The lucky ladies of Lakeland, Florida,
no longer have to shake their bras when city cops search,
them thanks to a new policy.
According to the city’s chief of police, officers cannot ask
women to shake their bras “unless the situation meets strict
exceptions.” It is not clear what those strict exceptions are.
The policy was changed in
response to an incident in which a 29-year-old woman was pulled
over by a city cop and searched for drugs.
The report from State Attorney Jerry Hill details what happened
to driver Zoe Brugger on May 21. Lakeland Police officer Dustin
Fetz initially stopped Brugger and her boyfriend, Larry Fields,
saying the Toyota they were in had a headlight out.The investigation revealed that Officer Fetz suspected Brugger
might have been carrying drugs, so he asked her to “pull her shirt
up, pull her bra out from her breasts, and to shake.”
A silent video of the search went viral, and the state attorney
said the practice “was demeaning, ineffective and possibly
dangerous.”
After the initial review of the incident, the officer, Dustin
Fetz, was not punished because requiring the woman to shake out her
bra “did not violate police search policy or the law.”
He did serve a one-day-suspension for “misusing recording
equipment because he had his car camera turned on during the
incident but not his microphone.”
According to the State Attorney’s Office report, the officer
said having woman shake their ta-tas “is a known technique that is
used by some LPD officers” but they were never “formally being
trained to do this.”
Lakeland police are also now required to use an officer of the
same gender to conduct body searches unless extreme circumstances
exist.
Those circumstances are:
– The suspect is thought to be carrying a weapon.
– The suspect is thought to be an immediate flight risk.
– The circumstances put the officer’s safety at risk.
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