When Does a Police Search of a Student Cross the Line?
This issue may play out in a Philadelphia courtroom as
result of a federal lawsuit filed against Philadelphia’s school district.
According to the suit, Conover
v. School District of Philadelphia, et. al., a 13-year-old female middle
school student was subjected to improper touching by school police as a part of
a search. During a two hour search of
more than 100 students, a male school police officer is alleged to have placed
his hand down the female student’s blouse and touched her chest after running a
metal detector wand across her body with negative results. Another female
student had a similar experience. The student’s lawyer told The Philadelphia
Inquirer that she was told that police were searching for a BB
gun, but no contraband was found. The district has denied these allegations.
Would it have been proper for school police to respond this
way? Probably not. This type of search
is known as a “strip search” – where clothing is removed or hands are placed
under clothing and touch skin. The US Supreme Court says that this type of search is
lawful only under the most extreme circumstances, such as when they have
information that leads them to believe the student is hiding something under
his or her clothes that poses a serious threat to others and there is no other
less personal way to search. But such
circumstances are rare.
Under current school district policy, physical searches are to
be conducted only when the hand wand goes off, and they must be conducted by a
police officer of the same sex as the student. While students have more limited
privacy rights in schools, constitutional protections that require physical
searches to be based on reasonable suspicion or probable cause apply to school
searches.
If the student’s claims are correct, this search is
troubling on many levels. Beyond the harm to this one student and to her
classmates, bad searches can lead to conflict between students and school
security, creating an atmosphere of distrust and disrespect between students
and officials. When officers and students have an adversarial relationship, the
officers are less able to obtain information from students that can prevent
violence, daily interactions between students and officers are more likely to
escalate, and students are more likely to be arrested, sometimes improperly.
Problems such as the ones described in the Conover complaint may be widespread in
the district. Safe Havens International, a safety consulting firm that reviewed
school police and security operations in 25 Philadelphia public schools, found
trouble with the pat-down procedures used in 60% of those schools, concluding
that they would “likely not withstand a
proper court challenge.” The report, which raised additional concerns about
school policing practices, concluded that addressing these improper procedures
“should not only improve school climate and culture, but will likely reduce the
number of incidents of students being charged with aggravated assault, as well
as officer injuries.”
Interactions between school police and students have become
commonplace. During the 2010-1011 school year, some 132 of Pennsylvania’s 501
districts employed sworn police officers inside schools, fully authorized with
the power to arrest. This count does not include situations in which outside
local law enforcement is summoned. This
presence is likely to increase, as recent changes to state law now require
school officials to report a wider range of incidents to police.
Whatever the result of this case, there is an urgent need
for school officials to make sure police and school staff follow proper and respectful
procedures.
--Harold Jordan, ACLU-PA Community Organizer
Labels: students rights
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