Pubdate: Thu, 14 Mar 2002 Source: Athens Banner-Herald (GA) Copyright: 2002 Athens Newspapers Inc Contact: http://www.onlineathens.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1535 Author: Stephen Gurr SAFETY OVER RIGHTS: SCHOOLS HAVE FREE HAND IN DRUG SWEEPS Courts have routinely upheld the sort of drug sweeps that occurred Monday at Oconee County High School, tacitly acknowledging that in some respects, students check their Fourth Amendment rights at the door in the interest of public safety. ''The (U.S.) Supreme Court has been pretty supportive of school authorities in conducting these kinds of searches,'' said Sam Davis, dean of the University of Mississippi School of Law and an expert on constitutional issues surrounding school searches. ''They've given school officials a pretty wide latitude in ensuring there is a safe environment conducive to learning.'' On Monday, two agents with RAID Corps, a Spartanburg, S.C.-based private security firm, swept through the school with drug dogs searching for indications of drugs or guns around lockers and parked cars. The school's doors were locked to prevent anyone from leaving, though administrators and faculty were posted at exits in case of an emergency. ''If you don't do it all the way, you really jeopardize the security of the operation,'' said Oconee County Schools Superintendent Shannon Adams. Adams said he will propose to the school board that it reserve funds in the next year's budget for regular spot checks. ''I believe it's a deterrent to students bringing drugs and other contraband on campus,'' Adams said. ''We're not naive enough to pretend it's not there, but this is more of a preventative measure.'' Adams said two days after the search, in which two teens were charged with misdemeanor possession of marijuana, his office hasn't heard a single complaint from parents. ''We really had not anticipated any negative reaction,'' Adams said. ''By and large parents appreciate the school system's efforts to make schools safe.'' In fact, few legal challenges have arisen from school drug searches, Davis said. ''It may be that in many cases parents don't seek to challenge it; that they support it. Maybe their lawyers do some research and conclude it would be pointless to challenge it.'' In the late 1960s, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Tinker v. De Moines School System that students could exercise their First Amendment right to free speech by wearing black armbands protesting the Vietnam War. At the time, conservatives worried that the decision would lead to chaos in the schools, with increased court interference in their operation and students in effect running the schools. ''I think what you're seeing now is the pendulum swinging back in the other direction,'' Davis said. ''The court over the last 15 to 20 years has really gone with preserving the government's interests over the individual's. There's really no question that students have less constitutional rights in a public school setting than they do outside.'' Generally, the Fourth Amendment protection from unreasonable search and seizure guarantees that searches of a person's belongings should not be done without a warrant issued after proof of probable cause is given. In schools, however, the administrators may unilaterally conduct searches without a warrant. The Supreme Court, in a New Jersey case decided in the 1990s, ruled that school officials don't need a warrant or probable cause, but merely a ''reasonable suspicion.'' The court reserved judgment, however, on the involvement of police in school searches. Jay Russell, founder of RAID Corps, said using private firms allows school systems to avoid some of the prickly issues that surround law enforcement searches. ''A lot of times when you're a police officer and you start searching things, the ugly word 'warrant' keeps surfacing,'' Russell said. ''We don't have to get into any of those issues. We're working as an entity of the school -- we're like a school employee.'' The U.S. Supreme Court has also upheld the constitutionality of random drug testing for student-athletes, a related issue in the area of Fourth Amendment rights. Lower federal courts have upheld school drug sweeps, though they've indicated that some reasonable suspicion should exist. ''At least one of these courts has indicated you need an individualized suspicion,'' Davis said. ''In other words, you can't go searching every room, every locker, every car.'' Davis said in the context of the Oconee High search, ''one critical point might be whether there were any indications there were drug or weapon problems in the school. If there's not any demonstrated showing, then I think they might be on somewhat shaky ground.'' Adams said there were no prior indications of drug or weapon use at the school before instituting the search. He noted, however, that the school board's attorney researched the law before any search was approved. ''The bottom line is this many school systems would not be doing it if there was a serious risk of a legal challenge,'' Adams said. ''We've had people try to sue us, but they just didn't have a case,'' said Russell, the private contractor. Russell estimates his firm conducts some 250 searches a month in school systems in North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia. He said his agents have seized 300 items of contraband and 33 guns so far this year. ''Ninety-eight percent of the parents we come into contact with praise us because we make them feel good about where their child is going to school,'' Russell said. Still, constitutional law scholars worry about the rights students are surrendering in public schools. ''Right now I think the pendulum is still swinging in giving teachers and administrators more authority,'' Davis said. ''I'm concerned in how far that is going to go.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart