4th Amendment
TLO
Redding
Vernonia
Earls
100

"The right of the people to be secure in their ______, ______, _____, and _______, 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."

persons, houses, papers, effects

100

It was the school rule violated that led to the search of the juvenile.

Smoking in the school lavatory (please elaborate with more facts)

100

These two teenagers' private parts were exposed during a search performed by school officials for illegal contraband. 

Savana Redding & Marisa Glines (please elaborate with additionally facts of the case)

100

In 1991, if a student in Vernonia, Oregon participated in this, they were subjected to a drug test and them 10% of the participants were selected for random drug testing.

Interscholastic athletes (Please elaborate the case facts)

100

The difference between Vernonia and Earls is Vernonia tested all athletes, Earls tested all students who participated in. 

All competitive extra-curricular activities. (academic club, Future Farmers of America, Future homemakers of America, choir, pom pom, band, and athletics.)

200

What the Crown used to enter and search any house they wanted without needing evidence of wrongdoing. 

General warrants. The Founding Fathers wanted to protect people from this sort of invasion of privacy from the government.

200

This is what the juvenile wants to do with the evidence found in the search and her confession.

Suppress the evidence found in the search as well as her confession. (please elaborate why)

200

The reason why the search of Redding's belongings and outer clothing was constitutional. 

Savana and Marisa friendship, previous connections to encounters with illegal contraband on school grounds, and an alleged house party where Redding served alcohol to underage classmates. All these connection gave reason to suspect Savana was involved in pill distribution.  

200

The expectations of privacy were not violated for students who voluntarily participate in school athletics for this reason. 

Student athletes have some reason to expect intrusions upon normal rights and privileges including privacy. (provide some of the examples the book gave)

200

The difference in how the urine samples were collected and monitored in Vernonia. 

The men as well as the women were monitored outside a private stall. 

300

The Fourth Amendment does not protect subjective expectations of privacy that are ____________ or otherwise "______________"

unreasonable; illegitimate 

300

It is what the courts balance in determining the application of the Fourth Amendment in schools

The individual's expectation of privacy and security and the responsibility and duties of securing the safety of schoolchildren and their academic environment. 

300

The reason why the search beyond the outer clothing was unconstitutional. 

The content of the suspicion failed to match the degree of intrusion. (please elaborate on some of the reasons the Court gave)

300

The reason the manner of collecting the urine sample was not an intrusion. 

The conditions were identical to to typical encounters in public restrooms. 

300

The argument presented in regards to non athletes. 

Non athletes have a stronger expectation of privacy since they are not subjected to physicals and communal undress.

400

TRUE OR FALSE : You give up some of your Fourth Amendment rights in certain situations such as flying on a public airline.

True 

400

The two part test reasonableness test for searches AKA the "special needs" exception of the 4th Amendment 

Part One: must be justified at its inception, Part Two: search is reasonably related in scope to the circumstances that justified the intrusion in the first place.

400

A moderate chance of finding evidence of wrongdoing. 

Reasonable suspicion 

400

The government concern at issue. 

There was an evident drug concern and  there was a particular danger to the athletes participating in sports eh=ngaged in drug use.

400

One added stipulation to the drug-testing policy different from Vernonia.

Must agree to be tested at any time upon reasonable suspicion. 

500

The slightly different requirement for probable cause in public schools. 

Reasonable suspicion 

500

Two requirements that are not necessary for searches in schools but are normally required in other searches.

Warrant and Probable Cause 

500

this defense protects government officials from liability for civil damages if their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known. 

Qualified Immunity. (How did this apply to Redding)

500

This Justice wrote in the dissent that suspicion-based drug testing was a more reasonable alternative.

Justice O'Connor

500

True of False : The number of 12th grades who use illicit drugs increased from 48.4 percent in 1995 (Vernonia) to 63.9 percent in 2001.

FALSE : 48.4 TO 53.9

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