i think that the supreme court regulate the evidence against T.l.o purse that it was legal and not against the law to limit the supreme power against the 4th amendment supreme court made it clear that she had denial that she smoked and the search for cigarettes and rolling papers, a further search was reasonable. Because the search was reasonable, the supreme court admitted the evidence that had been used in the delinquency proceedings. it reversed the new jersey supreme court ruling and upheld T.L.O.'S sentence for delinquency.
expulsion and $100 fine
It Doesn't
Civil Liberties
New Jersey v. TLO, 469 US 325 (1985)Chief Justice Warren Burger, who presided over the US Supreme Court from 1969-1986.For more information, see Related Questions, below.
New Jersey v. TLO, 469 US 325 (1985)Chief JusticeWarren BurgerAssociate JusticesWilliam J. Brennan, Jr.Byron WhiteThurgood MarshallHarry BlackmunLewis F. Powell, Jr.William H. RehnquistJohn Paul StevensSandra Day O'Connor
I think criminal since it involved marijuana, I was looking or the answer. I would vote criminal.
The New Jersey v TLO ruling limits the Fourth Amendment rights of students by stating that only a reasonable suspicion is required for a school official to search a student. Probable cause is a stronger standard for a search than a reasonable suspicion. By:Miltorious Britton
Mapp v. Ohio and Terry v. Ohio YES ITS IS BUT NOT REALLY, ITS THE CASE HELD IN SCHOOL WHERE TEACHERS SEARCHED HER WITHOUT ANY LEGAL NOTICE CALLED AS "PROBABLE CAUSE".
because it placed where students rights stood. so did tinker v. des moines, i think but this one was about the 4th amendment and about whether students were allowed to have certain constitutional rights at school>
In the case of New Jersey v. T.L.O., the plaintiff was T.L.O., a high school student. She was accused of violating school rules, which led to a search of her purse by school officials, resulting in the discovery of illegal substances. T.L.O. challenged the legality of the search, arguing that it violated her Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable searches and seizures.
In the 1985 case New Jersey v. TLO, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that school officials have the authority to search students and their belongings based on a lower standard of "reasonable suspicion" rather than the probable cause required in criminal cases. This decision recognized the need for maintaining school safety and discipline while balancing students' rights against the interests of the school environment. The Court's ruling emphasized that searches must be reasonable in scope and not excessively intrusive.
· Vineland, New Jersey