KY: Detention by school resource officer required Miranda

A school resource officer sheriff’s deputy taking a student out of class to the principal’s office to question him about drugs was enough to invoke Miranda. N.C. v. Commonwealth, 396 S.W.3d 852 (Ky. 2013):

The issue before the Court is whether a student is entitled to the benefit of the Miranda warnings before being questioned by a school official in conjunction with a law enforcement officer, the SRO, when he is subject to criminal charges in district court or, as in this case, adult felony charges in circuit court. The SRO, a deputy sheriff assigned to the school in a full-time capacity by the local sheriff’s office, participated in the process by going with the assistant principal, taking the student out of class, escorting him to the principal’s office, and was present in a closed room while the assistant principal questioned the student. He summed up the result of the questioning, charged the student with a Class D felony, and issued a citation on the spot.

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