techdirt: Legislators, School Administrators Back Off Cellphone Search Bill After Running Into ACLU Opposition

techdirt: Legislators, School Administrators Back Off Cellphone Search Bill After Running Into ACLU Opposition by Tim Cushing:

Legislators working with the Association of California School Administrators are backing away slowly from a bill aiming to separate schoolchildren from their phones and their privacy. The bill would have created an exception in California’s privacy law, allowing teachers and school administrators to search the contents of students’ phones. Courthouse News’ Nick Cahill has more details:

While short in length, the bill has stature. Its 130 words would exempt students from the California Electronic Communications Privacy Act, CalECPA, which was passed in 2015 with overwhelming bipartisan support in the Legislature.

“That law also specifies the conditions under which a government entity may access electronic device information by means of physical interaction or electronic communication with the device, such as pursuant to a search warrant, wiretap order, or consent of the owner of the device,” the new bill states.

This attempt to further limit students’ Constitutional rights and legal protections ran into the ACLU’s opposition, which noted the exception would “sledgehammer” the Fourth Amendment. …

This entry was posted in Cell phones, School searches. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.