Drug%20Detection%20in%20Schools - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Drug Detection in Schools Class 14 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Drug%20Detection%20in%20Schools


1
Drug Detection in Schools
  • Class 14

2
Searches in Schools Generally
  • New Jersey v T.L.O. gave broad discretion to
    school officials to search students
  • Diminished right to privacy in schools
  • Way beyond plain sight exceptions to Fourth
    Amendment searches, and broad interpretation of
    reasonable suspicion, based more on sufficient
    probability
  • Greater deference to school officials searching
    for drugs or weapons, but this assumes we
    understand where the line stands between serious
    and minor offenses

3
  • Does the schools interest vary by context of the
    search?
  • Is the calculus of the search different when the
    search is conducted in the school, in the school
    parking lot, in the locker room after school, or
    when the Math Team practices?
  • Does the balance of the schools interests tip
    toward the school and away from the students
    privacy in one of these circumstances more than
    others? Why?
  • Does the Exclusionary Rule serve as a deterrent
    to school authorities in constraining their
    search parameters and discretion?
  • Thompson v Carthage (1996, CA) says no

4
Drug Testing Generally
  • Automobile drivers Schmerber v California
    delay resulting from obtaining a warrant, etc.,
    would result in destruction of evidence
    (metabolizing alcohol)
  • Railroad employees Skinner v. Railway Labor
    Executives Association blood tests are so
    routine in society that they no longer constitute
    an intrusion but collection of urine samples is a
    greater invasion of privacy
  • Is fitness-for-duty test rationale justified? Or
    should it be confined to those who have had
    railway accidents? Parallels to schools?

5
  • Private employers Alaska 1977 legislation.
    State legislation authorizes employers to conduct
    urine screens, employers shielded from tort
    liability if confidential data are disclosed
  • Pregnant women Ferguson vs. City of Charleston
    (South Carolina), Whitner mandatory testing of
    pregnant women in medical facilities,
    doctor-patient privacy is diminished because of
    threat to fetus if mother uses drugs

6
Doctrines Justifying Broad School Search
  • Individualized v. Generalized Suspicion
  • Threshold questions what estimate of prevalence
    justifies mass search?
  • Does presumption of broad probability influence
    weight accorded to individual factors?
  • What are the boundaries on individualized
    suspicion?
  • Ind. suspicion need not arise from collective
    suspicion
  • And vice-versa (Desilets v Clearview Regional
    Board of Edn, 1993, NJ)
  • Reasonable suspicion is prevailing std., not
    probable cause

7
School Cases
  • Doe v Renfroe (ND)
  • Does any search itself violate 4th Amendment
    (generalized suspicion in pursuit of valid
    educational goal)
  • Was use of dogs a search, and does 4th Amendment
    apply, and if so, how does school context
    mitigate 4th Amendment protections?
  • Is special search of clothing pursuant to dogs
    alert a 4th Amendment violation?
  • Is body search unreasonable intrusion based on
    dog warning?

8
  • Does prior evidence of drug use by students
    justify search and provide context for
    generalized suspicion?
  • Students have no expectation of privacy with
    respect to lockers, but to clothing? Purses
    (T.L.O.)? Body?
  • The mild inconvenience of pocket search or
    purse does not extend to body search
  • Would this threshold have been neutralized is
    student had overt signs of intoxication? Wads of
    cash?

9
Student Cases
  • Vernonia v Acton (1995) student athletes
    constitute special needs
  • suspicionless searches are ok if they serve
    valid prophylactic purpose analogous to
    Skinner, customs officials, drunk drivers, etc.
  • These needs are compelling
  • What are special needs here? What is compelling
    about them?
  • Danger of physical harm during sports
  • Student athletes are leaders of drug culture
  • State of rebellion fueled by drug and alcohol
    use
  • Role models

10
  • Pottawatomie County and Independent School
    District 92 v. Lindsay Earles and Lacey Earles
    (536 U.S. 822, 122 S.Ct. 2559) (2002)
  • Suspicionless drug testing of students in all
    extracurricular activity
  • Extension of Vernonia logic, beyond initial harm
    concern
  • Advances school districts interests in
    preventing and deterring drug abuse among its
    children
  • S.C. ruled that an emergency need not be
    present to justify policy, preventive rationale
    is sufficient
  • but said that one was present anyway, relying
    heavily on hearsay
  • Earls argues that if she objects, she will suffer
    in college competition from not having
    extracurricular activities on her record

11
The 48 Hours Story
  • Reflect back, how can the school system defend
    its search?
  • Can the school system defend the offensive
    tactic?
  • Is there constitutional ground to consider the
    harm developmentally of subjecting children to
    these searches? What evidence?
  • Is the search less objectionable as policy if no
    guns or dogs?
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