Please Help Me

<p>@flocka123 I did not blame anything on anyone.</p>

<p>

Sure, the fact that released exams mean people can look at them, otherwise they wouldn’t have been released. </p>

<p>Does released exam mean it has to be from College Board? Because if you look up, on Google, “AP English Language Released Exams” non-college board links come up with exams. If you use these links, is it illegal?</p>

<p>@CE527M</p>

<p>Or even if you have the pdf of the exam that these links provide to everyone who has access to the internet?</p>

<p>If the College Board released them, in my mind they are now in the public domain. When I did search that phrase, I came up with various College Board websites, various educational websites, and College Confidential. LOL. If the search engine brought me to a website with obviously pirated content, then it becomes sketchy, but it did not.</p>

<p>@skieurope thanks for all your help. I did not obtain it illegally so they cannot destroy it, I assume. I called the school this morning, my dad emailed the dean, and my dad left a voicemail on the dean’s phone number, still no reply. </p>

<p>Also, "The Fourth Amendment provides that, while at a public school (which includes charter schools), students must be free from searches and seizures unless school administrators can show that they had a “reasonable suspicion” that the search would turn up evidence of a violation of a specific state law, or of a school rule or policy. " </p>

<p>If they suspect that I cheated during the exam, but my proctor who happens to be my AP English teacher says that he did not see me using my phone nor would he accuse me of doing so, am legally allowed to demand for my property back?</p>

<p>Seizure was never the question you put forward. Yes, they can seize your property. But they return it, at whatever time is outlined (end of day, end of week, end of year, whatever).</p>

<p>I had the objection with destruction of property, which is how you originally posed the question.</p>

<p>@skieurope I understand, it was something I found online that I wanted to ask about. </p>

<p>And yes, destruction was my original question, sorry for any confusion. </p>

<p>Just a quick update</p>

<p>My dad spoke with the dean around 4 and the dean said that my phone is clear and I will not be receiving any disciplinary actions. He said that he will schedule a parent meeting. But, he did not say when I can pick up my phone. At this point, since my I am clear, am I allowed to demand for my phone’s return? </p>

<p>Well, I would go in on Monday and say “May I have my phone back please?”</p>

<p>@skieurope the only problem is that we are currently on Spring Break…</p>