D.H. v. Clayton County School District

52 F. Supp. 3d 1261, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 147333, 2014 WL 5088111
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedSeptember 30, 2014
DocketCivil Action No. 1:12-CV-00478-AT
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 52 F. Supp. 3d 1261 (D.H. v. Clayton County School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D.H. v. Clayton County School District, 52 F. Supp. 3d 1261, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 147333, 2014 WL 5088111 (N.D. Ga. 2014).

Opinion

[1267]*1267 ORDER

AMY TOTENBERG, District Judge.

This case involves the constitutionality of a strip search conducted by a school official on a seventh grade boy in the presence of other students. It is before the Court on the parties’ Cross Motions for Summary Judgment [Docs. 112, 114, 116, 117] and Plaintiffs Motion to Strike Declaration of Latasha Lowe [Doc. 137]. The Court’s rulings are set forth below.

I. BACKGROUND1

D.H. was a twelve-year old seventh grader at Eddie White Academy on February 8, 2011 when he was required to strip down to his underwear by an assistant principal searching for marijuana.2 (See D.H. Dep. at 7, 14, 59.) Eddie White Academy (“EWA”) is a public school in the Clayton County School District consisting of grades kindergarten through eighth grade. (Ratcliff Dep. at 80; McDowell Dep. at 152.) Although this case involves only tbe claims of D.H., he was the fourth student to be searched for suspected possession of marijuana at the school. Therefore it is helpful to first discuss the events leading up to the search of D.H. to put the search in context.

On February 8, 2011, EWA Assistant Principal Sheneaise Williams Ratcliff (“Ratcliff’) was informed by the School Resource Officers3 (“SRO”), Ricky Red-ding (“Deputy Redding”), that a student had reported that “[D.V.] had drugs in the school and was passing them around the classroom.”4 (Ratcliff Dep. Ex. 1; Rat-cliff Dep. at 10; Redding Dep. at 51, 86-87.) According to Ratcliff, “there had been prior situations with D.V. and speculation of drugs,” and that he had been searched on several other occasions for suspicion of bringing weapons and drugs to school. (Ratcliff Dep. at 32-33, 40.)

A. Searches of D.V., T.D., and R.C.

At that time, the seventh grade students were in their first period classes. (Ratcliff [1268]*1268Dep. at 39-40.) Ratcliff pulled D.V.’s schedule of classes, and went to retrieve him out of his first period art class. (Id. at 39.) Ratcliff asked D.V. to bring his book bag with him to her office. (Id.) Once in her office, Ratcliff asked D.V. to open his book bag and empty its contents. (Id. at 39-41; Ratcliff Dep. Ex. 1.) D.V. complied, emptied all of the contents of his book bag on a table, and Ratcliff looked inside the bag’s zipper compartment. (Ratcliff Dep. at 40-41.) It appeared nothing was in the book bag. (Id.) Although she does not remember asking D.V. to pull his pockets inside out, Ratcliff testified that she “might have because that was typical.” (Ratcliff Dep. at 41.) Eventually during the search, D.V. stated “I know what you all are looking for,” and identified another seventh grade student, R.C., as someone he had seen with marijuana. (Ratcliff Dep. at 42-43; Redding Dep. at 87-88.) Although Ratcliff testified that D.V. did not mention where R.C. had hidden the marijuana, according to her February 9, 2011 written statement, D.V. indicated that the marijuana was in R.C.’s book bag. (Ratcliff Dep. at 43; Ratcliff Dep. Ex. 1.)

Ratcliff then escorted D.V. to the front office to wait while she went to retrieve R.C. from his class. (Ratcliff Dep. at 43-44; Ratcliff Dep. Ex. 1.) Ratcliff brought R.C. to Deputy Redding’s office and asked him whether he had drugs on him. (Rat-cliff Dep. at 44^16; Ratcliff Dep. Ex. 1.) According to Ratcliff, after R.C. denied having drugs, she asked him to open and empty his book bag5 and she performed a search of the book bag and found nothing.6 (Ratcliff Dep. at 46-48; see also Redding Dep. at 89.) During the search, Ratcliff perceived R.C. to be visibly nervous and thought he was being untruthful about having drugs. (Ratcliff Dep. at 49.) Rat-cliff also testified that she believes she would have asked R.C. to turn his pockets inside out. (Ratcliff Dep. at 50.) R.C. then informed Ratcliff that T.D., also a student in the seventh grade, was in possession of marijuana at school.7 (Ratcliff Dep. at 49-50; Ratcliff Dep. Ex. 1; Red-ding Dep. at 90.)

By.this time, the seventh grade students were in their second period classes. (Rat-cliff Dep. at 51.) Ratcliff left Deputy Red-ding’s office to go find T.D. in his second period class. (Ratcliff Dep. at 50-51.) While Ratcliff was gone to find T.D., Deputy Redding waited in the office with R.C. According to Deputy Redding, R.C. was fidgeting. Redding asked R.C. to remove his shoes and socks.' (Redding Dep. at 91, 98.) R.C. removed his shoes and socks and a bag of marijuana and two rolled blunts fell out onto the floor. (Redding Dep. at 91-92.) Deputy Redding asked R.C. to pick the marijuana up and put it on the desk beside him. (Redding Dep. at 92.) Deputy Redding informed Ratcliff upon her return that marijuana had been found on R.C., who indicated he had gotten the marijuana from D.V. (Redding Dep. at 92.) R.C. told Ratcliff that D.V. had marijuana in his book bag. (Redding Dep. at 99.)

[1269]*1269When Ratcliff returned to Deputy Red-ding’s office with T.D., Deputy Redding said to him “you know what we’re looking for so ... give it to us.” (Ratcliff Dep. at 52; Ratcliff Dep. Ex. 1; Redding Dep. at 92-93.) In response, T.D. “turned away from [Ratcliff,] unbuttoned his pants and reached in what appeared to be his underwear and pulled out” marijuana wrapped in plastic. (Ratcliff Dep. Ex. 1; Ratcliff Dep. at 52-55; Redding Dep. at 93 (stating that T.D. “turned away from Ms. Ratcliff, and he reached down in his pants and pulled out a bag of marijuana and gave it to Ms. Ratcliff”).) According to Ratcliff, she saw T.D. reach in his pants and believed he was reaching into his underwear “[b]ecause he reached kind of deep and it was in the front. It wasn’t a side pocket. It was directly in the front” and he did not appear to be pulling it out “from between his belt and the outside of his pants.” (Ratcliff Dep. at 54-56.) T.D. turned around, with his pants slightly undone, and put the marijuana he took out from inside his pants onto Deputy Redding’s desk. (Ratcliff Dep. at 55, 86.) The “bag” of marijuana found on T.D. was about the size of the exhibit sticker used for the deposition exhibits in the case. (McDowell Dep. 104-105.)

In her deposition, Ratcliff states that T.D. told her that he got the drugs from D.H. (Ratcliff Dep. at 57.) However, her February 9, 2011 written statement does not indicate that D.H. was identified by T.D. as having drugs. After counsel referred Ratcliff to her written statement, Ratcliff stated that she was not in the room when she believes T.D. implicated D.H. but “just assumed it was the next child,” apparently because D.H. was the next student that Deputy Redding asked to see. (Ratcliff Dep. at 61-64.) Ratcliffs written statement indicates that she left the room after T.D. produced the marijuana from his underwear in order to get fellow Assistant Principal Tyrus McDowell (“McDowell”) to take over the investigation. (Ratcliff Dep. Ex. 1; Ratcliff Dep. at 57, 60; McDowell Dep. 88.) Her written statement further indicates that when she returned to Deputy Redding’s office to meet Mr. McDowell she observed more drugs on his desk and asked Deputy Red-ding where the drugs had come from. (Ratcliff Dep. Ex. 1.) Redding informed her, that the drugs had been found in R.C.’s sock. (Id.) Mr. McDowell then arrived to continue the searches.8 (Id.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 F. Supp. 3d 1261, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 147333, 2014 WL 5088111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dh-v-clayton-county-school-district-gand-2014.