As the ongoing struggle against evil drugs continues school officials strip search girl after being tipped off that she possesses crack perscription oxycontin Marijuana ibuprofen pills!!Fear not America as public school system is ready to do what is necessary to protect the children against the harms of dangerous aspirin usehttp://www.cnn.com/2009/US/04/19/scotus.strip.search/index.html?iref=mpstoryview
4/20/2009 12:36:34 PM
Not to mention what kind of fuck NARC's about an IBUPROFIN in the first place.
4/20/2009 12:46:41 PM
snitches get stitches
4/20/2009 12:50:25 PM
4/20/2009 12:55:37 PM
does anyone know the case history leading up to this? I have to believe the courts have sided with the girl in each, and the school system has appealed each time.i think one of the key issues here is does one student NARCing on another constitute enough of a reason for school officials to even search another student. consider what would be required if this exact event didn't happen at school. kid tells the cops that the girl is selling prescription ibuprofen, cops need to decide if its credible. then get a warrant (ie. a judge also thinks its credible) then the girl can be searched. this case I feel may create cause for setting up of a school system internal judge to determine credible threats/information[Edited on April 20, 2009 at 1:00 PM. Reason : .]
4/20/2009 12:56:11 PM
I guess its out of the question to have the kid's parents come in and take care of it?
4/20/2009 1:00:40 PM
I may be wrong but i was under the impression that there is no difference between "perscription" IBUprofin and OTC except each perscription pill is the equivalent of like 2 or 3 OTC pills. This is neglecting to that even as prescription this is not like we are talking about someschedule IV like drug like codeine.
4/20/2009 1:07:21 PM
^Yeah, I'd question the NARC's ability to tell the difference as well - further deteriorating their credibility. Either way it's not a good idea to go around school selling any king of drugs. Back when I was in HS you'd get into some kind of trouble for selling candy. Candy. I can't remember the punishment attached to that. It's been too long.I guess the kid was going around advertising prescription strength ibuprofen, or the whole thing was made up. And yeah. A strip search on an allegation. Huge overreaction and sets a bad precedence.Steps for a huge perv:1) Become a HS administrator2) Get people to NARC out people on a list you give them3) [Edited on April 20, 2009 at 1:24 PM. Reason : -]
4/20/2009 1:18:33 PM
If any school personnel strip search my daughter over an allegation from another student, I will be the one going to jail after I find the administrator who made that decision.Unless the student was an immediate threat to others, just isolate her in an office somewhere and call her parents to come deal with it. What's so freaking difficult about this? The one thing I take solace in is that the stories where teachers and administrators use common sense don't make it to the press.
4/20/2009 1:20:23 PM
In this case, it appears "Strip-search" means go into a room with a female nurse and remove your clothes except for your bottom underwear. Its the same as any normal public-school medical examination. Hardly "Traumatic". I'm not going to speculate whether it was warranted in this particular situation, but perscription IBUPROFEN can definitely fuck up a kids stomach. If I were principal, I would want any pills accounted for ASAP. Kids getting sick from perscription drugs at a middle school is a bigger deal than a strip-search.Then again, I dont think one child's allegation is enough to warrant a search. There would have to be additional suspicious activity.[Edited on April 20, 2009 at 2:23 PM. Reason : .]
4/20/2009 2:19:20 PM
^ the kid is 13the MOST that should be done is the kid stays in detention until the parents get there.And while going through school, i've never heard of anyone being strip searched in school by a school nurse or otherwise.
4/20/2009 2:34:11 PM
oh no's little timmy may get a tummy ache ^Get real; a 12-14 yr old should possess some common sense about use of aspirin/IBUprofin/acetominophen elsewe'd have a real epidemic as any middle age kid likely has access to the household first aid kit or can bike to the local CVS
4/20/2009 2:36:00 PM
i[Edited on April 20, 2009 at 2:36 PM. Reason : i]
4/20/2009 4:25:57 PM
The key here is not the pills, the key is the decision to strip her based on allegations from another student.I hate to assume that you don't have a daughter on this one, aimorris. The thought of anyone in a position of power over my daughter deciding that her clothes should be removed would drive me to at least desire physical harm on the person in question. I don't care if it's only in front of a female school nurse in a closed room. It's humiliating and far past the boundary of in lieu parenting that school officials should abide. At the very least I would pull my daughter out of the school, and have whatever assface authorized this action's job.So why would it not be reasonable to isolate the student, call their parents in, and sit down and determine exactly what, if any type of substance they have? If stripping is necessary, then school officials leave the room and let the parents do it. Hopefully, you don't suck so much as a parent that you couldn't get your kid to admit what they've done.[Edited on April 20, 2009 at 4:44 PM. Reason : .]
4/20/2009 4:42:46 PM
Quote :"So why would it not be reasonable to isolate the student, call their parents in, and sit down and determine exactly what, if any type of substance they have?"I'd say this applies even if she were supposedly dealing ectasy in class. Regardless of parental locus the schools authority stops at strip search. If they feel they have the evidence to suspend her than so be it even if she has to prove her innocence. In no way though should schools be able to strip search a youth based on what in court would be "questionable" testimony.Besides even a shred of common sense would suggest that a 13 yr old girl or a 17 yr old punk drug head would not be trying to "smuggle" IBUprofin to school to get high.[Edited on April 20, 2009 at 5:05 PM. Reason : a]
4/20/2009 5:03:59 PM
I think this is a pretty interesting argument. Put aside the whole ibuprofen deal (it is a felony in NC but that is for another day). The police can't have people submit to random searches but the public can. I.e. when you go to Carter Finley and the stadium staff searches you. The police can't randomly search you because their are an agent of the government so my argument is; wouldn't the schools fall under the same umbrella? Although they are not sworn, it seems like they should. At my school, you pretty much signed a booklet saying you understand you can have your locker searched, etc. If you didn't sign the document, you didn't go to school. This is way off topic btw, but even though the school owns the locker, I have exclusive use of it; doesn't that give me an expectation of privacy for the contents of the locker? I think schools just have too much authority in the name of student 'safety.'
4/20/2009 5:16:25 PM
4/20/2009 5:24:18 PM
4/20/2009 5:38:55 PM
4/20/2009 5:39:52 PM
There is a big difference between a drunk adult popping OTC pills without taking appropriate precautions and a naive kid in school receiving prescription pills from a friend.
4/20/2009 5:51:41 PM
4/20/2009 6:40:13 PM
This is disgusting... and keeps happening on and off.But I don't understand how it can be done. What if the child resists and says no? They can't touch your or force you, because they are not the police.So how come it keeps happening if the only thing the students have to do to stop it is to just say no?
4/20/2009 6:56:54 PM
It doesn't stipulate all the details in her case but if this occurred in NC. If the pills were not hers, the correct charge is Possession of a Controlled Substance IV. This is a Class 1 misdemeanor. If she had more that 100 units, its a felony. If she sold, gave, whatever to another student, she can be charged with PWISD Schedule IV; a Class I Felony.
4/20/2009 7:07:01 PM
4/20/2009 7:12:12 PM
4/20/2009 7:56:08 PM
4/20/2009 8:33:52 PM
^ I think he was answering my general question above about if hypothetically if she had any Schedule IV like codeine, benzos, etc.Perhaps only California mere possession of schedule IV illegally is an infraction or any crime at all. Restricted believe it or not Pat MyKrotch is a 1st year law student out there haha; I could have swore he told me this but perhaps it was that state law only.
4/20/2009 10:30:17 PM
^I was trying to use that as an example. I was under the impression that these prescription strength contained narcotics. But as far as things like Xanax, Kalopin, etc All of those are scheduled. If you are in possession of these substances without a valid Rx, you can be charged. [Edited on April 20, 2009 at 10:41 PM. Reason : That was like 10 edits, I give up] [Edited on April 20, 2009 at 10:43 PM. Reason : Edit like 11]
4/20/2009 10:34:57 PM
4/20/2009 11:19:16 PM
disco_stu, I agree now I've seen the details of the entire search - that's unbelievable. I mean, I always thought it was wrong which is why I said it could've been handled better, but yeah, if I had found out they made my daughter do all that, I would have been a pretty pissed off dude.But since the topic has turned to the severity of even possessing ibuprofen - it is a big deal because we're dealing with (potentially) stupid ass kids who can find a way to overdose and do damage no matter what kind of drug we're dealing with. And we all know if a kid somehow overdosed on school grounds, the school's administration and faculty would be fucking crucified for somehow letting it happen on their watch.as a side note - I asked my dad (a middle school assistant principal) about this and he said there was no way in hell he would ever have a student strip-searched and absolutely no way in hell he would have a girl strip-searched. The most they ever do is have the kid empty his pockets and take off his shoes. He also said just an anonymous tip is always enough for them to have that done. I'm not sure what it would take for a more in-depth search, although I'm guessing it would involve the SRO.[Edited on April 21, 2009 at 12:17 AM. Reason : .]
4/21/2009 12:12:50 AM
Zero Tolerance = Zero ThinkingSavana should get used to the fact that she belongs to the state.
4/21/2009 12:14:45 AM
4/23/2009 12:00:08 PM
4/23/2009 8:47:03 PM
Well at least the girl can rest assured knowing that when she turns 17, she can get an abortion pill whenever she wants....
4/23/2009 10:46:43 PM
thats good; last thing we need is another teen welfare mom
4/23/2009 11:42:26 PM
I kept a full bottle of ibuprofin with me in middle/HS primarily for sports injuries, or the occasional headache.Also the Carter-Finley deal often goes beyond the normal pat down. I have found you don't have to deal with it anymore when you are no longer a student.
4/24/2009 3:48:53 AM
4/24/2009 8:43:45 AM
^5 I've had Rx strength analgesics two times, once after a wreck and once after having my wisdom teeth removed. The Dr.'s told me it was a way to get the insurance company to pay for it. I had a $5 co-pay for a 30 day supply of Rx strength instead of X number of OTC bottles.[Edited on April 24, 2009 at 10:38 AM. Reason : ]
4/24/2009 10:37:59 AM
4/24/2009 10:44:43 AM
And further to that, having people in authority telling you to do it, I wouldn't totally expect a 13 year old to refuse. This is why teachers and administrators have such stringent rules. They are basically parents for the day and students will do basically whatever they're told.
4/24/2009 11:13:25 AM
4/24/2009 2:37:03 PM
4/24/2009 3:24:48 PM
they should put that shit in the town water.
4/24/2009 3:27:54 PM
4/24/2009 4:52:14 PM
4/24/2009 4:55:37 PM
Hell YEAHWe should teach our kids to expose themselves to whoever asks them!!! And if it someone at school, no matter who, as long as it is someone above them (teacher, staff, admin, etc), they SHOULD comply... that's VERY HEALTHY!!!
4/24/2009 4:59:01 PM
Lumex, My daughter will be stripped by myself, my wife, a doctor (with one of the previous people attending), EMS personnel, or possibly the police if she does something REALLY stupid.Teachers, school nurses, school administrators are not on this list. This is not their place. Changing clothes for gym, or even taking a shower is not the same as being forced to remove your clothes for adults.
4/24/2009 5:00:09 PM
Wonder if that is the line the preacher used to convince 13 yr old boys to drop their pants.Please little timmy i must check your nether regions for the sins of the devil.
4/24/2009 5:29:35 PM
this thread is giving me a headache... any body got any tylenol? oh, shit!
4/24/2009 5:38:34 PM