To view this, you need to install the Flash Player 7. Please go to here and download it.

America's Criminal Defense Group
America's Criminal Defense Can Help You If You're Arrested For Any Criminal Offense

America's Criminal Defense Group - Our Legal Blog

June 25, 2009

Strip search of teen was unconstitutional, Supreme Court rules

Posted under: Miscellaneous News— Anthony Partipilo @ 4:48 pm

The high court says the search of a 13-year-old girl at an Arizona middle school was unjustified. But justices reject the suit against school employees, saying the law had not been clear.

By David G. Savage
9:18 AM PDT, June 25, 2009

Reporting from Washington — The strip search of a 13-year-old school girl who was suspected of hiding pain-relief pills was unreasonable and unconstitutional, the Supreme Court ruled today, setting new legal limits on how far school officials may go to inspect for drugs on campus.

In an 8-1 decision, the high court called a strip search at school “categorically distinct” from other inspections for drugs and so degrading that it usually cannot be justified.

The justices said a search of a student’s backpack or outer clothing was reasonable whenever a school employee had sufficient suspicion that the student was hiding something illegal, such as drugs or a weapon.

But requiring a student to remove her clothes required a “quantum leap” of suspicion and wrongdoing to be justified, the court said.

Its ruling was a partial victory for Savana Redding and her mother, April, who sued the vice principal of her Arizona middle school over a strip search in 2003. The vice principal was told by another girl that Savana had brought extra-strength ibuprofen pills to school and planned to give them to other students.

She was questioned and denied having the pills. Her backpack was searched as well. When no pills were found, the vice principal sent her to a nurse’s office, where she was ordered to remove her clothes.

No pills were found, but school officials did not apologize to the girl or her mother. The two sued the employees and the Safford Unified School District, contending the strip search violated Savana’s rights under the 4th Amendment, which forbids “unreasonable searches” by the government.

In today’s ruling, the justices agreed the search itself was unconstitutional, but they also rejected the suit against the school employees because the law had not been clear.

The decision sets a standard for all future school searches, but it may result in no compensation for Savana and her mother. The court sent the case back to Arizona to consider whether the school district itself may face some liability.

In Safford vs. Redding, Justice David H. Souter said the vice principal had reasonable grounds for questioning the students about drugs, but he went way too far.

“In sum, what was missing,” Souter said, “was an indication of danger to the students from the power of the drugs or their quantity, and any reason to suppose that Savana was carrying pills in her underwear. We think that combination of these deficiencies was fatal to finding the search reasonable,” he wrote.

Only Justice Clarence Thomas dissented. He complained the ruling “grants judges sweeping authority to second guess the measures that these officials take to maintain discipline in their schools and ensure the health and safety of the students in their charge.”

Meanwhile, Justices John Paul Stevens and Ruth Bader Ginsburg would have gone further and upheld a liability ruling against the school officials in this case. “I have long believed that it does not require a constitutional scholar to conclude that a nude search of a 13-year-old child is an invasion of constitutional rights of some magnitude,” Stevens wrote.

AnyoneΒ accused of a crime still has many rights available to them.Β  Should you find yourself in such position, contact Senior Case Manager, Todd Terry (non-attorney) at 818-225-2468Β or visit www.americascriminaldefense.com to schedule a free consultation.

Share/Save/Bookmark

No Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment


If you are facing charges for any criminal offense, contact America's Criminal Defense Group today. We believe that all our clients are innocent until proven guilty.







Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Blog
Sex Crimes
Sexual Assault and Abuse
Child Molestation
Computer Sex Crimes and Child Pornography
Forcible Rape and Date Rape
Public Sexual Indecency and Lewd Acts
Alcohol & Drug Crimes
DUI and DWI
Violation of Probation
Drug Possession Offense
Drug Sales Offense
White Collar Crimes
Theft and Embezzlement
Money Laundering and Extortion
Organized Crime
Grand Jury Advisement
Tax Evasion
Intellectual Property Fraud
Violence & Theft Crimes
Capital, First Degree, and Second Degree Murder
Manslaughter
Negligent Homicide
Assault and Aggravated Assault
Kidnapping
Arson
Child Abuse and Domestic Violence
Robbery
Other Federal, State & Juvenile Crimes
Trials & Appeals
Motions for Bail and OR Release
Resisting Arrest & False Statements to Law Enforcement
Restitution Cases and Post Conviction Relief
Criminal Damage and Trespassing
Forfeiture Cases and Professional License Defense