In this аppeal, we consider a number of issues arising from the search of a high school student’s locker in light of the state and federal constitutional prohibitions against unreasonable search and seizure. After considering the search conducted in light of the balance between the student’s privacy interest and the interest of the school in maintaining a proper educational environment, we conclude that the search was permissible and the district court *144 erred .in suppressing evidence obtained in the course of the search.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
On December 20, 2001, teachers and administrators at Muscatine High School attempted to complete an annual pre-win-ter break cleanout of the lockers assigned to each student at the school. The students were asked three to four days before the cleanout to report to their locker at an assigned time to open it so a faculty member could observe its contents. The general purpose of the cleanout was to ensure the health and safety of the students and staff and to help maintain the school’s supplies. Accordingly, faculty assigned to examine the lockers kept an eye out for overdue library books, excessive trash, and misplaced food items. They also watched for items of a more nefarious nature, including weapons and controlled substances. The cleanout functioned as expected for approximately 1400 of the 1700 students at the school. Hоwever, a sizea-ble minority — including the appellee, Mar-zel Jones — did not report for the cleanout at their designated time.
The next day, two building aides went around to the lockers that had not been checked the day before. Acting pursuant to rules and regulations adopted by the school board, the aides opened each locker to inspect its contents. The aides did not know the names of the students assigned to the lockers they were inspecting. One of the lockers they opened contained only one item: a blue, nylon coat, which hung from one of the two hooks in the locker. Apparently curious about its ownership and concerned that it might hold trash, supplies, or contraband, one of the aides manipulated the coat and discovered a small bag of what appeared to be marijuana in an outside pocket. The aides then returned the coat to the locker and contacted the school’s principal.
After crоsschecking the locker number with records kept by the administration, the principal determined the locker in which the suspected marijuana was found belonged to Jones. The principal and aides then went to Jones’ classroom and escorted him to his locker. Jones was asked to open the locker and, after doing so, was further asked if anything in the locker “would cause any educational or legal difficulties for him.” Jones replied in the negative. The principal then removed the coat from the locker. Jones grabbed the coat, struck the principal across the arms, broke free from him, and ran away. The principal gave chase and, after three attempts, captured and held Jones until the police arrived. The police retrieved the bag and determined that it held marijuana.
Jones was later charged with possession of a controlled substance in violation of Iowa Code section 124.401(5) (2001). He subsequently filed a motion to suppress the evidence — the marijuana — obtained during the search of his locker. He claimed that the search violated his right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure pursuant to the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and article I, section 8 of the Iowa Constitution. The lone witness at the suppression hearing was the principal of the high school, who testified about school policy relating to search and seizure and the events of December 20 and 21. The district court grantеd the motion to suppress. It found that the school officials did not have reasonable grounds for searching Jones’ coat pocket. The State filed a motion requesting the judge reconsider and alter his decision. The motion was denied. The State then sought discretionary review, which we granted.
*145 II. Standard of Review and Preservation of Error.
This controversy arises from an alleged violation of a constitutional right, making our review de novo.
State v. Naujoks,
III. Foundational Principles of Search and Seizure Analysis.
As we have recognized on numerous occasions in the. past, “the Fourth Amendment exists to protect the right of the people to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures by government officials ”
1
State v. Reinier,
The essential purpose of both constitutional provisions “ ‘is to impose a standard of “reasonableness” upon the exercise of discretion by government officials ... in order “to safeguard the privacy and security of individuals against arbitrary invasiоn.” ’ ”
Naujoks,
As we observed in another context involving a search and seizure question, “it has been clear that the location of property seized by authorities may be of critical importance in determining whether the search and seizure were lawful.”
State v. Flynn,
In the first case,
New Jersey v. T.L.O.,
the Court articulated several baseline principles related to the search of a student in the school setting. However,
T.L.O.
focused on the search of a specific student whose property was searched based on some measure of individualized suspicion of her conduct.
See id.
at 345-47,
We believe the locker search conducted by the school officials in this case is most closely analogized to the broad searches conducted in
Acton
and
Earls.
Although this search eventually focused oh Jones’ locker, the process leading to that point was random and carried out with the purpose of protecting the health and safety of the whole student body to preserve a proper educational environment. Although
T.L.O., Acton,
and
Earls
each provide helpful insight on search and seizure in schools, it is the sum of their holdings, crystallized in the Court’s opiniоn in
Earls,
from which our analysis must launch. Under the
Earls
analysis, we must consider three, factors: (1) “the nature of the privacy interest allegedly compromised” by the search, (2) “the character of the intrusion imposed by the [search] [p]olicy,” and (3) “the nature and immediacy of the [school’s] concerns and the efficacy of the [search] [p]olicy in meeting them.”
Earls,
The upshot of this analysis, as is evidenced by the controversy arising in the present case, is that “[e]vidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment is inadmissible at trial under the еxclusionary rule.”
Breuer,
IV. Nature of the Privacy Interest.
In assessing the nature of the privacy interest in this case, it is imperative to remember this controversy arose within the school context “where the State is responsible for maintaining discipline, health, and safety.”
Earls,
The determination of the existence of a legitimate expectation of privacy is based on the unique facts of each case, focusing on “ ‘ “whether the government’s intrusion infringes upon the personal and societal values proteсted by the Fourth Amendment.” ’ ”
Breuer,
Students at a minimum must bring to school not only the supplies needed for their studies, but also keys, money, and the necessaries of personal hygiene and grooming. In addition, students may carry on their persons or in purses or wallets such nondisruptive yet highly personal items as photographs, letters, and diaries. Finally, students may have perfectly legitimate reasons to carry with them articles of property needed in connection with extracurricular or recreational aсtivities. In short, schoolchildren may find it necessary to carry with them a variety of legitimate, noncontra-band items, and there is no reason to conclude that they have necéssarily waived all rights to privacy in such items merely by bringing them onto school grounds.
T.L.O.,
T.L.O.
involved the search of a student’s purse, but a student’s locker presents a similar island of privacy in an otherwise public school.
See
William G. Buss,
The Fourth Amendment and Searches of Students in Public Schools,
59 Iowa L.Rev. 739, 773 (1974). Numerous permissible items of a private nature are secreted away within a locker on a daily basis with the expectation that those items will remain private.
See id.; see also In re Adam,
V. Character of the Intrusion.
We must next “consider the character of the intrusion imposed by the [search] [p]ol
*149
icy.”
Earls,
The locker cleanout was premised on the need to maintain a proper educational environment, which school officials had dеtermined was undermined by violations of school rules and potential violations of the law. Most students cooperated in the school’s efforts to check the lockers for such violations. Although there was no indication that students on the day of the original cleanout had the contents of their lockers searched, the students were also present and supervised by a teacher who was responsible for observing the contents of the locker and ensuring the cleanout functionеd as planned. Moreover, the teacher supervisors surely could have communicated with a student present at the locker about its contents and taken further steps if the situation warranted.
The search on the second day came under different circumstances. The advantage of carrying out the cooperative clean-out and inspection of the previous day had passed. Students who had been advised that they were to report to their lockers for a сleanout had failed to do so, and caused the school to switch to an alternative method to ensure the cleanout was achieved. On entering Jones’ locker, the only item in sight was the blue coat. The school officials believed that trash, supplies, or other items could be in the coat pockets, and did not have the advantage of turning to Jones to ask him about its contents, as they likely could have done the day before. For this reason, they decided to make a сursory check of the coat for such items. Although they found the bag of marijuana, they just as well could have found a banana. peel. The scope of the search was supported by the underlying purpose of the search.
While it is possible that there would have been alternative ways to check the coat’s contents, constitutional search and seizure provisions do not require the least intrusive action possible.
See id.
at 837,
VI. Nature and Immediacy of School’s Concerns and Efficacy of Search Policy in Meeting Them.
The education of the students of the State of Iowa is a profound responsibility vested, ultimately, in the capable hands of local teachers, administrators, and school boards. What may be a daunting task to begin with is only made more difficult by the presence of various distractions ranging from excessive trash and missing supplies to — potentially—more troublesome items, such as controlled substances or weapons. What was observed by the Court in
T.L.O.
nearly twenty years ago remains true — if not truer — today: “Maintaining order in the classroom has never been easy, but in recent years, school disorder has often taken particularly ugly forms: drug use and violent crime in the schools have become major social problems.”
See id.
at 339,
The principal of the school testified that the annual winter break locker cleanout was conducted by the school to prevent violations of both school rules related to the accumulation of trash and school supplies and the sharing of lockers and the law related to possession of controlled substances and weapons. School officials were aware that students tended to accumulate excessive trash and supplies in their lockers and sometimes shared the lockers against school policy. Moreover, they knew that if controlled substances or weaрons were present in the school, either type of item would present a threat to the school environment that they were responsible for maintaining.
To counteract the problems caused by these items, the school presented reasonable notice to the student body and attempted to check the lockers with student assistance. Some students, including Jones, did not follow this procedure and left the school with little choice of methods by which it could carry out what it considered to be a legitimate method by which school rules could be maintained. Although the school did not have individualized suspicion of rule or law violations before the locker cleanout operation, constitutional search and seizure provisions include no irreducible requirement that such suspicion exist.
See Earls,
VII. Conclusion.
Although students are not stripped of constitutional protections in the school context, those protections must be balanced against the necessity of maintaining a controlled and disciplined environment in which the education of all students can be achieved. Thus, while students maintain a legitimate expectation of privacy in the contents of their school locker, that privacy may be impinged upon for reasonable activities by the school in furtherance of its duty to maintain a proper educational environment. The search of Jones’ locker was permissible in light of these principles, and the district court’s grant of a motion to suppress evidence obtained during the search was in error. For that reason, we reverse the decision of the district court and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Neither party disputes that the building aides (and the principal) are "government officials” subject to constitutional search and seizure provisions.
See New Jersey v. T.L.O.,
. To this еnd, the Supreme Court has also observed, "[in] the context of safety and ad- . ministrative regulations, a search unsupported by probable cause may be reasonable ‘when "special needs, beyond the normal need for law enforcement, make the warrant and probable-cause requirement impracticable.” ’ ”
Bd. of Ed. of Indep. Sch. Dist. No. 92 v. Earls,
. Although the Supreme Court has not exprеssly articulated the method by which the nature of a privacy interest should be measured in this context, the Court has used the language of ''typical” search and seizure analysis and referred to legitimate expectations of privacy in discussing the issue.
See Earls,
. Muscatine Community School District policy 502.7 provides, in part:
All school property is held in public trust by the Board of Directors. School authorities may, without a search warrant, search students, student lockers, personal effects, desks, work areas or student vehicles. The search shall be in a manner reasonable in scope to maintain order and discipline in the schoоls, promote the educational environment, and protect the safety and welfare of students, employees and visitors to the school district facilities....
Locker Searches
Inspections — Although school lockers are temporarily assigned to individual students, they remain the property of the school district at all times. The school district has a reasonable and valid interest in insuring that the lockers are properly maintained. For this reason periodic inspections of lockers is permissible to check for cleanliness and vandalism. Periodic inspections of all or a random selection of lockers may be conducted by school officials in the presence of the student. Any contraband discovered during such searches shall be confiscated by school officials and may be turned over to law enforcement officials. Searches — The student's locker and its contents may be searched when a school official has reasonable and articulable suspicion that the locker сontains illegal, or contraband items. Such searches should be conducted in the presence of another adult witness, when feasible.
Muscatine high school officials also post “Notice to Search” fliers around the school indicating, "Students should be aware their assigned lockers will be jointly accessible to the student and school officials. Lockers may be subject to search at the discretion of school officials.”
. Iowa Code section 808A.2(2) (2001) provides, in part:
2. School officials may conduct periodic inspections of all, or a randomly selected number of, school lockers, desks, and other facilities or spaces owned by the school and provided as a courtesy to a student. The furnishing of a school locker, desk, or other facility or space owned by the school and provided as a courtesy to a student shall not create a protected student area, and shall not give rise to an expectation of privacy on a student's part with respect to that locker, desk, facility, or space....
