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Grade 6-8
Search & Seizure
School Locker Search
School searched a student's locker based on a rumor, finding prohibited items. Was the search legal?
Real World Connection
Based on New Jersey v. T.L.O., where the Supreme Court established that schools need "reasonable suspicion" (not probable cause) to search. But was a rumor enough?
โก Legal Issues
4th Amendment
Reasonable Suspicion
Student Privacy
๐ Case Facts
- Another student told principal about a rumor.
- Principal searched locker without student present.
- Found prohibited item hidden under books.
๐ฅ Witnesses
๐ค
Plaintiff/Prosecution
Principal
School Official
Statement
I had a credible tip. School safety comes first. The lockers are school property anyway. I did what I had to do to keep students safe.
Key Facts to Establish
- Tip received
- School property
- Safety concern
Potential Weaknesses
- Just a rumor
- Student not present
๐ค
Defense
Student
Defendant
Statement
That's MY space! They didn't even ask me. Someone started a rumor because they're mad at me. I have privacy rights!
Key Facts to Establish
- Privacy expectation
- Rumor source unreliable
Potential Weaknesses
- Item was found
- Lockers are school-owned
๐ Jury Instructions
The jury must decide:
- Was there reasonable suspicion for the search?
- Should the evidence be excluded because of how it was found?