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News (Media Awareness Project) - Supreme Court Upholds Students' Strip Searches
Title:Supreme Court Upholds Students' Strip Searches
Published On:1997-11-11
Source:Los Angeles Times & Orange County Register
Fetched On:2008-09-07 19:58:18
LA Times

SUPREME COURT UPHOLDS STUDENTS' STRIP SEARCHES
By David G. Savage, Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTONThe strip search of two 8yearold Alabama schoolgirls over a
missing $7 did not so clearly violate the Constitution's ban on
"unreasonable searches" as to permit a damage suit against school
officials, according to a ruling that the Supreme Court let stand Monday.

The case illustrates how more conservative federal judges have shrunk the
scope of individual rights and given public officials a broader shield from
damage suits.

In general, public officials cannot be sued for damages in federal court
unless they violate a "clearly established" constitutional right.

This doctrine, known as "qualified immunity," protects police, school
authorities and city officials from being secondguessed.

As a result, however, many lawsuits are thrown out before a trial if a
judge concludes that no "clearly established" right was violated. And often
the judge says that no right is clearly established until the Supreme Court
says it is.

That is just what happened in the case of Cassandra Jenkins and Oneika
McKenzie, who were secondgraders in a Talladega, Ala., public school in
1992. On May 1, one pupil told the girls' teacher that $7 had been taken
from her purse.

Another child said she saw one of the girls put the money in a backpack.
One student said a boy had taken the money.

The two girls were taken to a hallway and questioned. A music teacher,
Susannah Herring, took the two girls to a bathroom and allegedly ordered
them to remove their clothes. No money was found.

Later, after the principal questioned the three, another teacher took the
girls back to the bathroom and again ordered them to remove their clothes.
Again, nothing was found.

The parents of the two girls filed a damage suit against the teachers,
claiming that their daughters had been subjected to an "unreasonable
search" in violation of the 4th Amendment.

In 1985, the Supreme Court agreed that the 4th Amendment protects a
student's right to privacy at school. It also agreed, however, that
teachers and principals can search lockers or purses if they suspect a
student is, for example, hiding drugs there.

Because the law on student searches is not "clearly established," U.S.
District Judge Robert Propst in Birmingham threw out the lawsuit filed by
the girls' parents in 1995. The conduct of the teachers, while
questionable, was not clearly illegal, he ruled.

In June, the U.S. court of appeals in Atlanta upheld that decision on an
83 vote. The high court's pronouncements do not "compel the conclusion
that all reasonable educators should have known that their conduct [in the
strip search case] violated a clearly established constitutional right,"
the appeals court said.

Lawyers for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund urged the Supreme Court to rule on
the matter.

Without comment, the justices refused Monday to hear the case (Jenkins and
McKenzie vs. Herring, 97381).
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