taken by a school official to gain access to any item possessed by a student that is shielded from open public view and located in a place or contained within a thing that is reasonably assumed to have a degree of privacy by nature.
What Conduct Amounts to a Search?
In general, the more difficult it is to gain access to something that is inaccessible, the more likely the effort to obtain it amounts to a search
Examples of student search include:
Physically examining the student’s person
Looking through personal possessions
Handling or feeling any closed opaque item to determine its contents
Opening any closed opaque container
Prying open locked containers or possessions
Enlarging the view into closed or locked areas
Taking extraordinary steps to penetrate natural or other barriers that screen activities or possessions from open public view
Protected Places or Things in the School Setting
The student’s person and any immediately connected item
Enclosed stalls within public rest rooms, dressing areas, and similar spaces when occupied by a student
Any closed opaque container
Papers, notes, ledgers, calendars, appointment books, literature, and the like
Any school property assigned for a student’s individual use
Van Dyke & Sakurai, 2004,2-2 & 2-3
Legal Appropriateness of Student Searches: Key Concepts
The courts use legal tests to balance the nature and quality of the intrusion on the student’s Fourth Amendment interests against the importance of the school’s interests alleged to justify the intrusion.
Reasonable suspicion or justification to initiate search (also called inception)
Reasonable search Scope of search Intrusiveness of search
Who can conduct a search?
School administrators Any school personnel authorized by the
school board to conduct searches as follows
School officials may search individual students and their property when there is a reasonable suspicion the search will uncover evidence that the student has or is violating the law or the district discipline code (BP 601.11) (emphasis added)
Fundamental Search Rules
Gotta have a good reason and a plan!
A search must be justified at its inception and reasonably related to the circumstances justifying the search in the first place (New Jersey v. TLO, 469 U.S. 325, 105 S.Ct. 733, 83 L.Ed.2d 720 [1985]).
Plain View is Not a Search
Open public view: Something suspicious is exposed openly to public detection by sight, smell, and hearing
Open public views are not searches; they do not involve a physical incursion or intrusion on any justified privacy interest
What is prohibited?
Unreasonable searches
Unreasonable seizures
INCEPTION OF THE SEARCH: When May a Search be Initiated?
Gotta have a legally sufficient reason and a plan!
A search may be initiated when there is reasonable suspicion.
A plan begins with a starting point.
Justified Search
Reasonable grounds to suspect the search will turn up evidence of a student's violation of the law or school rules (New Jersey v. TLO, 469 U.S. 325, 105 S.Ct. 733, 83 L.Ed.2d 720 [1985]).
Cannot justify a search simply because a student violated a school rule—must be an objective relationship between the rule violation and the search conducted.
Examples of Information Used to Validate the INCEPTION OF A SEARCH and Give
REASONABLE SUSPICION
Actual observations of illicit activity Tips or information from a reliable (may be
anonymous) source Violation of school policy Identification of contraband in the course
of a normal interaction with a student (plain view)
Reports that a student has threatened to bring weapons to school (Williams v. Cambridge Bd. Of Educ., 186 F. Supp. 2d 808 [S.D. Ohio, 2002])
Examples (from Case Law) Continued
Present behavior of a student, compared with past observations of the student’s behavior that are compatible with drug use
Present observation of a bulge or other noticeable change in parts of student’s clothing along with the knowledge that students have used their clothing to hide contraband
Statements of students and/or school personnel that they have seen contraband or been told by the student searched that he had contraband (In Re William V., 4 Cal.Rptr.3d 695 [Cal. Ct. App. 2003])
Facts leading to the reasonable suspicion for the search shall be documented in writing by the school official (BoardPolicy 601.11 – Search and Seizure).
REASONABLENESS OF SEARCH
A reasonable search is: (a) justified at its inception and (b) reasonably related in scope to the circumstances that justified the interference in the first place (New Jersey v. TLO, 469 U.S. 325, 105 S.Ct. 733, 83 L.Ed.2d 720 [1985])
A justified, minimally intrusive search based on reasonable suspicion. A reasonable search is one that does not invade the expectation of privacy society is prepared to recognize as reasonable (See Terry v. Ohio, [1968] and United States v. Hensley, [1985])
Remember: The U.S. Constitution permits reasonable searches and bans unreasonable searches
Reasonableness of a Search: Additional Factors
The search of a student is subject to escalating standards of reasonableness depending on several important characteristics associated with the search: Type of search; How intrusive it is; Who performs the search (school officials v. police); Object of the search; and How imminent is the need that prompted the search (Pitasky, 1998, I.2:5)
Examples of Unreasonable Searches N0T REASONABLE – Teacher report the student was
not “acting right,” was unable to understand the pronunciation of his name where school officials had no prior knowledge of the student (A.H. v. State of Fla., 846. So. 2d 1215 [Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2003])
N0T REASONABLE – School counselor observed student was “not acting himself,” had bloodshot eyes and that “something wasn’t right,” lacking reasonable suspicion where those characteristics occurred among students not involved with drugs (A.N.H. v. State, 832 So. 2d 1215 [Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2002])
N0T REASONABLE – Teacher noticed the student had money in his hand and was “fiddling” in his pockets, even though the student had a prior record, had a bad attitude, and school had a growing drug problem (Commonwealth v. J.B., 719 A.2d 1058 [Pa. Super. Ct. 1998])
Examples of Unreasonable Searches Continued
N0T REASONABLE - Generalized suspicion based on stale information, previous misbehavior, and heavy use of public telephone (Gordon J. v. Santa Ana Unified School Dist. [App. 4 Dist. 1984] 208 Cal.Rptr. 657, 162 Cal.App.3d 530)
N0T REASONABLE - Making "eye contact" and looking back in a general direction while walking did not rise to the level of "objective, articulable suspicion" that defendant was carrying drugs as to justify even limited detention under the Fourth Amendment (U.S.C.A. Const.Amend. 4). (Wilson v. Superior Court of Los Angeles County [1983] 195 Cal.Rptr. 671, 34 Cal.3d 777, 670 P.2d 325)
Examples of Reasonable Searches
REASONABLE - Opening school locker with master key following student report marijuana was in the locker (In re W. [App. 1 Dist. 1973] 105 Cal.Rptr. 775, 29 Cal.App.3d 777)
REASONABLE - Search of high school student's locker for handgun, pursuant to information provided by identified mother of another student, was reasonable; five-day-old information was not stale, and search of contents of student's locker was minimal intrusion (In re Joseph G. [App. 4 Dist. 1995] 38 Cal.Rptr.2d 902, 32 Cal.App.4th 1735)
Examples of Reasonable Searches
REASONABLE – Student was staggering in the hallway and speaking with a slurred speech, behaviors never exhibited by the student in the past and consistent with numerous students encountered in the past under the influence of drugs (In re L.A., 21 P.3d 952 [Kan. 2001]; Greenleaf ex rel. Greenleaf v. Cote 77 F. Supp. 2d 168 [D. Me. 1999])
REASONABLE – Where official relied upon knowledge of gang apparel and observed a student that had, in his back pocket, a bandanna of the color often associated with gangs leading the person to believe a bandanna folded and hanging from a pocket indicated that something was going to happen, the court finding the initial detention, history of gang violence, color and manner of bandanna display justified the search (In Re William V., 4 Cal.Rptr.3d 695 [Cal. Ct. App. 2003])
How Long May A Search Remain Justified?
A search of a student may be justified even though the information about a student’s possession of contraband on school grounds occurred several days earlier
Span of time – Once a search is initiated, it may be continued until the amount of time becomes too great (hours or days, as opposed to minutes), after which a new reasonable suspicion will be needed (C.S. v. State, 735, N.E. 2d 273 [Ind. Ct. App. 2000]; In re Joseph G., 38 Cal. Rptr. 902 [Cal. Ct. App. 1995]; Wilcher v. State, 876 S.W. 2d 466 [Tex. Ct. App. 1994])
Involvement of Law Enforcement
Which Fourth Amendment standard (Probable Cause/Reasonable Suspicion) applies?
Is there a point at which Miranda warnings apply?
When law enforcement joins the school, it is recommended that school officials be directly involved in student searches, including the questioning of students to increase the likelihood of keeping the reasonable suspicion standard and inapplicability of Miranda warnings
Reasonable Suspicion Distinguished from Probable CauseProbable Cause – Fourth Amendment Standard for law
enforcement to justify searchReasonable Suspicion – Fourth Amendment Standard
for schools to justify search
Amount of Information In schools, the amount of information needed is only
sufficient probability, not certainty In criminal law, a tip must be reliable in its assertion of
illegality, not just in its tendency to identify a determinate person
Role of Informant In schools, an anonymous tip is sufficient as long as it
contains allegations about a violation of law/rules; Police need the testimony of a reliable informant to meet
the probable cause standard
Florida v. J.L., 529 U.S. at 272; Russo, C.J. & Mawdsley, R.D. (2004).
Exclusionary Rule
In judicial proceedings, any evidence obtained illegally is inadmissible; the search or seizure is then in violation of the Fourth Amendment
Majority of courts have held the “exclusionary rule” doesn’t apply to school disciplinary proceedings
SCOPE OF SEARCH
The search is permissible in scope when: (a) the measures adopted are reasonably related to the objectives of the search and (b) not excessively intrusive in light of the student's age/gender and the nature of the infraction (New Jersey v. TLO, 469 U.S. 325, 105 S.Ct. 733, 83 L.Ed.2d 720 [1985])
The scope of the search must be reasonably related to the violation, which justified the search. The search cannot be legitimized by what is found
Concept of Scope of Search
Sequence of the search (order in which places are searched)
Selection of first place to be searched
Breadth of search (whether a search can continue if the first place searched did not produce contraband)
Example: Scope of Search
A school official may not inspect the text of the student’s personal diary while searching for a knife, because reading the text is not reasonably related to the objective of locating a knife
Scope is about how far you can go and is tied to what you are legitimately searching for
Others Examples: Scope of Search
A search for a knife did not justify searching a small zippered side pocket inside a purse (T.J. v. State, 538 So. 2d 1320 [Fla. App. 1989])
A search for stolen coins allows officials to look in very small boxes (Blair v. Commonweath, 225 Va. 483, 303 S.E.2d 881, 886 [1983])
A search for stolen mag wheels does not allow police to search the top shelf of a closet, since the wheels could not fit into such a small space (United States V. Chadwell, 427 F. Supp. 692, 696 [D.Del.1977])
Questions Regarding Scope of Search
Where should an employee begin a search if no place has been identified?
To the extent no place to begin the search has been identified, would the employee be advised to select a less intrusive place to begin the search?
To what extent can an employee continue a search when the contraband that was the object of the search has been found?
Scope of Search Continuum
Student pockets on person
Purse/wallet Book bag/
backpack Desk/locker
Most Intrusive
Less Intrusive
Least Intrusive
Search and Student Gender
Student searches shall be made by a staff member of the same gender as the student and whenever possible, will be observed by a second staff member (Board Policy 601.11 – Search and Seizure).
Example Search Procedures of Individual Student
(Heads Up) While en route to the office or location of the search
Precede search with questions directly related to nature of infraction (May search be made unnecessary?)
Backpack/book bag Wallet/purses, etc. Clothing With a little help from your friend(s) Stay away areas Avoid touching if at all possible When to get law enforcement involved
INTRUSIVENESS OF SEARCH
The concept of intrusiveness is embedded in reasonableness and scope
School officials are to consider the contraband, age and maturity of student, and carefully match the sought contraband with the search procedures to be minimally intrusive
As a general rule, officials may search as carefully and meticulously as is consistent with the nature of the objects they are seeking to find
Restrictions on Student Searches(Note: This is a real big deal)
No search of any body cavity of a student (mouth not a body cavity for these purposes PC 4030, In Law in the School, CDJ)
No search involving removal or arranging student's clothing to permit visual inspection of his/her underclothes, breast, buttocks, or genitalia (Education Code Section 49050)
No unreasonable searches
Consent Searches: Don’t Do It Student consent to a search will not
legitimatize the lack of a reasonable suspicion All a student need do following a “consent
search” is say he/she felt coerced in the presence of school officials, he/she thought there was no other choice than to consent, etc., and the consent will be struck down
Even if it is determined that consent was freely given, it will not operate to validate an otherwise invalid search. Consent is not a means of legitimizing a potentially illegal and improper search (Pitasky, 1998, I.2:64) (See In re Corey L., 203 Cal. App. 3d 1020 [Cal. Ct. App. 1988])
TYPES OF SUSPICION: INDIVIDUALIZED AND
GENERALIZED
Individualized Suspicion
Suspicion one specific student may have violated the law or district rules
Generalized Suspicion
Suspicion all members of an accused group may have violated the law or district rules (Alexander B., 1990 and Smith v. McGlothlin, 1997)
Search of an entire class, when school officials were not even certain that one of the students was guilty, was far too broad in scope (Bellnier v. Lund, 438 F. Supp. 47 [N.D.N.Y. 1997])
Examples Generalized Suspicion
In Alexander B. (2nd Dist. [1990] 220 Cal.App.3d 1572), the dean, attempting to prevent two groups of students from a clash, received information one member in an identifiable group had a gun. A search of all students in that group for weapons was upheld by the court
A VP saw 20 students and saw smoking materials being discarded as he approached. Each student was searched individually during a two-hour period. The Court held individualized suspicion was not necessary to determine that a search is reasonable and the search (duration) was not unreasonable since students were required to be in school at that time anyway (Smith v. McGlothlin, 119 F.3d 786 [9th Cir. 1997])
Drug Sniffing Dog Gone Bad
Search of School Properties
Lockers/student desks are under the joint control of the student and the district
School officials have the right to open/inspect any locker/desk when they have reasonable suspicion that the search will disclose evidence of illegal possession or activity or when odors, smoke, fire, and/or other threats to student health, welfare, or safety emanate from the locker and/or desk
Search of School Properties Continued
School officials need to give prior notice that lockers/desks will be subject to regular inspection. Notification may be made through the school handbook and/or posting on the school bulletin board. Notice is given to all students when lockers/desks are assigned
NOTICE: For health and safety reasons, a general inspection of school properties such as lockers and desks may be conducted on a regular, announced basis, with students standing by their lockers or desks. Any items contained in a locker shall be considered the property of the student to whom the locker/desk was assigned
Book Bags, Purses, and Other Personal Effects
Pupil’s personal possessions and effects fall somewhere on the spectrum between more intrusive searches of the person and the less intrusive search of jointly owned property such as lockers and desks (Pitasky, 1998, I.2:21)
A student has only a minimal expectation of privacy regarding the outer touching of a book bag by security (In the Matter of Gregory M., 606 N.Y.S.2d 579 [N.Y. Ct.App.1993])
Review
When may a search be conducted Reasonable suspicion or justification to search
What are the criteria used to determine if a search was reasonable Justified at its inception (reasonable suspicion) Reasonable in scope (reasonable related to the
objectives of the search) Minimally intrusive given the student's
age/gender and the nature of the infraction
Types of Reasonable Searches
In review: Reasonable Search based on individualized suspicion
In review: Reasonable Search based on generalized suspicion
SEIZURE: What may be seized?
Any item discovered during a valid and lawful student search that has been properly connected beforehand with a specific infraction (e.g., contraband)
It is also possible to have a plain view seizure of contraband
Seizure/Detention of Students
Seizure includes the willful detention or willful taking of both a person and thing.
Student constitutional protections apply to the willful detention of a student.
Seizure/Detention of Students Continued
In the case, In re Randy G. (2001), the California Supreme Court held:
Students can be detained for questioning while on school grounds without the detention constituting a violation of the student’s right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures, even in the absence of reasonable suspicion, so long as such authority is not exercised in an arbitrary, capricious, or harassing manner
The court concluded that moving students about the classroom, or from one classroom to another, sending students to the office, or taking them into the hallway to ask a question would not seem to qualify as a detention as defined in the Fourth Amendment
Liability of School Personnel
Invalid searches can result in legal liability for school districts.
Improper searches, disciplinary action, or other actions constituting Fourth Amendment violations are actionable under Section 1983 (42 U.S.C. Section 1983), a federal civil rights law which provides damages (Declaratory Relief, Nominal Damages, Substantial Damages) when school staff deprive students of their constitutional rights.
In a few published cases the court has awarded damages. In most cases, the school district has prevailed.
Materials on Search and Seizure
Glossary for Search And Seizure
Definitions
Board Policy 601.11 (Search and Seizure)
Publish Powerpoint On Web Site
Summary and Conclusion
Note: Suspicionless searches (e.g., Metal Detectors) not covered in this presentation
Thank you for your attendance and attention!
Additional References
Russo, C.J. & Mawdsley, R.D. (2004). Searches, Seizures and Drug Testing Procedures: Balancing Rights and School Safety. Horsham, Penn: LRP Publications.
Van Dyke. J.M. & Sakurai, M.M. (2004). Checklists for Searches and Seizures in Public Schools. Eagan, MN: Thomson West.
Search Procedure: Use of a Metal Detector With and Without Suspicion
The use of scanning devices such as metal detectors (or magnetometers) has been deemed a "search" within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment (New Jersey v. T.L.O. [1985] 469 U.S. 325, 333; In re William G. [1985) 40 Cal.3d 550, 557, 561).
In a metal detector search, the object sought is always some type of metal substance, presumably a weapon, which would set off the device. The machinery does the searching for school officials.
Use of Metal Detectors in Society
Airports
Court Buildings
Law Enforcement/Security
Search Procedure: Use of a Metal Detector With and Without Suspicion Continued
Courts have upheld the reasonable use of a metal detector when the school can demonstrate a strong interest in eliminating the threat of death or serious injury to students and staff posed by knives, and, as the evidence in the case law on point indicated (i.e., random metal detector search), the intrusion on the student’s liberty was limited (The People of the State of Cal. V. Latasha W., 60 Cal. App. 4th 1524 (Cal. Ct. App. 1998).
Metal Detectors: Restricted to JH/Middle School Campus
“The (Bakersfield City School District ) board also finds that random metal detector searches may offer a reasonable means to reduce the weapons and to mitigate the fears of students and staff on our middle school and junior high campuses”(BP 601.11 – Search and Seizure)(emphasis added).
During the 2000-01 school year, Safe School
Block grant funding was used to purchase a metal detector for each JH/Middle School campus.
Three Ways Metal Detectors May Be Used
Individualized – Reasonable search based on individualized suspicion.
Generalized - Reasonable search based on generalized suspicion.
Suspicionless - Reasonable search based on random (or “mass”) search for weapons (Administrative Plan and reported required!).
Required Safeguards in Random (or Mass) Use of Metal Detectors
Pupils must receive advance notice the school will be using metal detectors (See Notice #1 and Notice #2 below).
If a JH/Middle School elects to use random metal detector scans as part of its school safety program, a written notice shall be provided to both the parents and students of that school. This written notice shall briefly describe the school’s use of a metal detector and shall be given upon enrollment and at the beginning of each school year.
Additionally, a notice shall be posed at any school using metal detectors to explain that anyone may be scanned by a metal detector for guns, knives or other illegal weapons when on campus or attending extracurricular events.
Required Safeguards in Random (or Mass) Use of Metal Detectors Continued
An administrative procedure must be established (and followed) to eliminate arbitrary discretion as to who will be searched (e.g., every student, every fifth student entering the campus will go through the metal detector scan).
Review form entitled, “Metal Detection: Administrative Plan and Report.”
Examples of How Arbitrary Discretion in a Random (or Mass) Search Can Be Eliminated
A Random schedule for metal detector scanning can be implemented by:
Scanning every student Scanning every 4th or 10th, or 20th student
In all cases, an individualized search rising from the metal detector activation detected during a mass or random search would be conducted out of view of other students or the public.
NOTICE #1
Parent Notice in 2004-05 Guide for Parents and Students, p. 33 entitled “Student Search”
By law, the school principal or designee may search students or their belongings if there is reasonable suspicion the student may have, or is, violating the law or district rules. School officials also have the legal authority to confiscate and, shall take from the personal possession of any student, any dangerous object, including weapons, and any substance or item prohibited by law or school rules.
Notice 1 Continued
Furthermore, schools in the district are authorized to use reasonable means to keep contraband out of the schools and to ease any fears of students and staff. Technology may be used, as permitted by law, to support the school’s safety goals.
NOTICE #2: Posted (Sign) at School Site
California law (Penal Code 626.9 & 626.10) prohibits weapons on or near a school campus. All persons, packages and containers may be searched in accordance with applicable law. A refusal to submit to a search will result in denial of entry to the school campus.
Additional Legal Issues in the Use of Metal Detectors
The majority of court cases concerning metal detectors at schools have involved urban schools in large cities. Courts generally have upheld such searches when conducted in a random, suspicionless manner, where they are tied to the purpose of school safety, and the school is located in an area of high crime and violence (Pitasky, 1998, I.2:48).
A characteristic of mass searches is that there is no element of individualized suspicion. Every student is subjected to a search on an equal basis.
Additional Legal Issues in Metal Detectors Continued
A student entering the school building, saw metal detectors, and then revealed his pistol to an officer. The appeals court held that the detention of the student constituted an illegal seizure as the student had been specifically told to walk through the metal detectors even though he was leaving the building (People v. Parker, 672 N.E. 2d 813 [Ill. App. Ct. 1996]).
Additional Legal Issues in Metal Detectors Continued The use of metal detectors does not violate a
student’s right to be free from unconstitutional searches and seizures. The use of the metal detector must pass the two prong test established in T.L.O. (1) justified at its inception and (2) reasonably related in scope to the circumstances that initially justified the interference.
One court ruled a reasonable procedure involved asking students to remove all metal objects to avoid setting off the wand, and the student’s person was searched only if the wand repeatedly indicated the presence of metal (The State of Florida v. J.A., 679 So.2d 316 [Fla.App.1996]).
Restriction to Random (or Mass) Searches with Metal Detector
Pupils may be required to pass through a metal detector as a condition for entering school premises and as a general matter, no individualized suspicion is necessary to justify the use of this equipment. However, if a student does not willingly subject to the metal detector search and elects to leave the school grounds (elects not to enter the campus) without passing through the metal detector, the school still would need reasonable suspicion to order the student to submit to the metal detector search just as it would in any other student search (People v. Parker, 672 N.E. 2d 813 [Ill. App. Ct. 1996]).
Questions
You lack a reasonable suspicion to conduct a search and know it. You talk to the student and ask for his permission to look inside his backpack. He consents. Will it stand up?
Questions Continued
You observe a student stagger twice and then walk fine. Nothing else out of the ordinary is known to you. Do you have reasonable suspicion? If yes, what are your articulable facts? If no, what risk would you run if you conducted a search on this person?
Questions Continued
You heard a rumor, from an unreliable source, there is going to be a serious knife fight at school. In desperation, you are thinking about searching with your metal detector any suspicious student you see, as they enter the campus in the morning. Would any of the searches be legal? If you find something, will the evidence be legally admissible to support a disciplinary action? Why?
Questions Continued
From a distance, you see a group of children on the playground passing around a knife. By the time you get to the location, you can identify a group of students you believe had the knife, but don’t know the current location of the knife. No one is talking. What type of suspicion do you have and whom, if anyone, can you search?
Questions Continued
Relative to search and seizure, what benefits accrue to school officials possessing a developed understanding of a student’s civil and constitutional rights?
Questions Continued
Today is a day to conduct a mass (random) metal detector search of students as they first enter the campus. All the prerequisite steps have been taken. Joey is observed as he stands in line to enter the campus. He appears very anxious and repeatedly appears to be counting to determine the likelihood of being scanned. He bolts and runs right before he gets to the gate. What can be done? Why?
Search, Mass (or Random) - A mass search or random sweep refers to any search in which school officials seek to examine more than one student at a time and do not possess the requisite “reasonable individualized suspicion” or “reasonable generalized suspicion.”
Search, Prohibited – Prohibited searches include strip searches, body cavity searches, or any search that involves removing or arranging the student's clothing permitting visual inspection of his/her underclothes, breast, buttocks, or genitalia (Education Code 49050). Unreasonable searches are also prohibited.
Search (Random) - A search without an individualized or generalized suspicion a student (s) is violating or has violated law or district rules; every student is subjected to the search on an equal basis.
Search, Reasonable – A justified, minimally intrusive search based on reasonable suspicion. A search that does not invade the expectation of privacy society is prepared to recognize as reasonable (See Terry v. Ohio, 1968 & United States v. Hensley, 1985).
Search, Scope of – Scope of a search includes the method(s) used to search the student. The scope must be reasonably related to the objectives of the search and not excessively intrusive in light of the age and gender of the student and the nature of the infraction (New Jersey v. TLO, 1985; In re Joseph G., 1995).
Seizure - Seizure (of property) includes a meaningful interference with a person's possessory interests in that property. Seizure, within the meaning of Fourth Amendment, includes the willful detention or willful taking of both a person and thing (U.S.C.A. Const.Amend. 4).
• Surveillance – Close observation or listening of a person or place in the hope of gathering evidence (Black's Law Dictionary [Seventh Edition] [1999] St. Paul, MN: West Group).
Surveillance, Video – Collecting surveillance information by creating visual images by any means (e.g., analogue, digital).
Suspicion, Reasonable - Suspicion based on objective, articulable facts and on reasonable inferences from those facts, not on mere curiosity, rumor, or hunch (New Jersey v. T.L.O, [1985] & In re William G. [1985]).