During the last decade, the United States Supreme Court has rendered four major decisions regarding the validity of suspicionless drug testing policies. Such drug testing policies have become a common way for employers and other interested parties-including the government-both to deter the use of drugs and to determine who is acting under the influence of illegal narcotics. Because government officials often randomly select individuals for drug testing, some of these individuals have charged that a governmental drug testing policy violates the Fourth Amendment. The Supreme Court found this argument unconvincing in three cases decided between 1989 and 1997, but in its most recent decision the Court found the argument persuasive and struck do...
The United States Supreme Court held that a state hospital\u27s policy of drug testing maternity pat...
In the endless and seemingly futile government war against drugs, protections afforded by the Fourth...
In Portillo v. United States District Court for the District of Arizona, the Ninth Circuit held that...
During the last decade, the United States Supreme Court has rendered four major decisions regarding ...
This Note will discuss the three Supreme Court cases that, up to now, have defined Fourth Amendment ...
Random drug testing coexists uneasily with a general Fourth Amendment right to be free of suspicionl...
In Krieg v. Seybold, Robert Krieg challenged the City of Marion, Indiana’s, policy of random drug te...
In 1989, Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall surmised that “declaring a war on illegal drugs is ...
In Board of Education v. Earls, the United States Supreme Court recently held that a high school dru...
The Supreme Court\u27s recent decision in Gonzales v. Oregon, like its decision last year in Gonzale...
In recent months, public attention has dramatically been drawn to the dangers posed by substance abu...
Criminal defendants who are incompetent to stand trial have a significant liberty interest in refusi...
The primary goal of this degree paper is to critically examine arguments advanced by both the propon...
The United States Supreme Court held that drug urinalysis conducted on student athletes is constitut...
This is the published version.Few social problems in the last decade have raised the public's consci...
The United States Supreme Court held that a state hospital\u27s policy of drug testing maternity pat...
In the endless and seemingly futile government war against drugs, protections afforded by the Fourth...
In Portillo v. United States District Court for the District of Arizona, the Ninth Circuit held that...
During the last decade, the United States Supreme Court has rendered four major decisions regarding ...
This Note will discuss the three Supreme Court cases that, up to now, have defined Fourth Amendment ...
Random drug testing coexists uneasily with a general Fourth Amendment right to be free of suspicionl...
In Krieg v. Seybold, Robert Krieg challenged the City of Marion, Indiana’s, policy of random drug te...
In 1989, Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall surmised that “declaring a war on illegal drugs is ...
In Board of Education v. Earls, the United States Supreme Court recently held that a high school dru...
The Supreme Court\u27s recent decision in Gonzales v. Oregon, like its decision last year in Gonzale...
In recent months, public attention has dramatically been drawn to the dangers posed by substance abu...
Criminal defendants who are incompetent to stand trial have a significant liberty interest in refusi...
The primary goal of this degree paper is to critically examine arguments advanced by both the propon...
The United States Supreme Court held that drug urinalysis conducted on student athletes is constitut...
This is the published version.Few social problems in the last decade have raised the public's consci...
The United States Supreme Court held that a state hospital\u27s policy of drug testing maternity pat...
In the endless and seemingly futile government war against drugs, protections afforded by the Fourth...
In Portillo v. United States District Court for the District of Arizona, the Ninth Circuit held that...