Australia New South Wales music festival in
Sydney in 2017 Following the introduction of a controversial law in 2001,
New South Wales Police were given the power to deploy
drug detection dogs at major public events such as
music festivals, inside licensed premises (venues that serve alcohol) and at stations across the
Sydney Trains network. In late 2014, reports were first published alleging that NSW Police were routinely using drug detection dog indications as a justification for conducting invasive strip searches, particularly at major events such as music festivals. At these events, officers have employed the use of structures such as
ticket booths, tents, makeshift partitions and police vans to strip search attendees. In some cases, it was alleged that these structures did not offer adequate privacy to individuals being searched, leaving them exposed to other festivalgoers or officers outside. After stripping partially or completely naked, festival patrons have been asked to do things such as lift their breasts or genitals, spread their buttocks apart or squat and cough. Similar searches have reportedly been conducted during drug detection dog operations at
train stations and licensed venues as well. In October 2018, the
Law Enforcement Conduct Commission launched a formal investigation into the use of strip searches by NSW Police. In a final report handed down in December 2020, the Commission found that "a recurrent issue throughout the inquiry was the failure of officers to comply with, or at least to properly account for their compliance with, the legal thresholds for conducting a strip search". In several cases investigated by the Commission, it was found that officers had acted unlawfully. A trial for the class action is expected to be held in mid-2025.
Victoria In the early hours of 7 August 1994, approximately 40 officers from
Victoria Police took part in a raid at the Tasty nightclub in
Melbourne, a popular venue for
LGBT partygoers. Over the course of seven hours, all 463 staff and patrons inside the venue were detained and strip searched, supposedly under the auspices of finding illicit drugs. A class action subsequently launched against Victoria Police was finalised in 1996, with more than 200 patrons who were present at time each being awarded $10,000 in damages. In 2014, Victoria Police formally apologised for the Tasty nightclub raid.
Canada As part of
policing operations for the 2010 G20 Summit in Toronto, a makeshift detention centre was setup by
Toronto Police at a disused film studio on
Eastern Avenue. Over the course of the event, approximately 900 protestors were detained at the facility, where they were subjected poor conditions and mistreatment by police. While being held at the Eastern Avenue detention centre, some protesters were strip searched, with officers using cubicles described as “large plywood cells without roofs” to conduct these searches. In 2014, footage obtained by
Vice showed that
CCTV cameras could see into these cubicles, leading to fears that protestors detained at the facility were filmed while strip searches were taking place. When asked by Vice, Toronto Police did not respond to questions about the matter and it’s not clear if any such footage exists. In August 2020, the
Toronto Police Services Board agreed to pay $16.5 million dollars to settle a class action lawsuit brought on behalf of around 1100 people who were arrested during the 2010 G20 protests, including some who were detained at the Eastern Avenue detention centre.
United Kingdom In 2014, it was reported that more than 4,600 children had been strip-searched by the
Metropolitan Police in the preceding five years, with the youngest being ten years old. This was out of a total of 134,000 strip-searched. A charity described the number of younger children searched in this way as being "disturbing". In 2022, it was reported that 650 children (between 10 and 17 years old) had been strip-searched by the same agency between 2018 and 2020. 58% of these children were described as
black by the arresting officer; in 2018, this rose to 75%. 70% of children who were strip-searched without an
appropriate adult present – contrary to official Metropolitan Police guidance – were black boys. In January 2022, the Metropolitan Police formally apologised to Dr Koshka Duff, an academic who was strip searched at
Stoke Newington police station in 2013. The woman had been arrested for obstruction after attempting to offer a legal advice card to a black teenager during a
stop and search in
London. Once in custody, a Sergeant ordered two female officers to strip search the woman. Her clothes were cut off and she claimed that once she was naked the officers touched her breasts and between her legs. She described the search as a "very violating and humiliating experience" and said she was left with multiple injuries and
PTSD after the incident. The woman was charged with obstructing and assaulting police but was later acquitted. In 2018, the officer who ordered the strip search of Dr Duff was cleared of gross misconduct charges. In November 2021, a civil claim brought against the Metropolitan Police was settled, with Dr Duff being awarded £6,000 in damages. In January 2022, CCTV footage of the incident was made public. In the footage, the Sergeant who ordered the search can be heard telling officers to "treat her like a terrorist", while others can be heard making derogatory comments about the woman's underwear and pubic hair. After the footage was released, a Metropolitan Police spokesperson apologised for the "sexist, derogatory and unacceptable language used" by the officers involved. In March 2022, it was reported that Metropolitan Police officers had strip searched a 15-year-old black girl at her school in
Hackney in 2020 after she was wrongly accused of possessing
cannabis. The 15-year-old, referred to as "Child Q", was menstruating at the time and was searched without her parents present. Shortly after the story was made public, a protest involving several hundred people was held outside Stoke Newington police station, amid concerns that the girl had been targeted because of her race. In September 2023, the
Independent Officer for Police Conduct (IOPC) recommended disciplinary action against four of the officers involved in the incident. In 2023,
Sky News launched an investigation into the use of strip searches by
Greater Manchester Police. In a story published in July, three women alleged that they had been subjected to unjustified strip searches while in police custody. In one instance, a 38-year-old woman claimed that she was drugged and raped by officers after being arrested in 2021. After the story was published, several other women contacted Sky News alleging that they had been subjected to similar searches by Greater Manchester Police and other police forces across the UK. In response to the story, Greater Manchester Mayor
Andy Burnham announced that former Victims Commissioner
Vera Baird would conduct a formal inquiry into the treatment of women in police custody by Greater Manchester Police, with a focus on strip searches. A final report is due to be published in late 2024. ==Notable lawsuits==