Lead Opinion
OPINION ANNOUNCING THE JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
In this appeal, Appellant R.H., a minor, argues that the Superior Court improperly affirmed the order of the trial court denying his motion to suppress the statements he made during questioning by a school police officer. We agree with Appellant that he was entitled to receive Miranda warnings before being questioned by the school police officer and therefore, we reverse the Superior Court’s order affirming Appellant’s adjudication of delinquency.
The relevant facts and procedural history of this case are as follows. On December 7, 1998, the Monroe County Sheriff notified the East Stroudsburg Area School District Police Department that someone had broken into and vandalized a classroom at East Stroudsburg High School. After entering the classroom, East Stroudsburg School police officers discovered that someone had written graffiti on the blackboards, overturned desks, and discharged the room’s fire extinguisher. In addition, small sneaker footprints were observed in fire extinguisher residue on the floor and on the desktops.
The school police officers subsequently obtained a list of students with classes in the vandalized classroom and looked for a person small in stature to match the footprints found in the fire extinguisher residue. After reviewing the student list, the school police suspected that Appellant had been involved with the break-in because he had classes in the room, he was a person of small stature and because his discipline record indicated that he had exhibited unruly behavior in the past. One of the school police officers escorted Appellant to the main building of the school, where Appellant was asked to remove his shoe for comparison with the footprints found in the fire extinguisher residue. After observing the bottom of Appellant’s shoe, the officer concluded that the print matched those found in the classroom. The officer then informed Appellant that he was keeping the shoe as evidence and that he was going to question Appellant about the break-in.
The school police officer did not give Appellant Miranda warnings
Prior to his juvenile delinquency hearing, Appellant filed a motion to suppress any statements he made during the questioning by the school police officer. Appellant’s motion was denied and an adjudication hearing was held, wherein Appellant was adjudicated of burglary, criminal trespass, theft by unlawful taking, criminal mischief, institutional vandalism, and criminal conspiracy. Appellant was then sent to a residential treatment center for nine months, to be followed by one year of probation. The Superior Court affirmed.
On appeal to this Court, Appellant asserts that his Fifth Amendment rights were violated when he was compelled to give evidence against himself. Appellant argues that he should have been given Miranda warnings prior to any questioning by the school police. According to Appellant, school police are constitutionally indistinguishable from municipal police because they are permitted to exercise the same powers as the municipal police while on school property and because they wear uniforms and badges. Consequently, Appellant contends that his confession, given during custodial interrogation by a school police officer, should have been suppressed. We agree.
When reviewing a challenge to the denial of a suppression motion “we must consider only the evidence of the prosecution and so much of the evidence for the defense which remains uncontradicted when read in the context of the record as a whole. Where the record supports the findings of the suppression court, we are bound by those facts and may reverse only if the legal conclusions drawn therefrom are in error.” Commonwealth v. Hall,
To safeguard an uncounseled individual’s Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination, suspects subject to custodial interrogation by law enforcement officers must be warned that they have the right to remain silent, that anything they say may be used against them in court, and that they are entitled to the presence of an attorney. See Thompson v. Keohane,
In the instant case, it is uncontested that Appellant did not receive Miranda warnings before he was taken into custody for purposes of interrogation. It is also uncontested that Appellant was in custody during the interrogation.
Pennsylvania common pleas courts may appoint school police officers to serve in the school districts within their jurisdiction. See 24 P.S. § 7-778. The court may grant a school police officer the authority to exercise the same powers while on school property as the municipal police, including the power to arrest, issue summary citations, and detain individuals until local law enforcement is notified. Id. § 7-778(a), (c)(2), & (c)(3). By an order dated July 14, 1998, the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County granted East Strouds-burg school police officers the authority to exercise the same powers as the municipal police within the East Stroudsburg Area School District. The court also granted these school police officers the power to issue summary citations and to detain individuals until local law enforcement is notified.
In affirming the trial court’s denial of Appellant’s suppression motion in the instant case, the Superior Court concluded that school police officers are more akin to school officials than municipal police officers because school police officers are considered employees of the school district. See 24 P.S. § 7-778(g). The Superior Court noted that Miranda warnings are not required when school officials detain and question a student about conduct that violates school rules. Thus, since Appellant was questioned by a school police officer, i.e, a school official, about an incident involving “a flagrant violation of school rules,” the Superior Court found that Appellant was not entitled to Miranda warnings.
While it is true that the East Strouds-burg school police officers involved in the instant matter were employees of the school district, they were also judicially appointed and explicitly authorized to exercise the same powers as municipal police on school property. See 24 P.S. § 7-778(c)(2). Furthermore, as Appellant observes, the school police officers were wearing uniforms and badges during Appellant’s interrogation, and the interrogation ultimately led to charges by the municipal police, not punishment by school officials pursuant to school rules. In light of these circumstances, we agree with Appellant that the East Stroudsburg police officers were “law enforcement officers” within the purview of Miranda. Thus, Appellant was entitled to be read his Miranda rights before the school police questioned him and, given their failure to do so, we find that Appellant’s Fifth Amendment privilege against self incrimination was violated.
CAPPY, Justice, files a dissenting opinion.
CASTILLE, Justice, files a dissenting opinion.
NEWMAN, Justice, files a concurring opinion.
SAYLOR, Justice, files a concurring opinion.
Notes
. Miranda v. Arizona,
. Although Justice Castille's dissent goes through a lengthy analysis regarding its belief that Appellant was not “in custody” for purposes of Miranda, we note that the Common
. Justice Castille’s dissent indicates that both this Court’s plurality decision in Commonwealth v. Cass,
. In addition to his Fifth Amendment claim, Appellant also claims that Article I, Section 9 of the Pennsylvania Constitution requires that
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I must respectfully dissent. I agree with Mr. Justice Castille that the school police officer was not a law enforcement officer for purposes of the Fifth Amendment. I write separately, however, because the Opinion Announcing the Judgment of the Court correctly notes that both parties conceded that the student was in custody at the time of the questioning by the school police officers. Majority slip opinion at 4, n. 2. Therefore, I agree with the lead opinion that any analysis of the custody issue is improper in the instant case. Further, I believe that once it is determined that the school police were not either law enforcement officers or acting at the behest of law enforcement officers, the inquiry ends at that point.
As acknowledged by the lead and dissenting opinions, Miranda
I agree with Mr. Justice Castille’s conclusion that there is no distinction between school police officers and other school staff for Miranda purposes. There is simply no support for the proposition that school administrators must adhere to the precepts of Miranda before questioning students regarding alleged violations of school rules or illegal conduct on school grounds. See In re D.E.M.,
As noted by other jurisdictions, even assuming the fact of a custodial interrogation,
[t]he Miranda rule does not apply to a private citizen or school administrator who is acting neither as an instrument of the police nor as an agent of the police pursuant to a scheme to elicit state*336 ments from the defendant by coercion or guile.
Snyder,
. Miranda v. Arizona,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Public schools bring very large numbers of students together in close proximity with one another. When children are brought together in such a unique environment, their inexperience and lack of mature judgment often create physical hazards to others or disrupt a critical learning environment for other students. In addition to the challenge of keeping our children safe, our schools are, of course, charged with the life determinant task of educating our young. Indeed, “education is perhaps the most important function of state and local governments.” Brown v. Board of Educ.,
These special and important concerns do not mean that children in school completely forfeit their constitutional rights, but these rights are unquestionably different in the school setting than elsewhere. As the United States Supreme Court recently noted, there is an important caveat to the familiar aphorism that students do not abandon their constitutional rights at the schoolhouse door:
[WJhile children assuredly do not “shed their constitutional rights .... at the schoolhouse gate,” .... the nature of those rights is what is appropriate for children in school.
Vernonia Sch. Dist. v. Acton,
Initially, the lead opinion does not examine the threshold question of custody. Instead, the lead opinion states that it is not disputed by the parties that appellant was in custody during the interrogation. For this reason, the lead opinion summarily concludes that this necessary element of Miranda was satisfied here:
A person is deemed to be in custody for Miranda purposes when “[he] is physically denied of his freedom of action in any significant way or is placed in a situation in which he reasonably believes that his freedom of action or movement is restricted by the interrogation.” Commonwealth v. Williams,539 Pa. 61 ,650 A.2d 420 , 427 (1994) (citations omitted).
In the instant case, it is undisputed that [a]ppellant did not receive Miranda warnings before he was taken into custody for purposes of interrogation. It is also uncontested that [a]ppellant was in custody during the interrogation. Thus, the issue becomes whether school police officers should be considered “law enforcement officers” within the purview of Miranda.
Op. at 4 (footnote omitted).
Preliminarily, I would note that I am unconvinced that appellant was in fact not free to leave during the questioning by school personnel. Appellant was not formally arrested. He was not handcuffed or physically restrained in any way. The door to the room where the questioning took place remained open throughout the interview. It is not apparent that there was anything preventing appellant from refusing to answer the questions posed to him by school personnel and walking out of the office. Nor do I see any reason to assume that the school setting alone automatically restricts the freedom of all students to leave for Miranda purposes. In fact, the record here is silent as to what would have happened if appellant had refused to cooperate or attempted to leave the school building.
In any event, even if I were to accept the assumption that appellant’s mere status as a student being interviewed by
In Berkemer v. McCarty,
Similarly to Berkemer, the detention of appellant in a room in the school that he regularly attended does not automatically implicate the concerns that underlie the Miranda decision. As noted above, appellant was neither formally arrested nor placed in handcuffs. The questioning took place in an office in his familiar high school surroundings — not in the foreign, perhaps intimidating confines of a police station. The office had a window, and the door was left open. He was questioned by two members of the school staff with whom he was likely acquainted since he had had prior disciplinary problems at the school. Appellant makes no claim that the school security officers elicited his confession by using physical force, coercive interrogation tactics, or trickery — stationhouse tactics that helped to power the Miranda decision. Compare Miranda,
Thus, appellant was not “swept from familiar surroundings into police custody, surrounded by antagonistic forces, and subjected to [coercive] techniques of persuasion. ...” Id. at 461,
Under the unsupported extension of the Miranda custody requirement proposed in the lead and concurring opinions, a school police officer would virtually always be required to issue Miranda warnings before interviewing a student on school grounds, regardless of the specific circumstances of the encounter. For example, a school police officer would presumably be required to issue Miranda warnings to a student sitting at a cafeteria table with his friends before asking the student questions that might lead to school discipline. Such a student would be no less “in custody” than the appellant sub judice and the officer’s question seeks information that could possibly incriminate the student. Likewise, Miranda warnings would presumably have to precede a conversation in a school hallway between a school police officer and a student regarding whether the student had been involved in a fight during recess earlier in the day. Miranda, which involved the inherently coercive atmosphere of the police station, was plainly not intended to apply to the numerous brief, non-coercive encounters that school security personnel have with students at school on a daily basis. Because appellant was not in custody for purposes of Miranda, I would affirm the Superior Court on this ground alone.
Even if I could accept the Court’s predicate assumption that appellant was in custody, I still believe that Miranda warnings were not required here. My conclusion in this regard derives from other relevant precedents which have recognized the unique considerations that attend the public school setting, as well as the constitutional underpinnings of the Miranda decision.
In the seminal case of New Jersey v. T.L.O.,
We join the majority of courts that have examined this issue in concluding that the accommodation of the privacy interests of schoolchildren with the substantial need of teachers and administrators for freedom to maintain order in the schools does not require strict adherence to the requirement that searches be based on probable cause to believe that the subject of the search has violated or is violating the law. Rather, the legality of a search of a student should depend simply on the reasonableness, under all the circumstances, of the search.
Id. at 341,
Even if it is assumed that the Fifth Amendment should have some applicability in the school context, there is much to say in favor of adopting a T.L.O.-like rule of “reason and common sense,” rather than requiring a per se application of Miranda. Our Superior Court has held that school personnel should be afforded such latitude in the Fifth Amendment context. For example, in In re S.K.,
Many of our sister jurisdictions have likewise determined that, because of the unique concerns in the school environment, school personnel are not automatically required to advise students of their constitutional rights prior to questioning them regarding criminal or disciplinary matters. See, e.g., In re Harold S.,
We have no doubt, however, that the T.L.O. standards concerning Fourth Amendment searches are equally applicable to defendant’s Fifth Amendment claim. A school official must have leeway to question students regarding activities that constitute either a violation of the law or a violation of school rules. This latitude is necessary to maintain discipline, to determine whether a student should be excluded from the school, and to decide whether further protection*341 is needed for the student being questioned or for others.
It is true, as the lead opinion notes, see op. at 5 n. 3, that T.L.O., as well as this Court’s decisions in Commonwealth v. Cass,
It is notable that the lead opinion does not dispute the wisdom of those cases holding Miranda inapplicable when the schoolhouse interview is conducted by a school official. The lead opinion reasons, however, that the East Stroudsburg High School police officers in this case were not “school officials” but were “law enforcement officers” automatically subject to the full effect of Miranda, regardless of the school setting, because: (1) they were judicially appointed and authorized to exercise the same powers as municipal police on school property; (2) they were wearing uniforms and badges during appellant’s questioning; and (3) the questioning ultimately led to charges by the municipal police, not simply punishment by school officials pursuant to school rules. See op. at 5.
Although school police may be authorized to exercise the same powers as municipal police on school property pursuant to 24 P.S. § 7-778(c)(2), these powers must be viewed in the context of the statute as a whole and in light of the function of schools. The duties of the school police are not solely, or even predominantly, to investigate criminal conduct, but rather the prescribed duty is to “enforce good order in school buildings, on school buses
Furthermore, the mere fact that the school officers were wearing school district uniforms and badges does not ipso facto convert them into traditional police officers subject to full application of the Miranda doctrine. In fact, pursuant to § 7-778(d), the officers who questioned appellant were required to wear, in plain view, badges which bore the words “School Police” and the name of the school district for which they had been appointed — factors that obviously distinguished them from local or state law enforcement personnel. Moreover, badges and uniforms do not determine the applicability of Miranda even when traditional police officers are involved; rather, it is the fact of custodial interrogation. Thus, even a badgeless, non-uniformed police officer may need to comply with Miranda.
The lead opinion’s post hoc argument that Miranda warnings were required here because the questioning ultimately led to criminal charges is also unpersuasive. The decision to bring criminal charges depends on the nature of the offense, the ultimate prosecuting authority’s view of the evidence against the individual, and a host of other factors outside of the control, or even the bailiwick, of school police — or the school for that matter. The identity of the interrogators plays little or no role in that decision. A focus on whether a student is eventually charged with criminal wrongdoing is thus both over-inclusive and under-inclusive. Law enforcement officials routinely engage in questioning that does not lead to criminal charges, and non-law enforcement personnel, on occasion, engage in questioning that does lead to charges by the police. Moreover, a rule focusing on whether charges are eventually brought offers no guidance in the real world, since that decision cannot be known at the time of the questioning. We should not fashion an application of Miranda that schools can never comply with, nor one that requires a per se application in every instance in order to comply.
The lead opinion fails to cite a single decision in support of its broad conclusion. In fact, the cases in Pennsylvania to date have not drawn a distinction between school police officers and other school staff for suppression purposes. See In re S.K., supra (questioning of student by security officer for Pittsburgh Board of Education did not have to be preceded by Miranda warnings); In the Interest of S.F.,
A great number of our sister jurisdictions have also declined to find that enhanced constitutional protections attach merely because a school security officer, rather than a school administrator, is involved. See, e.g., People v. Dilworth,
That our precedents have generally not distinguished between school police or security officers and other school employees is not surprising in light of the unique policy concerns that are present in the school context. As Mr. Justice Cappy noted in Cass, T.L.O. and its progeny relaxed the constitutional standards applicable to public schools, not because of any special relationship between students and teachers or administrators vis-a-vis other school personnel such as school police officers, but because of the “unique setting of the school environment.” Cass,
The limits of [a student’s] expectation of privacy must be ascertained by considering the reasonable needs of the school to, first and foremost, protect the safety and welfare of all the students, to ensure school discipline and compliance with school regulations, and to maintain school property, which includes the school’s lockers. The need to protect all the students, to ensure school discipline, and protect school property, limits the student’s expectation of privacy while in the school environment.
Likewise, in In the Interest of F.B., the appellant challenged the constitutionality of a generalized point of entry search, conducted by Philadelphia Police Officers but under the direction of the School District of Philadelphia, at Philadelphia’s University City High School. All students entering the school were required to stand in line before a table and empty their pockets while their backpacks, coats, etc., were searched. Each student was also scanned by a hand-held metal detector before being permitted to enter the school. Mr. Justice Cappy’s plurality opinion affirmed the constitutionality of the search in light of again, inter alia, the “sui gener-is school environment.” Id. at 368. Thus, it is the special naturé of the school setting, and the necessity for the personnel therein to maintain good order and provide for the safety of all the students therein, and not the specific identify of the party conducting the search or the interrogation, which has powered this Court’s precedents in this area. Indeed, if it were the identity of the interrogators that mattered, it would be difficult to explain the results in Cass and F.B., where the actual searches were conducted, not by school police, but by local police at the behest of school administrators. The lead opinion’s per se rule again ignores the special and important policy concerns that underlie our jurisprudence in the school context.
The concurring opinion by Madame Justice Newman proposes a test that purports to be more flexible than the lead opinion’s wholesale application of Miranda. Justice Newman suggests that Miranda warnings should precede custodial questioning by “school officials, school police officers, or any other person” whenever “the constitutional interests of the student outweigh the interest of the school in solving the crime[J” and that one of the student’s parents or legal guardian should be present during any such questioning. Concurring op. at 4-6. In weighing the constitutional interests of the student under this approach, Justice Newman writes, the following factors should be considered: (1)
I cannot agree with this test, which, in many respects, is broader than the lead opinion’s approach. Certainly, with respect to the number and types of people who would be required to adhere to the rigid Miranda precepts, the concurrence's rule is far broader than the lead opinion’s. This approach would make Miranda applicable not just to the school police but to all school personnel, including teachers, administrators, custodial staff, cafeteria workers, etc., as well “any other person” who may question a student. As stated, the rule presumably would apply even to another student. As Justice Cappy notes, there is simply no support in the case law for the proposition that teachers or school administrators must comply with Miranda before questioning a student regarding alleged violations of school rules or illegal conduct on school grounds. In fact, as I have described, the great weight of authority, in this Commonwealth and elsewhere, is to the contrary.
Moreover, it is, in my view, neither “reasonable” nor “eommonsensical” to construe the Fifth Amendment as requiring a teacher, school administrator or other school official to follow the concurrence’s test. As Justice Saylor has noted in another context:
[T]he United States Supreme Court has emphasized [that] rules fashioned by courts to implement constitutional precepts that regulate police activities should be expressed in terms that are readily understandable and applicable in daily encounters.
Commonwealth v. Strickler,
For all of the above reasons, I respectfully dissent.
. Miranda v. Arizona,
. The concurring opinion by Madame Justice Newman agrees with the lead opinion that appellant was subjected to custodial interrogation, concluding that "[a]ny reasonable high school student in the situation would have felt as though the questioning significantly restricted his or her freedom of movement or action.” Concurring op. at 6 n. 6.
. This Court may affirm the order of the court below if the result reached by the lower court is correct without regard to the grounds relied upon by that court. See Moorhead v. Crozer Chester Med. Ctr.,
. In his concurring opinion, Mr. Justice Say-lor similarly concludes that the school police officers here are distinguishable from other school staff members as a matter of Fifth Amendment law because these officials were vested with the full authority of municipal police officers, including the power of arrest. See Concurring op. at 2 n. 1.
. Mr. Justice Cappy’s plurality opinion in Cass was joined by Madame Justice Newman and this Justice. Former Chief Justice Flah-erty authored a concurring opinion, joined by Mr. Justice Nigro, in which he agreed with the plurality’s treatment of federal law, but disagreed with its treatment of Pennsylvania law. The concurring opinion nonetheless concurred in the result reached by the plurality, in part, because it agreed that the "school environment is sui generis." Cass,
. In requiring a rigid application of Miranda in the fluid public school context, the lead opinion also fails to account for the multitude of practical problems which its ruling likely will create. For example, it is inevitable that many students, because of their youth, lack of maturity, or lack of experience will simply not understand the Miranda warnings when given. What is a fourth-grader, for instance, to make of the Miranda litany? Also, what happens if a student actually invokes his or her right to remain silent? Can the child be punished by school authorities for doing so, e.g., segregated from the general school population, suspended or expelled, or must he or she be allowed to return to the normal scholastic routine? If the student invokes his or her right to counsel, how will this right be honored? Presumably, the child will be unable to retain an attorney on his or her own. Must the student’s parents be notified so that they can retain an attorney on the child's behalf? Or will the school maintain a list of "school attorneys" to notify in such an event to be provided most likely at taxpayer expense? What should/must be done with the child in the interim? These questions and many other practical concerns will necessarily arise following any application of Miranda to the schoolhouse, but are left unanswered by the Court's unprecedented new formulation.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
While I agree with the ultimate conclusion of Justice Nigro that R.H. was entitled to Miranda warnings in this ease, I respectfully disagree with his creation of a per se rule requiring Miranda warnings whenever a student is questioned by police on school grounds. I write separately to acknowledge that special considerations exist in the school environment, which, depending upon the circumstances of the situation, could render Miranda warnings unwarranted.
In Miranda v. Arizona,
However, the Supreme Court of the United States has recognized that the school setting requires modification of constitutional protections. In New Jersey v. T.L.O.,
The State of New Jersey commenced delinquency proceedings against T.L.O. T.L.O. moved to suppress the evidence obtained from her purse as an invalid search and seizure. The New Jersey Superior Court denied the motion, which the Appellate Division affirmed. The New Jersey Supreme Court reversed, holding that the evidence should have been suppressed because the search was unreasonable. The U.S. Supreme Court reversed, holding that, while juvenile students have privacy rights in items brought to school, the standard for determining the propriety of the search is reasonableness, and the search was reasonable in this situation. The Court reasoned that “the child’s interest in privacy must be set [against] the substantial interest of teachers and administrators in maintaining discipline in the classroom and on school grounds.” T.L.O.,
The concerns articulated by the U.S. Supreme Court in T.L.O. are likewise implicated in the context of the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. A student does not lose his rights when he enters the school, but the school officials must have the ability to protect adequately the other students. As Justice Castille recognizes, the U.S. Supreme Court has said that, “while children assuredly do not shed their constitutional rights at the schoolhouse gate, the nature of those rights is what is appropriate for children in school.” Vernonia School District 47J v. Acton,
Justice Castille argues that this Court’s decisions in Commonwealth v. Cass,
I would extend T.L.O., Cass, and F.B. to the Fifth Amendment context and hold that the school officials should give the student Miranda warnings when the constitutional interests of the student outweigh the interest of the school in solving the crime. When weighing the constitutional interests of the student in this setting, courts should consider the following factors: (1) the age of the student to be questioned (the older the student is, the more likely the information elicited from him in an interrogation will be used against him in a court of law, rendering Miranda warnings more necessary); (2) the ability of the juvenile to understand the Miranda warnings, if they are given; (3) the gravity of the offense alleged (likewise, the more serious the offense the school officials are investigating, the more likely that he will be criminally charged); (4) the prospect of criminal proceedings, as opposed to merely school-related discipline; and (5) the extent of the coercive environment in which the questioning occurs.
For Miranda rights to attach at all, the student being questioned must be in custody and must be subject to an interrogation. The fifth factor presumes the existence of custody, and instead looks at the nature of the custody, specifically, the number of questioners present, the place of the questioning, and the tactics used to elicit the information sought. For example, if three or four persons are interrogating the student in the principal’s office and are threatening to file criminal charges if the student does not cooperate, this is a highly coercive environment. The more coercive the environment, the greater the need to ensure that the student’s constitutional rights are not violated. When a student is in custody and being interrogated, the right to be given Miranda warnings presumptively attaches. However, recognizing that the school setting is sui generis,
In cases where the student will likely be subjected to criminal or delinquency proceedings outside of the school, I would hold that school officials, school police officers, or any other person wishing to question that student for the purpose of eliciting information about the alleged crime to be used in such a proceeding, should first inform the student’s parent or guardian of his or her wish to question the student and allow the parent or guardian to be present during the interrogation.
In the case sub judice, I agree with Justice Nigro that R.H. was in custody and was subject to an interrogation.
In light of the aforementioned facts, the failure of the School Police to provide Miranda warnings to R.H. violated his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. Therefore, I agree with Justice Nigro that R.H. was entitled to be read his rights before the School Police interrogated him and, because the School Police failed to do this, his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination was violated.
. See generally, In re Gault,
. For a more in-depth discussion of New Jersey v. T.L.O. and the cases interpreting that decision, refer to Justice Castille’s opinion in the present case.
. In F.B., we articulated this “reasonableness test" as follows:
The three factors to be weighed and balanced in reviewing the constitutionality of a general search under the Fourth Amendment are: 1) the nature of the privacy interest upon which the search at issue intrudes, 2) the character of the intrusion, and 3) the nature and immediacy of the governmental concern and the efficacy of the means utilized to address that concern.
Id. at 364.
. See In the Interest of F.B.,
. I recognize that this Court in Commonwealth v. Williams,
. I respectfully disagree with Justice Castille that R.H. was not subject to a custodial interrogation. Any reasonable high school student in the situation would have felt as though the questioning significantly restricted his or her freedom of movement or action.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
Like Madame Justice Newman, I disagree with the opinion announcing the judgment of the court to the extent that it can be read as imposing a per se rule applicable to the school setting. I would also emphasize the substantial interest of school administrators and educators in ensuring discipline and the need to afford them latitude in questioning students respecting activities that may violate school rules. See Vernonia Sch. Dist 47J v. Acton,
. The dissents posit that there is no difference between school police officers and other school staff for Miranda purposes. As noted by the majority, however, pursuant to the authorizing statute school police officers may be vested with the full authority of municipal police officers, including the power of arrest. See 24 P.S. § 7-778. Indeed, at least one of the school police officers involved here possessed just such authorization. See In re Appointment of School Police Officer for the East Stroudsburg Area Sch. Dist., 4603 Misc.Civ. 1998 (C.P. Monroe July 14, 1998). As Miranda’s underlying concern is with the compulsion inherent in police custodial questioning, I find highly material the distinction between educators and those operating under color of police authority and possessing general police powers including the power of arrest.
