1. Does the Fourth Amendment protect students from searches by school officials?
 2. Under what circumstances, if any, can school officials search students or their belongings?               Facts of the Case: 
T.L.O. was a fourteen-year-old; she was accused  of smoking in the girls' bathroom of her high school. A principal at the  school questioned her and searched her purse, yielding a bag of  marijuana and other drug paraphernalia.               Question: 
Did the search violate the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments?               Conclusion: 
No. Citing the peculiarities associated with  searches on school grounds, the Court abandoned its requirement that  searches be conducted only when a "probable cause" exists that an  individual has violated the law. The Court used a less strict standard  of "reasonableness" to conclude that the search did not violate the  Constitution. The presence of rolling papers in the purse gave rise to a  reasonable suspicion in the principal's mind that T.L.O. may have been  carrying drugs, thus, justifying a more thorough search of the purse.
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