M.K. v. The City of New York

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMay 29, 2025
Docket1:23-cv-06579
StatusUnknown

This text of M.K. v. The City of New York (M.K. v. The City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M.K. v. The City of New York, (E.D.N.Y. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ----------------------------------------------------------- X : M.K., a minor, by and through her mother : Sharmil Surujnath, : : MEMORANDUM DECISION AND Plaintiff, : ORDER : -against- : 23-cv-6579 (BMC) : THE CITY OF NEW YORK, et al., : : Defendants. : ----------------------------------------------------------- X

COGAN, District Judge. This case joins special-use Fourth Amendment doctrine with more familiar state tort law. Plaintiff is a minor who claims she was subjected to an overly intrusive, under-the-clothing search by three school officials. Appearing through her mother, she brought one federal and several state claims against defendants – the officials, another administrator, and two municipal entities. Before me are defendants’ motion for summary judgment on plaintiff’s claims and plaintiff’s cross-motion for partial summary judgment on a state procedural defense. Material issues of fact preclude summary judgment on plaintiff’s federal claim because, accepting her version of the facts, the search was overly intrusive relative to the circumstances and violated clearly established constitutional law. The state claims, on the other hand, fail as a matter of law because plaintiff has not articulated redressable theories of negligence. Defendants’ motion is accordingly denied on plaintiff’s federal claim but granted on the state claims, and plaintiff’s motion is denied as moot. BACKGROUND Upon arriving to school each morning, students at John Adams High School must empty their pockets, place their bags on a scanner, and walk through one of three metal detectors at the school’s entrance. The process is “Phase One” of the school’s three-phase security protocol.

The NYPD officers manning these detectors either clear the students to enter the school or flag them for Phase Two, at which point officers use a handheld metal detector, a “hand wand,” to isolate what set off the first detector. Students who are not cleared after Phase Two are sent to Phase Three. The parties dispute what Phase Three typically entails, but at a minimum students are escorted to a private room with NYPD officers and school officials who question the student. A designee from the principal’s office remains present “to make sure the student’s rights aren’t violated” and “that there’s [sic] no strip searches.” When she was searched, plaintiff M.K. was a fifteen-year-old ninth grader at John Adams. She claims to have been a model student with no disciplinary record, but she had an admitted problem with the school’s metal detectors. The culprit, she says, was an underwire bra

she often wore. M.K. testifies that she was flagged for the Phase Two screening roughly half of the mornings she arrived at school that year – over one hundred times. The officers usually cleared her for class, but on four occasions officers moved her to Phase Three: twice in December 2022, once in January 2023, and once in November 2023. The first time, school officials sent her home to change, and she was cleared to return later that day. The second time, an official waved her through, satisfied by the hand-wand scan that “it was the bra.” The third of these incidents is the important one. It began when M.K. set off a Phase One detector manned by NYPD officer Defendant Vidalina Lopez. Lopez asked M.K. to walk through the same machine twice more, and the machine lit up both times. Moving M.K. to Phase

2 Two, Lopez conducted a hand-wand scan, which according to her detected metal in M.K.’s “chest/bra area.” Lopez then sent M.K. back through a different metal detector, which again detected metal, and ultimately to a Phase Three private room. In this private room were Lopez; defendant Jessica Sirakowski, dean of the school; and defendant Arlene Marsh, an NYPD officer

senior to Lopez (collectively, the “Phase Three defendants”). The parties dispute whether Sirakowski ordered Lopez to search M.K. and how long Marsh stayed in the room, but they do not dispute that Lopez asked M.K. to lift her shirt and that M.K. did so, exposing her bra and stomach. After the search, defendant Adam Pashko, the assistant principal, asked M.K. to write a statement. M.K.’s mother filed an administrative complaint. And M.K. was sent to Phase Three for a fourth time later in the year. That time, instead of asking her to lift her shirt, the on-duty officer asked her to “bend forward a bit” and lift her bra up under her shirt. Nothing fell out. In the operative amended complaint, M.K. asserts five causes of action. Count One, asserted against the Phase Three defendants, is a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that the

third search violated M.K.’s Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. The remaining four counts are state tort claims asserted against various combinations of the Phase Three defendants, Pashko, the City of New York, and the New York City Department of Education. I address first the § 1983 claim before turning to the state claims. DISCUSSION I. Section 1983 Claim A. Legal Framework The Fourth Amendment enshrines “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons . . . against unreasonable searches and seizures,” U.S. Const, amend IV, and the Fourteenth

3 Amendment prohibits state officers from violating that right. See Elkins v. United States, 364 U.S. 206, 213 (1960). Because “the ultimate touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is reasonableness,” officers generally must have “probable cause to conduct [a] search.” United States v. Bodnar, 37 F.4th 833, 838 (2d Cir. 2022) (cleaned up). But the well-worn probable

cause standard does not apply to in-school searches of students by school officials. “[T]he school setting ‘requires some modification of the level of suspicion of illicit activity needed to justify a search,’” and courts thus apply a two-step test that “stops short of probable cause.” Safford Unified Sch. Dist. No. 1 v. Redding, 557 U.S. 364, 370 (2009) (quoting New Jersey v. T.L.O., 469 U.S. 325, 341 (1985)). The test strikes a balance between “the schoolchild's legitimate expectations of privacy” and the “substantial interest of teachers and administrators in maintaining discipline in the classroom and on school grounds.” T.L.O., 469 U.S. at 339. At step one, a court determines whether the search was “justified at its inception.” Id. at 341-42. A search is so justified when the school officials had some “reasonable suspicion that a particular regulation or law has been violated, with the search serving to produce evidence of that

violation.” Phaneuf v. Fraikin, 448 F.3d 591, 596 (2d Cir. 2006) (quotation omitted). Although this standard stops short of probable cause, it is no rubber stamp. If probable cause requires a “substantial chance” of wrongdoing, reasonable suspicion still requires a “moderate chance.” Safford, 557 U.S. at 371. At step two, the court evaluates whether the search was “reasonably related in scope to the circumstances which justified the interference in the first place.” T.L.O., 469 U.S. at 341 (quotation omitted). There are twin dimensions to the second-step inquiry: whether the “measures adopted” are tailored to “the objectives of the search” and whether they are “excessively intrusive in light of the age and sex of the student and the nature of the infraction.” Id. at 342. In practice, the two steps are interrelated – “as the intrusiveness of the

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