the_hessian said:
Maybe they saw the pack, thought it could have been something like extacey, or some other pill based drug, asked if she had anything, but then to go as far as strip searching her, I mean they would have had to get the police involved to do that surely, not just a teacher, or even a school security guard. If nothing else the school should issue a public and unreserved apology over the situation, but to be honest that is just... sick.. messed up. I hope they sue.
...and I'm against sueing people, for just about anything, but that's rediculous.
Even if they had heard about or seen such pills on her person, then the reasonable thing to do is to bring her into an office. This puts her under supervised "custody", clearly if it is on her person she can't get rid of the pills under supervision. They then search her locker and backpack etc ;That is fairly acceptable. (Locker is school property, backpack meets reasonable search)
Now, if for whatever reason they deem it necessary to further search her person, i.e. her body. Then they have to at first notify authorities and her parental guardians in which case the guardian can deny the search requiring the authorities to obtain a warrant in order to do so. Which they obviously wouldn't do for a couple of ibuprofen pills. An immediate search isn't necessary because the pills on her person have no way of doing harm to herself or other persons. Get my drift? Common sense policy. Searching her immediately because she supposedly distributed the so-called pills to others does not rip a hole in the time/space continuum and remove the other pills from other people. Total nonsense.
Again, if the student is brought into an office under 'custody' and supervision, there is no need for a "search" because the pills go nowhere. The student is isolated from discarding the evidence or further distributing.