Pubdate: Mon, 22 Mar 1999 Source: Reuters Copyright: 1999 Reuters Limited. Author: James Vicini SUPREME COURT REJECTS SCHOOL'S DRUG TEST APPEAL WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court returned Monday to the controversy over high school drug testing,letting stand a ruling that struck down for violating privacy rights mandated tests for all suspended students. The justices rejected without comment or dissent an appeal by a school district in Anderson, Indiana, after an appellate court struck down its drug-testing program for violating the constitutional right against unreasonable searches. The policy, adopted in 1997, requires that all students suspended from school for any reason for three days or more take a urine test to screen for drug or alcohol use before they may be readmitted. Besides suspended students, tests are required for any students who use or posses tobacco products, who are habitually truant or who are suspected of being under the influence of drugs or alcohol. The last major decision on school drug-testing was handed down in 1995, when the Supreme Court ruled that schools may randomly test those who play sports. In 1998 the Supreme Court without any comment or dissent allowed a school district to require all students involved in extracurricular activities to submit to random drug tests. The latest case stemmed from a lawsuit filed by James Willis, who in 1997 was a freshman at Anderson High School and was suspended for fighting with another student. After the five-day suspension ended, Willis was told he would be tested for drugs and alcohol. When Willis refused to provide a urine sample, he was suspended again. He was told that if he refused again to provide the urine sample, he would be deemed to have admitted unlawful drug use and would be suspended a third time, pending expulsion proceedings. A federal judge upheld the school's policy, but a U.S. appeals court struck it down as unconstitutional, ruling that the school must meet the traditional standard -- suspicion that a student used drugs or alcohol before requiring the test. It ruled the school's interests do not outweigh Willis' privacy rights. In its Supreme Court appeal, the school district argued Willis has a ``lesser'' expectation of privacy as a public school student and the infringement of his privacy rights from the drug test was ``minimal.'' The school district said it has a ``legitimate and compelling interest'' in deterring student drug use and that its policy was ``very effective and narrowly tailored.'' Last, the school district said there may be a link between drug or alcohol use and fighting, giving ``individualized reasonable suspicion'' that the cause of Willis' violent behavior may be drugs or alcohol. But attorneys for the Indiana Civil Liberties Union, which represented Willis, said the dean of students examined Willis after the fight and concluded there was no reasonable suspicion he was under the influence of drugs or alcohol. They also said there was no need for the Supreme Court to expand the boundaries on what constitutes sufficient cause to justify a drug test. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck