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SEARCH AND SEIZURE

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SEARCH AND SEIZURE A REASONABLE TEST Created by the Ohio State Bar Foundation Asking More Fourth Amendment Questions Can government officials read someone s email? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SEARCH AND SEIZURE


1
SEARCH AND SEIZURE
  • A REASONABLE TEST

2
Search and Seizure
  • Redding v. Stafford United School District (2009)

3
Background Story
  • Savana Redding (13 years old)
  • Zero tolerance drug policy
  • Accused of giving others prescription drug
  • Vice principal searches backpack
  • No pills found

4
Background Story
  • Strip searched down to underwear
  • Had to shake out bra and underwear
  • No pills
  • Humiliation and lawsuit

5
Background Story
  • Fourth Amendments Rights
  • The right of the people to be secure in their
    persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
    unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
    violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon
    probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation,
    and particularly describing the place to be
    searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

6
Legal Problem
  • Were Savanas Fourth Amendment rights violated?
  • Can schools strip search for drugs?

7
Arguments for Redding
  • No evidence of dangerous concealed drugs
  • Invasion of young girl unreasonable
  • Inability to return to school
  • Zero tolerance went too far

8
Arguments for School
  • Can act on school policies
  • Objectively reasonable- area can conceal
  • Reduced privacy in schools
  • Uphold policies as they occur
  • Cannot act if afraid of lawsuit

9
Outcome
  • Supreme Court ruled 8-1 for Savanna
  • Constitutional rights violated
  • Officials went too far (quantum leap)
  • No danger
  • Unreasonable

10
Outcome
  • One dissenting vote
  • Judges should not second-guess
  • Ruling vague about drug searches
  • Specific accusations
  • Danger of drugs

11
SEARCH AND SEIZURE
  • A REASONABLE TEST

12
  • New Jersey
  • v.
  • T.L.O. (1985)

13
Background Story
  • Girl caught smoking (T.L.O.)
  • Denied she had been smoking
  • Searched purse
  • Found cigarettes and more

14
Background Story
  • Was dealing in school
  • Police brought charges
  • T.L.O. confessed
  • Appealed conviction

15
Background Story
  • Argued search was illegal
  • Argued confession was invalid
  • Appealed to the Supreme Court

16
Background Story
  • Fourth Amendment Rights
  • The right of the people to be secure in their
    persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
    unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
    violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon
    probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation,
    and particularly describing the place to be
    searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

17
Legal Problem
  • Do students have the same Fourth Amendment rights
    as adults?
  • Was the principals search unreasonable?
  • Should the evidence have been thrown out?

18
Arguments for T.L.O.
  • School officials cannot act like parents
  • Must respect student right to privacy
  • No warrant-no probable cause
  • Unreasonable search led to confession

?
19
Arguments for New Jersey
  • Schools can act in place of parents
  • Schools have broad powers
  • T.L.O.s behavior gave reasonable cause


20
Outcome
  • Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in favor of New Jersey
  • Officials must maintain school discipline

21
Outcome
  • Search can be reasonable without probable cause
  • Metal detectors and protective searches now
    allowed

22
SEARCH AND SEIZURE
  • A REASONABLE TEST

23
Present Day Realities
  • Judging the Fourth Amendment

24
Fourth Amendment
  • The right of the people to be secure in their
    persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
    unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
    violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon
    probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation,
    and particularly describing the place to be
    searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

25
Background Story
  • Constitution over 220 years old
  • Colonists wanted
  • A castle and a fortress
  • Limits and definitions

26
Background Story
  • Our Founding Fathers could not have predicted
  • Terrorism
  • Drugs
  • Social media and Internet
  • Organized crime
  • School shootings
  • Mass media and electronics
  • Over 300 million people

27
Asking Fourth Amendment Questions
  • What can police do?
  • Police officer stops a car
  • Pat someone down for suspicious behavior
  • Park or open field

28
Asking Fourth Amendment Questions
  • Searches a friend at a house
  • Searches garbage can on the curb
  • Taps someones phone line
  • Searches Facebook

29
Asking Fourth Amendment Questions
  • Reads school Internet or emails
  • Profiles person from known terrorist country

30
Asking Fourth Amendment Questions
  • Search someones computer files
  • Search at a border crossing

31
Asking Fourth Amendment Questions
  • Search a non-English speaking person
  • Put a GPS tracker on a car?

32
Asking More Fourth Amendment Questions
  • Can parents put a GPS tracker on their childrens
    cars?

33
Asking More Fourth Amendment Questions
  • Can a school system tag certain words such as
    suicide or drugs or hit list on its computer
    server and identify students who write about
    these topics?
  • Does the school have the right to check the
    context of how the words are being used

34
Asking More Fourth Amendment Questions
  • Can government officials read someones email?
  • Can evidence obtained, without a warrant, be used
    against a person at a trial?

35
Asking More Fourth Amendment Questions
  • Can evidence be used at a trial if the defendant
    gave permission for a search without a warrant?
  • What questions would you want answered if a
    police officer breaks into your bedroom and takes
    your journals?

36
Asking More Fourth Amendment Questions
  • How important in todays society is it to protect
    Fourth Amendment rights?
  • Who is responsible for the protection afforded
    under the Fourth Amendment if it is important? Is
    enough being done?

37
Asking More Fourth Amendment Questions
  • What can you do to protect your rights?
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