About Strip Search
A strip search is a practice of searching a person for weapons or other contraband suspected of being hidden on their body or inside their clothing, and not found by performing a frisk search, by requiring the person to remove some or all of his or her clothing.
Child Q: Strip-search schoolgirl head teacher steps down
... The school s governing body has claimed teachers were " not aware that a Strip Search was taking place"...
Anger and grief as crowds rally to support Child Q
... Jacqui and several others say they felt particularly traumatised after hearing how the 15-year-old was Strip Searched by two female police officers, and made to take off her sanitary towel...
Strip-searched Hackney teenager to sue Met Police
... It added three police constables had been served with notices last year advising them they were under investigation for misconduct, " over their roles in either carrying out the Strip Search or involvement in supervising it"...
Met Police apologise after officers strip-search Hackney schoolgirl
... Her family strongly believe the Strip Search was a racist incident, and the review found her experiences are " unlikely to have been the same" had she not been black...
Koshka Duff: Professor says she faced victim blaming over police claim
...A professor who won an apology from police over sexist language during a Strip Search has said she feels like she has been on trial for eight years...
Koshka Duff: Met apology to woman over language in strip search
... She was taken to Stoke Newington police station, where Sgt Kurtis Howard approved the Strip Search...
Jailed Ian Watkins 'had concealed phone in prison'
... The 42-year-old produced a small white telephone after a Strip Search in HMP Wakefield in March last year, Leeds Crown Court heard...
Koshka Duff: Met apology to woman over language in strip search
The Metropolitan Police has apologised to A Woman for the " sexist, derogatory and unacceptable language used" while she was being strip-searched.
Dr Koshka Duff was after offering a legal advice card to a black teenager during his stop-and-search.
On CCTV footage, officers can be heard laughing about her hair, clothes and talking about her underwear.
The Force said it had settled her claim and " sincerely apologised".
Dr Duff, who is now an assistant professor at the University of Nottingham, was trying to give the " know your rights" card to a 15-year-old boy in London.
The officers accused her of obstruction and arrested her.
She told The Bbc she decided to act in The Spirit of " passive resistance" and went limp rather than walking to The Police van willingly.
She was taken to Stoke Newington Police Station , where Sgt Kurtis Howard approved the Strip Search .
Source of news: bbc.com