State Technical College of Missouri no longer allowed to require testing of incoming students.
The ACLU of Missouri and the national ACLU’s Criminal Law Reform Project filed a class-action lawsuit against Linn State Technical College (now known as State Technical College of Missouri) on behalf of several students who were required to take a drug test in order to remain enrolled, even though the College had no reason to believe that the students were abusing drugs and no documented problems with drugs in the college’s 50-year history.
“We shouldn’t treat students seeking to better their lives through education with immediate suspicion,” said ACLU of Missouri Legal Director Tony Rothert. “Under the Fourth Amendment, every person has the right to be free from an unreasonable search and seizure—including college students.”
The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld an injunction issued by the trial court prohibiting the College from implementing this unconstitutional policy.
"Students should not be required to sacrifice their constitutional rights in order to further their education, and we're thrilled that the court has permanently struck down the policy,” said Jason Williamson, senior staff attorney at the ACLU's Criminal Law Reform Project, and co-counsel on the case. “Our victory should serve as a warning to colleges and universities across the country: mandatory, suspicionless drug testing of the entire student body is inefficient, ineffective, and grossly unconstitutional.”
Read the full decision here.
About the ACLU of Missouri: The ACLU of Missouri preserves and expands the constitutional rights and civil liberties of all Missourians as guaranteed in the Missouri and U.S. Constitutions, with a focus on the Bill of Rights, the first ten Amendments.
About the ACLU Criminal Law Reform Project: The Criminal Law Reform Project is a division of the national ACLU that aims to put an end to excessively harsh crime policies that result in mass incarceration and stand in the way of a just and equal society.