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#REDIRECT [[New South Wales Police Force strip search scandal]]
{{Main|New South Wales Police Force Strip Search Scandal}}
{{Multiple issues|
{{Notability|date=February 2022}}
{{Overly detailed|date=February 2022}}
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<!-- Important, do not remove this line before article has been created. -->A list of publicly reported incidents involving strip searches conducted by members of the [[New South Wales Police Force]]. Incidents are listed chronologically in order of the date they were first reported.

== 2006 ==
'''June –''' The [[Ombudsmen in Australia|New South Wales Ombudsman]] publishes a comprehensive 400-page review of the ''Police Powers (Drug Detection Dogs) Act 2001'', legislation giving NSW Police the power to deploy specially trained drug detection dogs at large scale public events, licensed venues and on selected routes across [[Sydney|Sydney's]] public transport network.<ref>New South Wales Ombudsman. [https://www.ombo.nsw.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0020/4457/Review-of-the-Police-Powers-Drug-Detection-Dogs-Part-1_October-2006.pdf Review of the Police Powers (Drug Detection Dogs) Act 2001]. (Report, June 2006) Pg. i,</ref> Figures published in the report reveal that during a two-year review period between February 2002 and February 2004, officers had conducted just over 10,000 personal searches resulting from positive drug detection dog indications.<ref>Review of the Police Powers (Drug Detection Dogs) Act 2001 Pg. 29</ref> Most of those searches had either been a pat down search or a search of a person's belongings, however in rare cases, officers had proceeded to conduct a strip search. The report mentioned two incidents which had been observed by the Ombudsman's office, one involving a woman who had been stopped inside a pub and another involving a man who was stopped at a train station. Drugs and [[Syringe|drug paraphernalia]] respectively had been found in both cases before a strip search was conducted.<ref name=":0">Review of the Police Powers (Drug Detection Dogs) Act 2001 Pg. 139-140</ref>

In another incident, a complaint had been made after a man was allegedly stopped by a drug detection dog twice within the space of a one-and-a-half-hour period. On the second occasion, the man had voluntarily accompanied officers to a [[police station]] where he was "subjected to the humiliation of a strip search". It's alleged that one of the officers suggested to the man that he "might have sat next to someone on a train or bus that had been smoking [[Cannabis (drug)|cannabis]]" when no drugs were found during the search.<ref>Review of the Police Powers (Drug Detection Dogs) Act 2001 Pg. 55</ref> The report also mentioned another case which had been recorded on the police database. In that instance, a commuter had been strip searched inside a [[Sydney Trains|train station]] toilet after an indication from a drug detection dog. No drugs were found and the man was later allowed to leave.<ref name=":0" />

== 2009 ==
'''February –''' The New South Wales Ombudsman publishes a final review of the ''[[Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002 (NSW)|Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002]]'', legislation governing the powers given to police in [[New South Wales]].<ref>New South Wales Ombudsman. [https://www.ombo.nsw.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0018/6048/Law-Enforcement-Act-Parts-1-3.pdf Review of certain functions conferred on police under the Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002]. (Report, February 2009), Foreword</ref> One key aspect of the review were safeguards in relation to personal searches conducted by NSW Police.<ref>Review of certain functions conferred on police under the Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002 Pg. i</ref> A number of case studies were referred to in the report, including one incident involving a drug detection dog operation which was monitored by the Ombudsman's office. A summary of that incident read: '''"'''We observed frisk and ordinary searches performed on people attending a youth event who were indicated by a drug detection dog as they moved from the train station to the venue. On this occasion, police set up a number of tents, which provided six separate spaces in which searches could be conducted and advised us that this had been done to provide people with a level of privacy. Once an indication had been made, two police officers were introduced and the person was taken to a tent where the search was conducted. While we only observed frisk and ordinary searches, strip searches were also performed in the tents. We did not observe any searches outside the tents".<ref>Review of certain functions conferred on police under the Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002 Pg. 87</ref>

== 2012 ==
'''January''' '''25 –''' The [[Hack (radio program)|Hack]] program on [[Triple J]] broadcasts a half hour special discussing the issue of drug detection dogs at music festivals in [[New South Wales]] and other Australian states. The program hears from a number of callers who were searched by police in the aftermath of a positive drug detection dog indication, including some who were strip searched. Many of the callers admitted that were in possession of small quantities of drugs when they were stopped by police.<ref>Triple J Hack (ABC). [https://web.archive.org/web/20120129224430/http://www.abc.net.au:80/triplej/hack/stories/s3415816.htm Sniffer Dog Special]. 25 January 2012 [Audio File] ([https://web.archive.org/web/20120129224430/http://www.abc.net.au:80/triplej/hack/stories/s3415816.htm Recording])</ref>

== 2013 ==
'''March 7–''' A 53-year-old man tells news.com.au that he was strip searched while attending a [[Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras|Mardi Gras]] afterparty event at the [[Royal Botanical Gardens, Sydney|Royal Botanical Gardens]]. The man says he was stopped by a drug detection dog at the entrance of the event while picking up tickets for a friend. After being taken to a police search area, it's alleged that he was first made to undergo a pat down search before being told to drop his pants and underwear. The 53-year-old says that there was a gap in the tarpaulin covering the area where search was taking place, leaving him exposed to onlookers while this was happening. "They could see] my bare butt," he told [[news.com.au]]. "I was not comfortable with that at all". No drugs were reportedly found during the search. Speaking about the incident, the 53-year-old said "It's a complete abuse of their powers ... I feel embarrassed and humiliated." The man subsequently launched legal action against New South Wales Police,<ref>Daniel Piotrowski. [https://www.news.com.au/national/man-forced-to-strip-naked-at-mardi-gras/news-story/db27ac61e03c878ef7191366fe2b232d Man 'forced to strip naked' at Mardi Gras event]. news.com.au, 7 March 2013</ref> with the matter later being [[Settlement (litigation)|settled out of court]] for an undisclosed amount.<ref>acon. [https://www.acon.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/Policing-Advocacy-document.pdf Policing at NSW Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Intersex and Queer (LGBTIQ) Events and Venues.] (Report, September 2013) Pg. 5</ref> The incident was one of dozens of alleged cases of [[police misconduct]] which reportedly taken place at the 2013 Mardi Gras Parade and subsequent afterparty celebrations.<ref>Obriens Solicitors. [https://obriensolicitors.com.au/gl-v-state-of-new-south-wales/ GL v State of NSW: Assault, battery, false imprisonment]. (Date not recorded)</ref>

== 2014 ==
'''October 10 –''' An article published by [[Vice Media|Vice]] reports that NSW Police are routinely using drug detection dog indications as a justification for conducting strip searches, particularly at large scale events such as [[music festival]]s. In one instance, a 24-year-old man says he was strip searched while volunteering at the [[Stereosonic]] music festival in 2013. The man had reportedly been stopped by a dog at the entrance of the event. "They took me into a little tent. I took off all my clothes. They're like, 'You don't have anything'" the 24-year-old recalled. "It was really humiliating. The fact that they didn't apologise was ridiculous and they were so aggressive with their questioning". In another instance, a 23-year-old student alleged that he had been strip searched three times over the past three years, twice at music festivals and once at [[Kings Cross railway station, Sydney|King's Cross Train Station]]. On each occasion, he says he was in possession of a small amount of cannabis, which he claims he handed over to officers before the searches took place. In each instance, he was reportedly asked to remove his clothes, turn his back to police and squat. "It happens at festivals all the time. They've got booths set up to strip search you. It's basically a known thing that where there's sniffer dogs, they'll be strip searches as well" he said.<ref name=":1">{{Cite news|last=Gregoire|first=Paul|date=10 October 2014|title=Strip Searches are Now Routine in New South Wales|work=Vice|url=https://www.vice.com/en/article/bn53qz/strip-searches-are-routine-at-new-south-wales-music-festivals}}</ref>

The article also featured an account from a 39-year-old man who had allegedly been strip searched at the 2012 Mardi Gras Toy Box party after being stopped by a drug detection dog. The man says he had informed officers he was in possession of [[ketamine]] before the search was conducted. "I was taken down into the holding pen. It was a fenced off area, with black plastic around chicken wire fencing. I was basically told to strip down. It was very intimidating, because I had these three cops in my face. I was basically bare-naked". Speaking about the issue, drug educator Paul Dillon, Director of Drug and Alcohol Training and Research Australia (DARTA) said: "I can remember one girl who was totally traumatised by the experience" ... "She'd been strip searched and was mortified. The girl had no drugs on her, was not a drug user, but had been through a very traumatic experience. That event got me to question... is the benefit worth the potential risks to people who have no contact with drugs?"<ref name=":1" />

'''December 2 –''' The [[The Sydney Morning Herald|Sydney Morning Herald]] reports that strip searches following drug detection dog indications have risen 32% since 2009. An article titled "Police in the Doghouse over Strip Searches" features firsthand accounts from two men who were strip searched by police after being stopped during separate drug detection dog operations. Both men had admitted to being in possession of illicit substances before being searched. One man was subsequently issued with a cannabis caution.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Corderoy|first=Amy|date=2 December 2014|title=Police in doghouse over strip searches|work=Sydney Morning Herald|url=https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/police-in-doghouse-over-strip-searches-20141201-11xpzh.html}}</ref>

'''December 2 –''' Speaking to [[The Project (Australian TV program)|The Project]], a 24-year-old commuter says he was strip searched by police at Redfern Train Station after an indication from a drug detection dog. The man says he was heading home after having lunch with a friend when he was approached by a group of four police officers who claimed that they had seen him throw something into a rubbish bin. The 24-year-old said he had been speaking with the officers for several minutes when the dog came over and sat down beside him. It's alleged that he was initially subjected to a pat down search in view of other commuters before having his belongings emptied out onto the ground. The 24-year-old says that when he asked the officers if they felt anything for the embarrassment that they had caused him, one replied, "You should be glad that we're keeping you safe". It's alleged that he was then taken to a private area where a strip search was performed. "Well basically they just take all of your clothes off, they strip you down" ... "it's quite a degrading process" the 24-year-old recalled. "You actually get told to squat and you actually get told to cough". Speaking about the incident, he told presenters that, "I remember a quote somewhere, laws become unjust when they start to effect people that they weren't written to effect" ... "I think that's definitely the case with these laws".<ref>The Project (Network 10). [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-hVWxKYcu0 False Positives]. 2 December 2014 [Video File]  <nowiki>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-hVWxKYcu0</nowiki></ref>

== 2015 ==
'''May 31 –''' [[BuzzFeed News|Buzzfeed News]] speaks to a 23-year-old medical student who was allegedly strip searched at the 2014 Defqon Music Festival after a drug detection dog indication. The man says he was stopped at the entrance of the event when the dog began "sniffing around his feet" before being taken to a police search area, which he described as a "tent with makeshift cubicles made out of security fencing". After initially being directed to remove his shoes and empty his bag and pockets, the man says he was then told to take start taking off his clothes, alleging that police told him to "drop your daks" before instructing him to "pick up your balls and move them to one side". The man says he could hear another male festivalgoer undergoing a similar search in the cubicle next to him while this was happening. He was later released when no drugs were found. The 23-year-old described the incident as "embarrassing and humiliating", telling Buzzfeed that it "made for a shit start to a day that was supposed to be a fun day out with my mates".<ref>{{Cite news|last=Lee|first=Alex|date=31 May 2015|title=Should Police Sniffer Dogs Be Banned From Music Festivals?|work=Buzzfeed News|url=https://www.buzzfeed.com/alexlee/politicians-claim-the-drug-dogs-dont-work}}</ref>
[[File:Sniff Off Volunteers FOMO 2020.jpg|thumb|258x258px|Sniff Off volunteers at the FOMO music festival in [[Parramatta]] in 2020]]
'''November 6 –''' In an article discussing the [[Greens New South Wales|NSW Greens]] "Sniff Off" campaign, a 28-year-old electrician says he was strip searched by police at [[Ashfield railway station, Sydney|Ashfield Train Station]] after being stopped by a drug detection dog. Speaking to Vice, the man says he was initially patted down before being taken into a public toilet cubicle and asked to remove his clothes. Recalling the incident, he said that "having to get naked in a small space with a pair of large men with guns strapped to their hips was humiliating". The man claimed that he was deliberately targeted by police on the basis of his looks. "I walked past the dog, then the cop grabbed me and asked me to come back," ... "the dog wasn't really that interested, but then the cop was like, 'The dog's detected drugs on you'". The 28-year-old said he later spoke to another man of similar appearance who was also searched despite having no drugs on his person.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Gregoire|first=Paul|date=6 November 2015|title=A Facebook Site Is Helping Australians Dodge Drug-Sniffing Dogs|work=Vice|url=https://www.vice.com/en/article/5gjqmz/a-facebook-site-is-helping-sydney-residents-avoid-drug-dogs}}</ref>

'''November 28 –''' A performer says she was made to squat naked in front of a female police officer while being strip searched at the 2011 [[Parklife Music Festival]] in Sydney. Speaking to music industry website HowlandEchoes, the woman said she was she was stopped at the entrance of the event after a drug detection dog "decided to take an interest " in her bag. "A cop took me into a prison wagon and made me strip naked, squat... the whole nine-yards. I'd started crying in my show make-up, angry and humiliated that somehow I had no consent in this process. She tried to make small talk with me while my clothes were in a pile against the bars and I'm barefoot on the well-trodden muddy floor".<ref name=":2">{{Cite news|last=Ziegler|first=Lauren|date=28 November 2015|title=I Was Strip Searched Before Performing At A Festival|work=HowlandEchoes|url=https://howlandechoes.com/2015/11/strip-searched-performing-festival/}}</ref>

Describing what happened next, the woman said, "they pulled all my belongings outside onto the muddy ground and went through everything with a fine tooth comb. Nothing. They turn to my costume bag and start pulling everything out onto the dirty ground. Seeing the delicate tulle of my dress covered in mud sent me in near hysterics. I found my voice and insisted they search on a cleaner surface. The male cop ignored me. The female who had searched my body finally took pity and suggested he put the tentacle pieces on the bonnet of the car. His response? Open the stitching on one of the pieces and pull out the stuffing. He shrugged. "You've could have stored something in there". Speaking about the experience, the woman said, "it was violating, destructive and left me totally shaken for weeks".<ref name=":2" />

'''December 2''' – The Hack Program on Triple J speaks to two women who were allegedly strip searched on their way to the Strawberry Fields music festival near the New South Wales – [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]] Border. It's not stated whether the officers involved in the alleged incident were members of New South Wales Police or [[Victoria Police]], though a subsequent report suggested that it may have been the latter.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Sarah McVeigh, Tom Tilley, Ange McCormack|date=2 December 2015|title=Sniffer dogs and strip searches at music festivals|work=Triple J Hack (ABC)|url=https://www.abc.net.au/triplej/programs/hack/strip-searches-at-festivals:-what-are-your-rights/6984906}}</ref> Responding to the story, a caller to the program said he was made to undergo a similar search at a music festival in Sydney. "I was searched at Stereosonic 2014. I had to do some very embarrassing things like take all my clothes off, then I was asked to bend over and squat, then I was actually asked to bens my testicles and my shaft and separate them in case I was hiding anything there and pull back my foreskin". He said he was not carrying any illicit substances and had initially been stopped by police after attempting to move out of the path of a drug detection dog.<ref name=":3">Triple J Hack (ABC). [https://www.abc.net.au/triplej/programs/hack/hack-wednesday/6974662 Strip searches, Facebook after Zuckerberg & tattoos after death.] 2 December 2015 [Audio File]</ref>

Texting into the program, another listener wrote: "My friend had no drugs, was told to strip and squat by New South Wales Police, they even made her remove her tampon".<ref name=":3" />

== 2016 ==
'''November 19 –''' An article published on the Triple J Hack website features a Q and A about the legal rights of patrons at music festivals. One person asks: "My friend had a sniffer dog sit next to him at Big Day Out. So they took him into a back tent and [asked him to] squat and even cough to see if anything came out. I couldn't believe it and said 'Is that legal?' They said yes because the sniffer dog gave them reasonable doubt that my friend had drugs on him".<ref>Triple J Hack (ABC). [https://www.abc.net.au/triplej/programs/hack/festival-rights/8039748 Strip, squat, and cough: Your music festival legal FAQs answered]. 19 November 2016</ref>

== 2017 ==

'''May 8 –''' In an article published by [[University of Sydney]] newspaper [[Honi Soit]], a 25-year-old political staffer recalled being strip searched by police at the Secret Garden music festival in February earlier that year. The woman had reportedly been stopped by a drug detection dog at the entrance of the event. "The dog was interested in me and sniffing me. It never sat down — something I understood to a be a positive indication" she said. The 25-year-old was reportedly taken into a tent by two female police officers, who then instructed her to remove her clothes. She says she initially took off her shorts before stopping "in the hope that reason would prevail", at which point the officers reportedly told her to "keep going". It's alleged that she was made to perform a naked squat before having to ask to put her clothes back on and collect her belongings, which had been "scattered across the tent floor" by police. "They definitely didn't say sorry. They had no sense that they'd put me through any kind of humiliating or uncomfortable situation. They weren't treating humans like humans," she said.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Noore|first=Natasha|date=8 May 2017|title=Police and the people.|work=Honi Soit|url=http://honisoit.com/2017/05/police-and-the-people/}}</ref>

'''November 14 –''' Buzzfeed News reports allegations from two women who say they were strip searched after attending a pro-refugee rally at in [[Eveleigh, New South Wales|Eveleigh]]. The women, aged 51 and 43, say they were arrested by police when the protest moved into the inner-city suburb of [[Redfern, New South Wales|Redfern]]. It's alleged that officers had cited a "failure to move on" as the reason for the arrest before transporting the pair to [[Newtown, New South Wales|Newtown]] police station. "I was informed that they would need to conduct a strip-search and this was for my protection because I was in their care and custody and there might be something on my person I could hurt myself with" one of the women said. "I was asked to turn around and squat and asked if I had any contraband". It's alleged that the other woman was made to remove her bra but refused a request to remove her underwear. "They said 'take off the bra' at which I was incredulous and then they said 'jewellery and shoes' and asked me to take off my underwear," she told BuzzFeed. "I said 'this is ridiculous, I have my period' and so they did a pat down". Both women were later released without charge.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Rushton|first=Gina|date=14 November 2017|title=Two Women Say They Were Strip-Searched For Protesting About Australia's Offshore Detention Regime|work=Buzzfeed News|url=https://www.buzzfeed.com/ginarushton/two-women-say-they-were-strip-searched-for-protesting-about?utm_term=.uhye74z0p#.ag82Dwv7N}}</ref>
[[File:Drug Dog Newtown Station 2017.webm|thumb|279x279px|An excerpt from a video of a drug detection dog operation at [[Newtown railway station, Sydney|Newtown Train Station]] in 2017]]
Complaints made by the two women were later the subject of separate internal investigations by NSW Police, who initially recommended that "not sustained" findings be made against the officers who had strip searched the pair. Following the intervention of the [[Law Enforcement Conduct Commission]] in May 2018, a subsequent police investigation recommended that "sustained" findings be made against both officers.<ref>Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. [https://www.lecc.nsw.gov.au/news-and-publications/publications/nswpf-misconduct-matter-investigation-lmi1703786-newtown-amended.pdf Misconduct matter investigation – LMI1703786], July 2020 Pg. 18-19</ref> Earlier sustained findings had already been made against the officer who had ordered that the strip searches be conducted<ref>Misconduct matter investigation – LMI1703786 Pg. 12</ref> (see [[New South Wales Police Force Strip Search Scandal (Law Enforcement Conduct Commission Investigations)#Investigation into the Arrest, Detention and Strip Searching of Two Female Protestors|Investigation into the Arrest, Detention and Strip Searching of Two Female Protestors]]). In September 2019, it was reported that NSW Police had issued a formal apology for the "distress and embarrassment" caused by the incident, agreeing to settle a civil case launched by the two women for an undisclosed amount.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Gregoire|first=Paul|date=17 September 2019|title=NSW Police Apologise for Strip Searches: An Interview With Socialist Alliance's Evans and Price. Sydney Criminal Lawyers|work=Sydney Criminal Lawyers|url=https://www.sydneycriminallawyers.com.au/blog/nsw-police-apologise-for-strip-searches-an-interview-with-socialist-alliances-evans-and-price/}}</ref>

'''December 28 –''' Speaking to the Hack program on Triple J, one woman says that she and a friend were strip searched by police at a music festival earlier in the year after being stopped by an undercover officer. "Their rationale for pulling us aside was that I tried to avoid the sniffer dogs. This may sound silly but I am genuinely afraid of dogs and I'm not surprised that I unknowingly avoided them. They strip searched us and I was even asked to squat. As a female it was grossly degrading to go through, and they found nothing on us".<ref>{{Cite news|last=Medhora|first=Shalailah|date=28 December 2017|title=Know your rights when it comes to drug searches at festivals|work=Triple J Hack (ABC)|url=https://www.abc.net.au/triplej/programs/hack/know-your-rights-at-festivals/9290824}}</ref>

== 2018 ==

'''May 1 –''' Writing for news.com.au, a man says that he was made to strip to his underwear at the [[Groovin' the Moo|Groovin the Moo]] music festival after an indication from a drug detection dog.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Blair|first=Alex|date=1 May 2018|title=What it's like to be strip searched|work=news.com.au|url=https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/real-life/news-life/what-its-like-to-be-strip-searched/news-story/bcb5183dcfc2c2bc05057bcbb88079e2}}</ref>

'''May 29''' '''–''' The [[District Court of New South Wales]] hands down a judgement in the case of a 53-year-old man who was strip searched at Kings Cross police station in 2015. The 53-year-old had been detained in [[Darlinghurst, New South Wales|Darlinghurst]] in the early hours of March 24 after being approached by three police officers. He was later transported to Kings Cross Police Station where during a strip search he was told to "strip to a naked state, squat and expose his genitals". In handing down his ruling, District Court Justice Phillip Taylor found that the officers involved had acted with "an almost reckless indifference" before awarding the man $112,387 in damages plus [[Court costs|legal costs]]. "The state's concession in relation to the strip-search illustrates that the police officers have used a most invasive power without the slightest justification," he wrote in his judgement.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Thompson|first=Angus|date=23 June 2019|title='Invasive power without the slightest justification': Man awarded $112k over illegal strip search|work=Sydney Morning Herald|url=https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/a-most-invasive-power-without-the-slightest-justification-20190622-p52090.html}}</ref>

The incident was later the subject of an investigation by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. In a final report handed down in May 2020, the Commission found that the actions of the senior constable who had made the decision to detain the man and ordered he be strip searched in custody amounted to "serious misconduct",<ref>Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. [https://www.lecc.nsw.gov.au/news-and-publications/publications/operation-sandbridge-s132-report-may-2020-bw.pdf Operation Sandbridge] (May 2020) Paragraph 5.9</ref> suggesting that the woman was "indifferent to the legal limits of her powers as a police officer"<ref>Operation Sandbridge Paragraph 5.7</ref> (see [[New South Wales Police Force Strip Search Scandal (Law Enforcement Conduct Commission Investigations)#Operation Sandbridge|Operation Sandbridge]]).

'''June 7 –''' The [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation|ABC]] reports on an upcoming legal challenge being mounted by the New South Wales Greens in response to a proposed plan by NSW Police to deny entry to ticketholders at an upcoming performance by Above and Beyond at Sydney Showground that weekend. Speaking to the ABC, one man recalled being strip searched a music festival several years earlier. "The police officer who was speaking to me said that the dog had indicated that I had drugs on me. And I was like 'Oh, I don't have anything on me'. They wanted to search my wallet and bag I was like 'fine, totally, have a look through it, nothing in there'". It's alleged that police then informed the man that he would be taken to a van to be strip searched. "Everyone walking into the festival can see that you're being escorted over to the van to be searched. So I go over there, more questioning, you have to take off all your clothes, one by one and they search all the lining of all the clothes and then you have to bend over and they search shining a torch into cavities, I had to lift my scrotum, the police search every little bit of me". He told the ABC that the experience was "humiliating".<ref>{{Cite news|last=Crealy|first=Louise|date=7 June 2018|title=Festival goers take NSW Police to court over sniffer dogs|work=ABC|url=https://www.abc.net.au/radio/programs/am/festival-goers-take-nsw-police-to-court-over-sniffer-dogs/9844038}}</ref>

'''June 10 –''' [[SBS World News|SBS News]] speaks to a woman who was denied entry to the Above and Beyond performance at Sydney Showground after being strip searched by police. The woman says she was made to "strip and squat" after being stopped by a drug detection dog. "I feel a bit traumatised 'cos like I walked past and then there were just like cops stopping me, and then they're like really intimidating you during the whole strip search. They ask you a lot of questions". The woman had reportedly been ejected from the venue despite no drugs being found.<ref>SBS News. [https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=1951604774850702&ref=sharing Drug dogs go Above and Beyond the law]. 12 June 2018 (Originally aired on 10 June 2018) [Video File]</ref>'''June 12 –''' The Hack program on Triple J speaks to a ticketholder who was banned from the [[Sydney Olympic Park]] precinct for six months after being strip searched by police at the Above & Beyond performance on June 9. The man had reportedly been stopped by a drug detection dog on his way into the event. "I tried to get into the venue with my friends, the dog went up to me once didn't detect went away and comes back... it sat, three officers took me into a side room and searched me," he recalled. "They made me squat and cough and all that... they didn't find anything because there wasn't anything... and then I was issued with a six month ban from the venue." It's alleged that after searching the man, police asked to see his ticket, but he refused. "I didn't want to show them my ticket because it's my private property and I felt like my rights had been violated enough".<ref>{{Cite news|last=Dias|first=Avani|date=12 June 2018|title=Sniffer dog update: five people without drugs refused entry at Sydney gig|work=Triple J Hack (ABC)|url=https://www.abc.net.au/triplej/programs/hack/five-refused-entry-from-sydney-concert-after-tough-sniffer-dog/9860238}}</ref>

A photo of the six month ban notice issued to the man was circulated on social media after the event. Responding to questions from news.com.au, NSW Police denied suggestions that he was banned from the venue on the basis of a positive drug dog indication, instead citing "bad behaviour" while also claiming that the man did not have a ticket for the event. A Sniff Off volunteer spoke to the man in the aftermath of the incident disputed those claims, instead suggesting that the notice had been issued because the man and his group of friends were arguing with the officers who conducted the strip search.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Graham|first=Ben|date=11 June 2018|title=Festival-goer barred for six months despite testing negative for drugs|work=news.com.au|url=https://www.news.com.au/national/nsw-act/crime/festivalgoer-barred-for-six-months-despite-testing-negative-for-drugs/news-story/4509b40c6d07b7d3f769c955c37b269e}}</ref>

'''June 16 –''' A woman who attended the Above and Beyond performance at Sydney Showground on June 9 says she was strip searched and ejected from the event after police witnessed her handing a [[Australian fifty-dollar note|fifty-dollar note]] to her boyfriend. Speaking to entertainment news website goat.com.au, the woman says she had given him the money to buy drinks when she was approached by a group of officers. "They just said 'We can't speak to you here, put your hands in a fist behind your back, come outside and we will explain everything'" she recalled. "They took my bag and everything off me [including my phone] and sent me straight to a booth to be searched" ... "I'd already asked multiple times 'Why am I here, what's going on? But [the female officer performing the search] kept saying 'Not sure, I wasn't in there'". It's alleged that another officer then entered the booth to speak with the female officer outside. "She comes back in and says 'It's been reported that you were involved in a drug deal". The woman says that the female officer then proceeded to conduct a strip search, at one point asking her to squat while the search was taking place. "I honestly felt so uncomfortable, and absolutely violated – which she could see – so she then made the comment 'It's more uncomfortable for me, don't worry!'". The woman alleged that police later went through her phone before ejecting her from the event after claiming that she was intoxicated.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Calloway|first=Mark|date=16 June 2018|title=An Above & Beyond Punter Strip-Searched By Police And Sent Home After Handing Her Boyfriend $50 For The Bar|work=GOAT|url=https://goat.com.au/festivals/the-above-beyond-festival-goer-subjected-to-strip-search-expulsion-and-ban-notice-after-handing-her-boyfriend-50-to-get-some-drinks-at-the-bar/}}</ref>

'''November 13 –''' Speaking to the ABC, a woman says she was left feeling "anxious and paranoid' after being wrongly strip searched at a music festival. It's alleged that her ticket was confiscated by police despite no drugs being found. "Even though I don't carry anything, what's the chances of me getting forced into the booth and strip searched and then be refused entry again?" she said.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Cohen|first=Hagar|date=13 November 2018|title=Number of strip searches in NSW doubles in a year, triggering Law Commission inquiry|work=ABC|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-11-13/nsw-police-strip-search-rise-triggers-law-commission-inquiry/10491032}}</ref>

'''October 1 –''' Writing on Facebook, a woman says that a young female acquaintance was left feeling "distraught" and "humiliated" after being strip searched at the [[Yours and Owls]] music festival in [[Wollongong]] in the aftermath of a drug detection dog indication. It's alleged that the woman was made to "strip naked in front of other girls" and had her "privates rubbed" by police during the incident. No illicit substances were reportedly found during the search.<ref>Tammy Robinson. [https://www.facebook.com/WINNewsIllawarra/posts/2396739013676161 Facebook], 1 Oct. 2018, Retrieved 12 November 2021</ref>

'''November 12''' – The ABC reports that the state's newly established police watchdog, the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission, will be launching a formal investigation into the use strip searches by NSW Police, citing an increase in complaints surrounding the practice. The report features a firsthand account from a woman who was strip searched by police while celebrating her 21st birthday in the [[Sydney central business district|city.]] The woman had reportedly been attempting to adjust her clothing when she said she noticed two men looking at her. "They were in, like all black clothing. They were both just standing outside the female bathrooms, staring. They weren't talking to anyone, they weren't really talking to each other. I got really, really nervous, I was just really uncomfortable" she recalled. The woman says she went into the toilets with a female friend to adjust her leotard, alleging that when she came out, she was approached by the two men, who revealed themselves as undercover police officers.<ref name=":4">{{Cite news|last=Cohen|first=Hagar|date=12 November 2018|title=New inquiry investigates strip searches in NSW|work=ABC [Audio File]|url=https://www.abc.net.au/radio/programs/worldtoday/new-inquiry-investigates-strip-searches-in-nsw/10487886}}</ref>

'''December 20''' – Redfern Legal Centre's Samantha Lee speaks to the Hack program on Triple J about the use of strip searches by NSW Police. She says one of her clients was made to strip naked in front of two female police officers after being stopped by a drug detection dog at a music festival. "The dog didn't sit down and indicate [positively for drugs] but the person was escorted to a cubicle and searched," she said. "There was a table, they asked her to put her hands on the table, they then searched her bag, they then asked her to remove all of her clothing. They then inspected her body and continued questioning her while being strip searched. At the end of this process, nothing was found on her but she was then escorted off the premises and her ticket was confiscated".<ref>{{Cite news|last=Dias|first=Avani|date=20 December 2018|title=Festival-goers urged to know their rights after 'unlawful' strip searches for drugs|work=Triple J Hack (ABC)|url=https://www.abc.net.au/triplej/programs/hack/festivals-strip-search-drugs-app/10639576?fbclid=IwAR1TyQ3c6dwoCkUEEX3XFrf7UmVVVN6TwYkJQ-lCRwLJMF-Hb7-S82SaaIc}}</ref>

== 2019 ==
'''January 9''' – Speaking to news.com.au, a festivalgoer says he was strip searched by policefi at a music festival after being stopped by a drug detection dog. The man says he was preparing to enter the event with his fiancé and 18-year-old brother when they were approached by police. "We were walking to the entrance when an officer clicked his fingers at my fiancée and told the dog to sit". It's alleged that the man was told he would be arrested if he refused to submit to a strip search. "The whole time were treated like criminals and the police officers were aggressive, calling us liars," he said. "My brother was a little scared he was going to miss his first ever event." No illicit drugs were reportedly found and said the man says the experience made him feel "violated and cautious of authorities".<ref>{{Cite news|last=Pengilley|first=Victoria|date=9 January 2019|title='War on fun': Crackdown on unlawful strip searches|work=news.com.au|url=https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/real-life/news-life/war-on-fun-crackdown-on-unlawful-strip-searches/news-story/bf09506118696e0c6c3dc7e98e6db42e}}</ref>
[[File:Drug Detection Dog FOMO 2019.jpg|thumb|256x256px|A drug detection dog at the FOMO music festival in Parramatta in 2019]]
'''January 25''' – Speaking to Buzzfeed News, two festivalgoers say they were strip searched by police at separate music festivals following drug detection dog indications. In one incident, a 25-year-old man says he was stopped by officers as he was preparing to enter a music festival at Sydney Olympic Park in 2016. "They started accusing me of being really nervous and shaky," he said. "At that point I had about four police officers surrounding me." The man says he was then taken to a "cordoned-off area with a number of cubicles", where it's alleged that police initially searched his outer clothing and bag before taking him into a cubicle and instructing him to remove his clothes. "They ask you to lift up your genitals, my penis and whatever, to show it to them. Then I had to turn around, squat down, and get back up" he recalled. The man says that one of the officers continued to question him while the search was taking place, while another began "sniffing my phone as if he had some sixth sense, like he had drug detection powers with his own nose". He says he was released after "about five minutes", recalling that the officers were "a little peeved" that no drugs had been found during the search. "I was a little bit shocked because I hadn't [ever] had to get naked in front of people I don't want to get naked in front of, especially strangers," the 25-year-old said, recalling that he had "a bit of [[Stockholm syndrome|Stockholm Syndrome]]" and thanked the officers after the strip search had been completed. "They ignored me — they were visibly annoyed that they hadn't found anything."<ref name=":5">{{Cite news|last=Ryan|first=Hannah|date=25 January 2019|title="Humiliating And Embarrassing": This Is What It's Like To Be Strip-Searched At A Music Festival|work=Buzzfeed News|url=https://www.buzzfeed.com/hannahryan/strip-searching-festivals-australia-campaign}}</ref>

Several months later, the same man said he was again stopped by police when a drug detection dog "leapt on to him" as he was preparing to enter the Midnight Mafia music festival, which was being held at the same venue. It's alleged that officers told the man he "looked nervous" before leading him away to be strip searched. The 25-year-old said that this time the door of the booth was left open while the search was being conducted, recalling that when he asked the officers to close it, they told him that "it didn't matter and that nobody was looking". Speaking about the incident, he said the experience made him feel "powerless", telling Buzzfeed that "you're completely naked in front of two police officers who really have the ability to decide your night".<ref name=":5" />

Also speaking to Buzzfeed, a 19-year-old woman who attended the Midnight Mafia music festival in 2018 recalled being strip searched at the event after being approached by a drug detection dog. "I was feeling a bit uneasy because I understand if the dog sits down that's a reasonable excuse to take me to the back, but it had, what, two sniffs, and then it's accusing me of carrying things," she said. It's alleged that the 19-year-old was taken to an area inside the venue where police had setup a van and several tables. Despite insisting that she wasn't carrying any illicit substances, the woman says she was taken into a booth with two female police officers, describing it as being reminiscent of a "larger toilet cubicle". It's alleged that the officers initially searched the 19-year-old's bag before asking her to remove her jacket. Recalling what happened next, she said "And then they asked me to take off my shirt and then my shorts," ...  "And then my socks inside out with my shoes. And then I was completely naked". It's alleged that one of the officers spotted a string between the woman's legs, recalling that she told the officer "Oh, that's a tampon" when asked what it was. Speaking about the incident, the 19-year-old said it was "humiliating and embarrassing", telling Buzzfeed that "I was feeling violated and very upset". It's alleged that the woman's ticket was cancelled and she was ejected from the event despite no drugs being found. She said she was considering making an official complaint against NSW Police, stating that "I don't ever want to go through that process again or wish it upon anyone else. [The police are] supposed to serve and protect us but I felt really unsafe".<ref name=":5" />

'''February 11''' – Speaking to [[The Music (magazine)|TheMusic.com.au]], a festival patron recalls being ejected from the Knockout Circuz music festival after being strip searched by police in the aftermath of a drug detection dog indication. "They then pull me out of the line and told me to get into my underwear. They searched my clothes and found no drugs on me. I was then told that I wouldn't be allowed to enter the festival. I asked the policeman why I wasn't allowed in and they told me it was the venue policy" they said. "I later found out it wasn't the venue policy, it was police policy. I did get refunded and HSU were very apologetic and assured [me] this would not happen again".<ref>{{Cite news|last=Baxter|first=Lauren|date=11 February 2019|title=So You've Just Been Refused Entry At A Festival... What Are Your Rights?|work=TheMusic.com.au|url=https://themusic.com.au/features/festival-entry-refusal-news-feature-lauren-baxter/MDooIiUkJyY/11-02-19/}}</ref>

'''February 26''' – It's reported on social media that a 21-year-old performer was strip searched by police at the secret garden music festival in South-Western Sydney after an indication from a drug detection dog. No drugs were reportedly found and it's alleged that after the search had been completed, a male officer jokingly threatened to arrest the woman before laughing when she became upset. "Shout out to the cops at Secret Garden festival for STRIP searching my artist on her way in to perform, giving her the all clear, stopping her AGAIN to tell her they were going to be "pressing charges" then laughing & telling her to learn to take a joke when she got upset" said the woman's manager in a post uploaded to Facebook.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Richards|first=Jared|date=26 February 2019|title="Such A Disgrace": Secret Garden Artists Slam 'Intimidating' NSW Police Presence|work=Junkee|url=https://junkee.com/secret-garden-police/195488}}</ref>

The incident later formed part of a wider internal Investigation conducted by NSW Police in relation to complaints of unlawful strip searches (see [[New South Wales Police Force Strip Search Scandal (Law Enforcement Conduct Commission Investigations)#Strike Force Blackford Report|Strike Force Blackford Report]]). That investigation had been overseen the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. In a complaint made by the woman's parents following the incident, it was alleged that the 21-year-old had been taken to a tent and made to "pull her underpants down and bend over".<ref>Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. [https://www.lecc.nsw.gov.au/news-and-publications/publications/final-report-an-inquiry-into-nsw-police-force-strip-search-practices-15-december-2020.pdf Report on the monitoring of NSW Police Force misconduct matter investigation – Strike Force Blackford]. Pg. 4 (Report, July 2020)</ref> In findings published in July 2020, police investigators found that there was "no apparent justification" for strip searching the woman, alleging that the officer who had conducted the search was under the belief "that she had been directed to search all persons upon whom the drug dogs had detected". When questioned about the matter, the officer claimed to have no specific recall of the incident, telling investigators that "I don't recall the female herself at all. I recall on the day I strip searched alot of females. And the majority of those females I witness(ed) (sic) the drug dog indicate on".<ref name="ReferenceA">Strike Force Blackford Report Pg. 12</ref> It was also acknowledged that after the search had been completed, a male officer had spoken to the woman, making comments to the effect that "the drug dog sat for you again, we will have to press charges", while other officers had laughed and told the 21-year-old that she should "take a joke". Speaking to investigators, the officer conceded that his comments were "inappropriate and unprofessional", claiming that he was attempting to "make light of a difficult situation". The report found that the officer's conduct constituted a "breach of the NSWPF Code of Conduct and Ethics".<ref>Strike Force Blackford Report Pg. 13</ref>

'''March 3''' – Writing on [[Medium (website)|Medium]], a performer who attended the final Secret Garden Music Festival in South-Western Sydney reports on the large-scale police operation at the event. He speaks to a 21-year-old woman who was strip searched after an indication from a drug detection dog. The woman had been charged with drug possession after attempting to conceal a small amount of cannabis internally. "We were all visibly anxious and the police were talking to us about how angry drugs and liars make them, they were also making comments about how much they liked the girls in tiny shorts. When I was searched they told me they knew I had something and made the dog sniff me separately first. I was made to get completely naked and squat down, and then the officer told me to pull my ass cheeks apart. They then made me remove the drugs I had inside myself, told me to get dressed, and took me away for questioning". Speaking about the experience, the 21-year-old said, "I have never felt more dehumanised in my life. I am still quite anxious now, as someone who has never been to court or had much interaction with the police".

The author had also spoken to a [[solicitor]] who was operating a legal advice stall at the festival. Commenting on the police operation, she said it was "beyond noticeable and substantially harsher than other events. I have no doubt it was designed to intimidate". The woman said she had spoken with a number of festivalgoers who had been strip searched by police. "Some that approached us were distraught, having been subjected to a strip search in what they describe as particularly degrading circumstances. Most notably, in police tents with entrances that didn't close and afford proper privacy. Others described friends being whisked away to police stations and not having a clue how to help or contact them. That police don't explain this to young people increases their distress".<ref>{{Cite news|last=Endrey|first=Chris|date=3 March 2019|title=After the Secret Garden: The NSW Police State|work=Medium|url=https://endrey.medium.com/after-secret-garden-the-nsw-police-state-abab5a02fabc}}</ref>

'''March 5''' – Writing on Facebook, a 19-year-old woman says she was left feeling "humiliated and embarrassed" after being strip searched by police at the Hidden music festival at Sydney Olympic Park the previous weekend. The woman had reportedly been made to strip naked and "squat and cough" inside a booth at the event after being stopped by a drug detection dog. It was also alleged that the door of the booth had been left open while the search was being conducted, leaving the woman exposed to police and other festivalgoers outside. Despite no illicit drugs being found, the 19-year-old was issued with a 'ban notice' prohibiting entry to the Sydney Olympic Park precinct for 6 months. A recount of the incident uploaded to Facebook later went viral, attracting more than 13,000 reactions and over 3000 comments, with many users alleging that they had been subjected to similar treatment by NSW Police.<ref>Lucy Kate. [https://www.facebook.com/lucy.moore.3114/posts/2764900090201625 Facebook], 5 March 2019, Retrieved 11 November 2021</ref> Several media outlets also reported the story.<ref>7News. [https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=329691087656481 19-year-old considering legal action after embarrassing strip search]. 10 March 2019 [Video File]</ref><ref>{{Cite news|last=Graham|first=Ben|date=8 March 2019|title=Festivalgoer left 'humiliated, embarrassed' and banned after false flag strip search|work=news.com.au|url=https://www.news.com.au/entertainment/music/music-festivals/festivalgoer-left-humiliated-embarrassed-and-banned-after-false-flag-strip-search/news-story/c884fd87e46625cfe4309fcf1dc5977e}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|last=Singhal|first=Pallavi|date=9 March 2019|title=Strip-searched and sent packing: Police to review woman's claims after Sydney music festival|work=Sydney Morning Herald|url=https://www.smh.com.au/national/stripped-searched-and-sent-packing-police-to-review-woman-s-claims-after-sydney-music-festival-20190309-p512xn.html}}</ref>

A complaint made by the 19-year old's mother later formed part of a wider internal investigation into allegations of unlawful strip searches conducted by NSW Police. That investigation had been undertaken by officers from the Force's Professional Standards Command and was overseen by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission (see [[New South Wales Police Force Strip Search Scandal (Law Enforcement Conduct Commission Investigations)#Strike Force Blackford Report|Strike Force Blackford Report]]).<ref name=":6">Strike Force Blackford Report Pg. 4</ref> In findings handed down in July 2020, police investigators found that there was "insufficient lawful basis" for both the strip search and the 6 month ban notice that was issued to the woman at the event.<ref>Strike Force Blackford Report Pg. 8</ref> It was also acknowledged that the door of the booth used to conduct the search had been left open, with the report noting that "in terms of the location provided to conduct the searches... the doors were unable to be fully closed as they apparently locked automatically" and suggesting that "officer safety required the door to remain unlocked".<ref>Strike Force Blackford Report Pg. 10-11</ref> Police investigators recommended that "sustained" findings be made against two officers in relation to the ban notice, however it was unclear if any disciplinary action would be pursued in relation to the strip search of the 19-year-old.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> The Commission did however recommend that NSW Police consider issuing an apology to the woman.<ref>Strike Force Blackford Report Pg. 10</ref>

In an article published by [[Guardian Australia|The Guardian]] in June 2020, it was revealed that one of the officers involved in the incident had since resigned, while another had been "counselled by a senior officer and referred for additional training". Speaking to the Guardian, the woman's mother said that the family had not been informed of the outcome of the investigation by NSW Police. "All we've ever really wanted was for them to admit that they didn't follow their procedures, and that what they'd done wasn't what they were supposed to do," she said. "For me, I know they're not all bad, but you know it just feels like I've brought up my children to respect police and feel like they're there to protect you and I don't feel that's the case any more. That's really hard for me. I work in childcare and I have to tell these children the police are the good guys when that's not what I feel any more".<ref>{{Cite news|last=McGowan|first=Michael|date=8 June 2020|title=NSW police took more than a year to complete investigation into 2019 strip-search.|work=The Guardian|url=https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2020/jun/08/nsw-police-took-more-than-a-year-to-complete-investigation-into-2019-strip-search}}</ref>

'''March 7''' – In a Reddit thread discussing 19-year-old's Facebook post, one person says that a family member was subjected to similar search at a separate event. It's alleged that the woman was made to squat naked over a mirror after being stopped by a drug detection dog. "A similar incident also happened to my cousin at a festival last year. On entry to the event, the officer walked past her with the dog and the dog did not sit. He walked past her again, and again the dog did not sit and yet she was told to come with him. She was courteous (she hates confrontation and never wants to do the 'wrong' thing). She was [[Breathalyzer|breath tested]], [[Drugwipe test|drug tested]], strip searched and asked to squat over a mirror. All tests clear (because she really didn't have anything on her). She was then breath tested and drug tested a second time, you know, just in case the first tests were somehow wrong). After complying and being proven to have not broken any laws, she was still escorted out of the event, with her hands being held behind her back and told she was not allowed back in. The officer ended the interaction by saying 'you and people like you are the reason why people die at these events'".<ref>psyclic_. [https://www.reddit.com/r/australia/comments/ay6f7a/nsw_police_sniffer_dog_incident_at_hidden/ NSW Police sniffer dog incident at Hidden festival in Sydney]. Reddit, 7 March 2019, Retrieved 12 November 2021</ref>[[File:Central Station July 2019.jpg|thumb|255x255px|Police using the same black partitions during a detection dog operation at [[Central railway station, Sydney|Central Station]] in July later that year]]'''March 10''' – A story printed in [[The Daily Telegraph (Sydney)|The Daily Telegraph]] reports on the use of drugs at music festivals in New South Wales. Speaking to the Telegraph, two women recall being strip searched at the Groovin the Moo and Rolling Loud music festivals, describing their experiences as "scary" and "invasive". "A dog came up to me and sat down, which was terrifying, then two female police officers strip-searched me," one of the women said.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Jack Morphet|first=Ava Benny-Morrison|date=10 March 2019|title=Festival-goers scared to get help fearing punishment, missing out on jobs|work=The Daily Telegraph|url=https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw/festivalgoers-scared-to-get-help-fearing-punishment-missing-out-on-jobs/news-story/e6d089e2381f43f0a1007407a05fb22a}}</ref>

'''May 2''' – A study published by [[RMIT University|RMIT]] criminology researcher Dr Peta Malins highlights a number of issues relating to the use of drug detection dogs by police. Writing in the [[International Journal of Drug Policy]], Dr Malins found that the presence of the dogs at music festivals increased the risk of overdoses and did not deter attendees from consuming illicit substances.<ref>Triple J Hack (ABC). [https://www.abc.net.au/triplej/programs/hack/sniffer-dogs-increase-risk-of-drug-overdoses-at-festivals/11078234 Sniffer dogs increase risk of drug overdoses at festivals, research shows]. 3 May 2018</ref> As part of her research, Dr Malins interviewed 22 festivalgoers who had been searched by police following positive drug detection dog indications at music festivals in New South Wales and Victoria, including some were strip searched.<ref>Peta Malins. Drug Dog Affects: [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0955395919300581 Accounting for the Broad Social, Emotional and Health Impacts of General Drug Detection Dog Operations in Australia]. ''International Journal of Drug Policy Volume'' 67, May 2019, DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2019.03.004, Pg. 65</ref> "Strip search experiences were particularly traumatic, disempowering and dehumanising," she said in relation to the study's findings. "The trauma associated with any of these searches, but particularly strip searches, can be long-lasting, so not only affecting people for the rest of that day, but also into the future".<ref>{{Cite news|last=Gregoire|first=Paul|date=3 May 2019|title=Drug Dogs Are No Deterrent & Increase the Harm: An Interview With RMIT's Dr Peta Malins|work=Sydney Criminal Lawyers|url=https://www.sydneycriminallawyers.com.au/blog/drug-dogs-are-no-deterrent-increase-the-harm-an-interview-with-rmits-dr-peta-malins/}}</ref>

One participant described the experience of being strip searched as "the most embarrassing and invasive process in my life", while another said that "being ordered to strip, it felt ... dehumanising ... it put images in my mind of being a prisoner". Describing her own experience, one woman recalled, "I was in the corner ... my back against the wall, and I was just shaking because I thought strip-search meant cavity search, and I was saying "you don't have the right to touch my body! I don't give you permission to touch my body! ... I thought she was going to pin me down and put her hands inside my body". The woman had reportedly suffered ongoing trauma as a result of the incident.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Malins|first=Peta|date=7 December 2019|title=Strip-searches are a form of state-sanctioned violence that must stop|work=The Guardian|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/dec/07/strip-searches-are-a-form-of-state-sanctioned-violence-that-must-stop}}</ref>

'''May 11''' – A 22-year-old man says he was strip searched at the Midnight Mafia music festival after an officer accused him of being on drugs. Speaking to [[Yahoo! News|Yahoo news]], the 22-year-old said he was lining up with friends to enter the event when he was singled out by police. "A police officer grabs me by the arm and links arms with me as he drags me away," ... "He said: 'Mate you're chewing your face off, we're going to have to search you'". The 22-year-old claims he then attempted to explain the situation. "I pulled out my gum and told him I'm chewing gum but he said 'you're obviously under the influence'". After being questioned by officers, he said he was told he would need to submit to a strip search. "I was really eager to get into the festival so I was like 'lets do this'" he recalled.

Despite no drugs being found, it was alleged that a senior officer had refused the man entry to the event after the search had been completed. "He said 'I'm still going to void your ticket because I believe you're under the influence'". When the officer reportedly asked the man why his pupils were dilated, he recalled telling the officer that he was "nervous" because of the search. It was later alleged that another officer had told the 22-year-old he would be allowed to enter the event if he purchased another ticket, reportedly doing so because he had been "co-operative" during the incident. After spending $150 to purchase another ticket, the 22-year-old said he was allowed to the festival, telling Yahoo news he was "pissed off" about what had happened. "If they thought I was under the influence why would they let me back in?" he said. A statement issued by NSW Police after the event revealed that officers had searched 272 patrons, 32 of whom were charged with drug possession offences. It's not clear what percentage of the 272 searches conducted at the event were strip searches.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Flanagan|first=Tom|date=21 May 2019|title=Man, 22, interrogated and strip searched at festival after chewing gum mix-up|work=Yahoo News|url=https://au.news.yahoo.com/midnight-mafia-festival-goer-turned-away-police-chewing-gum-045651126.html}}</ref>

'''May 11''' – Writing on Facebook, a man says that he and his girlfriend were strip searched by police before being ejected from the Midnight Mafia music festival at Sydney Showground earlier that evening. Neither were reportedly carrying any illicit drugs. A journalist covering the event spoke to the pair and the incident was later reported by [[The Sunday Telegraph (Sydney)|The Sunday Telegraph]]. The matter was later investigated by NSW Police as part of a wider investigation into complaints of unlawful strip searches. The findings of that investigation were published by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission in July 2020 (see [[New South Wales Police Force Strip Search Scandal (Law Enforcement Conduct Commission Investigations)#Strike Force Blackford Report|Strike Force Blackford Report]]).<ref name=":6" />

'''June 4''' – The Sydney Morning Herald speaks to a 20-year-old woman who was allegedly strip searched at the Midnight Mafia music festival in 2018. The woman had reportedly been the victim of a sexual assault and said the experience of being "cornered" in a booth with two female police officers was a refresher of the incident. "I had to be stripped naked and I felt completely helpless, and I was scared" the 20-year-old recalled. "It was horrible, that's how they made me feel. All I wanted was to go to the music festival". It was alleged that the woman's ticket had been confiscated by police despite no drugs being found, however a refund had reportedly been issued by organisers after the event.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Thompson|first=Angus|date=4 June 2019|title='I felt completely helpless': Woman's strip search revives trauma of sexual assault|work=Sydney Morning Herald|url=https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/i-felt-completely-helpless-woman-s-strip-search-revives-trauma-of-sexual-assault-20190530-p51svp.html}}</ref>[[File:Drug Dog Hornsby Station 2019.jpg|thumb|257x257px|A drug detection dog at [[Hornsby railway station|Hornsby Train Station]] in 2019]]'''June 18''' – The ABC reports on the increasing use of strip searches by NSW Police. The story features an account from a 23-year-old woman who was allegedly made to strip naked in front of a female police officer at a music festival earlier in the year. Recalling the incident, the woman said, "I was strip searched in a booth this year. The female officer took me over to the metal round hut, conducted the strip search, even made me squat, looked behind my hair my feet everything. I felt like I was going into jail. The whole strip search made me a bit scared. It was a horrible experience when you just want to have some fun with your friends".<ref>{{Cite news|last=Pengilley|first=Victoria|date=18 June 2019|title=Strip search locations may be putting victims of sexual assault at risk|work=ABC [Audio File]|url=https://www.abc.net.au/radio/programs/pm/strip-search-locations-may-be-putting-vulnerable-people-at-risk/11222414}}</ref>

'''June 23''' – The Sydney Morning Herald speaks to a 22-year-old woman who was allegedly strip searched and ejected from a music festival at Sydney Olympic Park earlier that year. The woman said she was queueing up at the entrance of the event when she was approached by an officer with a drug detection dog. "It didn't sit down at any stage, but the officer stopped me and said the dog had indicated that I did have something on me". She said she was told to place her hands in front of her body before being taken to a police search area inside the event. "I remember the officer who interviewed me initially was rude. I was crying, and he said something along the lines that I was only crying because I knew I was guilty".

After initially being questioned, the woman said she was taken into an "enclosed cubicle" with a female police officer, who then instructed to remove her clothes. "First the officer told me to take off my top. Then my bra. She touched the seams of my clothing to make sure I hadn't hidden anything inside. She did the same with my hat. Then she gave me back those garments and told me to take off my pants and my underwear so she could inspect those items as well. The officer even took the inner soles from my shoes to see if anything was concealed in there" she said. "At the end she looked through my bag, even questioning why I had $60 in there. All up it took about 10 minutes, but it felt like an eternity. After I dressed we sat back at the table where she had taken my details, handing back my bag and my identification".

The woman claimed that despite no drugs being found, her ticket was confiscated by police, with officers allegedly citing a "previous offence" as the reason for denying her entry into the event. Speaking about the incident, the 22-year-old said it left her feeling "vulnerable and exposed". "You just feel so humiliated, and it's horrible because you haven't done anything wrong" she told the Herald. "Now when I go to an event I feel sick when I'm waiting to get in. I know I don't have anything on me, but it doesn't matter. I did nothing wrong that day and I was penalised for it".<ref>{{Cite news|last="Anonymous" speaking to Angus Thompson|date=13 June 2019|title='You just feel so humiliated': What it's like to be strip-searched|work=Sydney Morning Herald|url=https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/you-just-feel-so-humiliated-what-it-s-like-to-be-strip-searched-20190622-p520aj.html}}</ref>

'''July 11''' – A witness breaks down in tears at a [[Inquest|coronial inquest]] as she describes how an officer reportedly threatened to subject her to a "nice and slow" strip search at the Knockout Circuz music festival in 2017. The 28-year-old said she was entering the event at Sydney Olympic Park when a drug detection dog sat down beside her. It was alleged that she had then been taken to a ticket booth, which she described as a "metal room", where a female officer instructed her to remove her clothes.<ref name=":7">{{Cite news|last=Cornwall|first=Deborah|date=11 July 2019|title=Stripped festival attendee in tears|work=The Australian|url=https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/music-festival-deaths-woman-tells-of-being-forced-to-squat-and-cough-by-police/news-story/53bc51a9cc174b34260c7e4765d095a1}}</ref> "I had to take my top off and my bra, and I covered my boobs and she told me to put my hands up, and she told me to tell her where the drugs were" ... "She said, 'If you don't tell me where the drugs are, I'm going to make this nice and slow" the 28-year-old recalled. "She made me take my shorts off, and my underwear, and she made me squat and cough, and squat and cough, and squat and cough, and I had to turn around and squat and cough". It was alleged that the officer had opened the door of the booth while the woman still naked to hand her wallet to someone outside.''<ref name="Thompson">{{Cite news|last=Thompson|first=Angus|date=11 July 2019|title='Nice and slow': woman battles tears describing police strip-search to inquest|work=Sydney Morning Herald|url=https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/nice-and-slow-woman-battles-tears-describing-police-strip-search-to-inquest-20190711-p5267p.html}}</ref>''The woman had originally been called to give evidence in relation to the death of an 18-year-old festivalgoer who had died in hospital after consuming a fatal dose of [[MDMA]] at the same event earlier that day.<ref name=":7" /> In a final report from the inquest handed down in November, [[Coroner's Court of New South Wales|Deputy State Coroner]] Harriet Grahame made reference to the woman's testimony, describing it as "palpable and disturbing".<ref>Coroners Court of New South Wales. [https://coroners.nsw.gov.au/documents/findings/2019/Music_Festival_Redacted_findings_in_the_joint_inquest_into_deaths_arising_at_music_festivals_.pdf Inquest into the death of six patrons of NSW music festivals]. (November 2019) Pg. 103</ref> In handing down her findings, Ms. Grahame called for an end to the routine use of strip searches at music festivals in New South Wales, suggesting that they only be undertaken in cases where, "there is a reasonable suspicion that the person has committed or is about to commit an offence of supply a prohibited drug" and "there are reasonable grounds to believe that the strip search is necessary to prevent an immediate risk to personal safety or to prevent the immediate loss or destruction of evidence".<ref>Inquest into the death of six patrons of NSW music festivals (November 2019) Pg. 137-138</ref>

'''August 22''' – The Hack program on Triple J reports on the increased use of strip searches by NSW Police. Texting into the program, one person writes, "I was apparently detected by a sniffer dog at a festival in Sydney. I was then treated quite roughly and I was strip searched in full view of the entry line. I had no drugs in my possession, I was then released after having my details taken". Also texting into the program, another person wrote, "I got strip searched at Secret Garden festival too, had absolutely nothing on me whatsoever, the dog indicated while going through the car and I got taken away and strip searched. It was really intimidating and rude".<ref>Triple J Hack (ABC). [https://www.abc.net.au/triplej/programs/hack/hack/11423670 Police strip searches, North Korea defector, and Amazon burning]. 22 August 2019 [Audio File]</ref>

'''August 22''' – Speaking to the ABC, a 21-year-old woman says she has been strip searched six times while attending separate music festivals in New South Wales. In one incident, the woman recalled being made to strip naked and "squat and cough' while she was on her period. "I was made to take my clothes off completely, squat and told I'd have to take my tampon out if they believed I had something concealed inside me" she said. "She was a woman herself so surely she could have understood how uncomfortable that would have made me feel". The 21 year old said she was not carrying any illicit substances and that the experience made her feel "humiliated and embarrassed".<ref>{{Cite news|last=Pengilley|first=Victoria|date=22 August 2019|title=NSW Police's use of strip searches skyrocketing, report finds|work=ABC|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-08-22/new-report-puts-nsw-strip-searches-under-microscope/11435260}}</ref>

'''August 23''' – A caller to the Hack program on Triple J says he was strip searched at a music festival after an indication from a drug detection dog. "I went to a festival when I was about 17 years old and I got sat down by the dogs" ... "They took me out back and they said, 'You need to come for a strip search'. I told them that I was underage, and they were like 'yeah, well, still gotta do it otherwise we'll rip up your ticket'" he said. "I was kind of left in a position where I had no other option. I had to go in and get strip searched. They found nothing". The caller says the experience made him feel "super uneasy and just kind of violated in a way".<ref>Triple J Hack (ABC). [https://www.abc.net.au/triplej/programs/hack/hack/11426868 Police strip searches, Amazon burning, and inter-generational inequality]. 23 August 2019 [Audio File]</ref>

'''September 5''' – Speaking to news.com.au, a man says he was ejected from a music festival after being strip searched by police. "I was singled out as I was there by myself waiting for a mate who was coming from the other side of Sydney, so I was texting a lot and walking from stage to stage depending who was playing". The man says that he and his friend were later approached by officers on the dancefloor before being asked to follow them outside. It's alleged that the man was taken to a separate area where police and security guards made him "drop his pants and underwear and pull up his shirt to be patted down". "It made me feel very uncomfortable and like a criminal for doing absolutely zero wrong," he said. "I asked the security why we were targeted. They said that they had seen me walking around texting constantly on my phone and then meeting my mate, they followed us in to where we were dancing". Speaking about the incident, the man said that "getting pulled out in front of others we knew as well and explaining it to them after was a sh*t feeling".<ref>{{Cite news|last=Fernando|first=Gavin|date=5 September 2019|title='Abuse of power needs to stop': Why drug dogs and strip searches just don't work|work=news.com.au|url=https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/abuse-of-power-needs-to-stop-why-drug-dogs-and-strip-searches-just-dont-work/news-story/7f49819a0e1e3d733c2554334cf9ac2a}}</ref>

'''October 21''' – Operate Brugge Hearing commences. The Law Enforcement Conduct Commission opens a four-day public hearing in relation to a complaint made by a 16-year-old girl who had allegedly been strip searched by police at the Splendour in the Grass music festival in 2018 (see [[New South Wales Police Force Strip Search Scandal (Law Enforcement Conduct Commission Investigations)#Operation Brugge|Operation Brugge]]). The girl had reportedly been stopped by a drug detection dog at the entrance of the event.<ref>Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. [https://www.lecc.nsw.gov.au/news-and-publications/hearing-transcripts/brugge-day-1-transcript.pdf?utm_source=Oztix&utm_campaign=jtt_wa_181008&utm_content=NewsItem&utm_medium=Email&r=cbd7a001-f66a-4302-8bdc-c3c6e460a8ff&utm_term=JSReplacedUrl Operation Brugge, Transcript Day 1] Pg. 10</ref> In a statement read by Counsel Assisting Dr. Peggy Dwyer on the first day of the inquiry, the Commission was told how the 16-year-old had been left feeling "completely humiliated" after being taken into a tent and made to strip naked in front of a female police officer. "I could not believe this was happening to me. I could not stop crying" she recalled.<ref>Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. [https://www.lecc.nsw.gov.au/news-and-publications/publications/operation-brugge-s132-report-may-2020.pdf Operation Brugge Final Report] Pg. 9-12</ref>

The Commission was told that police had conducted 143 strip searches at the Splendour in the Grass music festival in 2018, with more than 90% of those searches resulting in no illicit substances being found. Seven of the festivalgoers strip searched at the event were recorded as being under the age of 18.<ref>Operation Brugge Final Report Pg. 1-2</ref>

'''November 6''' – Speaking to The Guardian, a 23-year-old woman recalls being made to strip to her underwear before a female officer "jiggled" her bra at a police station in 2011. The woman was fifteen at the time of the alleged incident and described the experience as "intimidating" and "traumatic".<ref>{{Cite news|last=McGowan|first=Michael|date=6 November 2019|title='She grabbed my bra': NSW woman says being strip-searched at 15 had a traumatic effect|work=The Guardian|url=https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2019/nov/07/she-grabbed-my-bra-nsw-woman-says-being-strip-searched-at-15-had-a-traumatic-effect}}</ref>

'''November 9''' – A 19-year-old man says that he was made to "lift his shirt, drop his pants and hold on to his genitals" while being strip searched inside a tent at the Lost Paradise music festival in December 2018. Speaking to the Guardian, the man says he was sitting in his car with a friend when a female police officer approached the vehicle with a drug detection dog. It's alleged that the officer claimed the man "looked nervous", before telling him that "if you have drugs on you then you might as well tell me now or I'll take you to the strip-search tent and we'll find them that way". The man said he was then strip searched by two male police officers. No drugs were reportedly found during the search and the 19-year-old said he felt "shook up" after the incident.<ref>{{Cite news|last=McGowan|first=Michael|date=9 November 2019|title='Devastating': the drug inquest findings that condemn 'wholesale' strip searches|work=The Guardian|url=https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2019/nov/10/devastating-the-drug-inquest-findings-that-condemn-wholesale-strip-searches}}</ref>[[File:Drug Dog Pub Randwick 2019.jpg|thumb|269x269px|A drug detection dog at a pub in [[Randwick, New South Wales|Randwick]] in 2019]]'''November 28''' – Doctors at Sydney's [[St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney|St Vincent's Hospital]] deliver a signed letter to then NSW Premier [[Gladys Berejiklian]] calling on the state government to introduce pill testing and end the use of strip searches at music festivals in New South Wales. It follows an incident in the hospital's emergency department involving an 18-year-old woman who was allegedly brought in by police earlier in the year. The woman had reportedly sought police assistance at a music festival after admitting to internally concealing two MDMA tablets. It's alleged that the 18-year-old was then strip searched by officers before being subjected to three internal medical examinations. "Strip searches, as currently conducted, demean both the individual and the police conducting the search", wrote Dr Jennifer Stevens, the letter's author.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Clun|first=Rachel|date=28 November 2019|title=Frontline doctors urge Premier to trial pill testing, end strip searches for drugs|work=Sydney Morning Herald|url=https://www.smh.com.au/politics/nsw/frontline-doctors-urge-premier-to-trial-pill-testing-end-strip-searches-for-drugs-20191127-p53eny.html}}</ref>
Speaking to [[Steve Price (broadcaster)|Steve Price]] on [[2GB]] that afternoon, Dr. Stevens also revealed that a colleague's daughter had been left feeling "absolutely devastated" after being strip searched by police at a separate event. "Where you go along to this music festival, something you love doing, somebody asks you to get naked and then, you know if you're not carrying anything that's fantastic, but then to expect somebody to put their clothes on, go into the festival and have a good time, without this having effected them profoundly I think is extraordinary" she said.<ref>2GB. [https://www.2gb.com/frontline-doctor-says-strip-searches-not-worth-the-devastating-effects-on-children/ Frontline doctor says strip-searches not worth the devastating effects on children]. 28 November 2019 [Audio File]</ref>

'''December 2''' – Operation Gennaker Hearing commences. The Law Enforcement Conduct Commission opens a four-day public hearing centred around allegations of unlawful strip searches at an under 18s music festival earlier in the year (see [[New South Wales Police Force Strip Search Scandal (Law Enforcement Conduct Commission Investigations)#Operation Gennaker|Operation Gennaker]]). The Commission investigates complaints from three teenage boys who had attended the Lost City music festival at Sydney Olympic Park in February. All three had allegedly been strip searched by police at the event, with no illicit substances being recovered during any of those searches.<ref>Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. [https://www.lecc.nsw.gov.au/news-and-publications/publications/operation-gennaker-s132-report-may-2020.pdf Operation Gennaker Final Report]</ref> In a final report handed down in May 2020, the LECC found that each of the three strip searches investigated during the hearing was "unlawful",<ref>Operation Gennaker Final Report Pg. 41-42</ref> however the Commission declined to make "serious misconduct" findings against any of the officers involved, citing a "lack of training and direction provided to those officers".<ref>Operation Gennaker Final Report Pg. 51</ref>

== 2020 ==

'''February 7''' – The Hack Program on Triple J discusses revelations that NSW Police had set personal search quotas for officers to meet during the 2018 and 2019 financial years. The program hears from a girl who was attending the Splendour in the Grass music festival in 2018. She and a friend had reportedly been strip searched at the event. Both were 15 at the time of the alleged incident. "We'd just gotten off the public buses and we were pretty much, like filtering into the festival when we got approached by a policeman and the dog" she recalled. It's alleged that the dog then indicated on the girl's friend. "The police officer pretty much straightaway was like, 'alright, come with us' and since I really didn't understand the system very well, I said to my friend, 'Oh, I'll take your bag for you, because I didn't realise they would need to go through it".

She said that they were then taken to different tents, which were "separated by a white sheet". "Pretty much he{{efn|The girl uses the word "he" though it's not clearly stated if the strip search was conducted by a male police officer. }} took me in there, asked me to take everything off except my underwear but including my bra. I pretty much just felt like I was doing what an adult told me to, and since I saw the officer as an authoritive figure and I was just the subordinate in that situation" she recalled. "I was a bit teary, and I felt very intimidated as sort of as though I didn't really have any say or idea of what was going on". Neither person was reportedly carrying any illicit drugs. Speaking about the incident, the girl said she would not have consented to the strip search if she was better informed of her legal rights. "We should have had our rights explained to us or we should have had what was happening explained to us further" she said.<ref>Triple J Hack (ABC). [https://www.abc.net.au/triplej/programs/hack/hack/11943744 Police search quotas]. 7 February 2020 [Audio File]</ref>

'''May 8''' – The Law Enforcement Conduct Commission releases the findings of five separate investigations relating to the use of strip searches by NSW Police. These include final reports from two public hearings held in 2019 centred around unlawful strip searches of minors at the Splendour in the Grass and Lost City music festivals, as well as an investigation into a 2015 incident which saw a Darlinghurst man awarded $112,000 in damages after being wrongfully strip searched at Kings Cross Police Station.<ref>Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. [https://www.lecc.nsw.gov.au/news-and-publications/news/presentation-of-lecc-strip-search-reports Presentation of LECC Strip Search Reports]. 8 May 2020 [Media Release]</ref> Two additional reports released by the Commission related to separate incidents involving strip searches of [[Indigenous Australians|indigenous persons]] in custody in 2017 and 2018. In one incident, a 16-year-old aboriginal boy had allegedly been subjected to two strip searches in regional New South Wales after being stopped by police with a small amount of cannabis in his possession.<ref>Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. [https://www.lecc.nsw.gov.au/news-and-publications/publications/operation-mainz-s132-report-may-2020-1.pdf Operation Mainz] (Report, May 2020)</ref> The Commission also investigated a complaint from a 29-year-old Aboriginal man who had reportedly been strip searched in custody at a Sydney police station in 2017. In both cases, the Commission found that the conduct of police was "unsatisfactory" but did not amount to serious misconduct<ref>Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. [https://www.lecc.nsw.gov.au/news-and-publications/publications/operation-karuka-s132-report-may-2020.pdf Operation Karuka]. (Report, May 2020)</ref> (see [[New South Wales Police Force Strip Search Scandal (Law Enforcement Conduct Commission Investigations)|Law Enforcement Conduct Commission Investigations]]).

'''May 27''' – Speaking at the launch of a [[class action]] investigation, a 25-year-old [[United Kingdom|British]] woman says she felt "numb all over" while being strip searched at the Lost Paradise music festival on the [[Central Coast (New South Wales)|Central Coast]] in 2017. The woman had reportedly been queueing with friends to enter the event when a drug detection dog sat down beside her. It's alleged that officers then told the 25-year-old that they suspected she was in possession of illicit drugs before her to consent to a search. "I felt I had no choice but to comply, otherwise I'd be left stranded in the middle of nowhere, with no way of getting home" she told reporters.<ref name=":8">7News. [https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=1078563802525577 NSW strip-search class action is being considered]. 27 May 2020 [Video File]</ref>

The 25-year-old was then reportedly escorted to a police search area inside the venue by a male officer. Before handing her over to a female officer, it's alleged that he told the woman to "go easy on her, I don't think she's got anything on her". Recalling the comments, the 25-year-old said, "that's when I started feeling really scared".<ref name=":8" /> After handing over her ID and having her belongings searched, she said she was taken into a large police transit van, alleging that the windshield of the van was uncovered and that three male officers could be seen standing outside. "I was just so aware that people could look in. My main concern was the male police officers being so close at the time. There was no real privacy... It just felt very perverted, to be honest".<ref name=":9">Redfern Legal Centre. [https://rlc.org.au/sites/default/files/attachments/Class%20actions%20to%20hold%20NSW%20Police%20accountable%20for%20widespread%20unlawful%20strip%20search%20tactics%20270520.pdf Class actions to hold NSW Police accountable for widespread unlawful strip search tactics]. 27 May 2020 [Media Release]</ref>

The 25-year-old said that the female officer first asked her to lift up her top. When she informed the woman that she wasn't wearing a bra, it's alleged that she was told to "just do it quickly". She says that the officer then asked if she was on her period. When she said yes, the officer reportedly told her that "we still need to do this anyway" before instructing her to remove her pants and underwear. The 25-year-old says she was then told to "drop, squat and cough", at which point the female officer squatted down and looked at her genital area. The woman says she had a tampon inserted at the time, After the search had been completed, the 25-year-old's belongings were returned and she allowed to leave the area, recalling that she began "sobbing uncontrollably" when she returned to her friends. Speaking about the incident, she said "I had done nothing wrong. I felt violated like I was just another body and not a human being".<ref name=":9" />

'''July 21''' –The Law Enforcement Conduct Commission releases the findings of an internal police investigation carried out by Strike Force Blackford, a specially formed task force made up of officers from the Force's Professional Standards Command (see Strike Force Blackford Report). The investigation was overseen by the Commission and centred around five separate complaints made in relation to unlawful strip searches, four of which had allegedly taken place at music festivals. In each incident, the person had initially been stopped by police following a drug detection dog indication. None of the individuals searched were found in possession of any illicit drugs.<ref>Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. [https://www.lecc.nsw.gov.au/news-and-publications/publications/strike-force-blackford-s138-report-july-2020.pdf Report on the monitoring of NSW Police Force misconduct matter investigation – Strike Force Blackford]. (Report, July 2020)</ref>

'''December 15''' –The Law Enforcement Conduct Commission hands down a final report detailing the findings of its two-year inquiry into strip search practices employed by NSW Police. The report makes reference to several previous investigations undertaken by the LECC, including several investigations which had not previously been disclosed to the public. In one of those investigations, an Aboriginal man had allegedly been strip searched by police in regional New South Wales after officers had suspected he was in possession of a weapon.<ref>Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. [https://www.lecc.nsw.gov.au/news-and-publications/publications/final-report-an-inquiry-into-nsw-police-force-strip-search-practices-15-december-2020.pdf Inquiry into NSW Police Force strip search practices]. Final Report, December 2020 Pg. 107-109</ref> In another case, two young people had been allegedly been strip searched at a shopping centre on the state's [[Mid North Coast]] after staff at a jewellery store had accused them of shoplifting. A summary of that incident included in the report stated that:<blockquote>On the advice of an [[Australian police ranks|Inspector]], who was not in attendance but who had been contacted to provide advice about whether the young people should be searched, police decided to strip search both of the young persons at the shopping centre. A female officer attended to assist. Both young people were taken to the store lunch room where their pockets were emptied and bags searched. The male young person was asked by Police whether he would submit to a search on the basis that there were reasonable grounds to suspect that they had the ring. He was strip searched behind a cupboard, in the break out room of the store. The ring was not located. The female young person was strip searched in the disabled toilets of the shopping centre, by the female officer. Male police officers were standing outside the first cubicle while the female young person was strip searched inside the second cubicle by the female officer. The door of the cubicle was held ajar by a plastic tub during the search. The ring was not located on her.<ref>LECC Final Report December 2020 Pg. 98-99</ref></blockquote>

== 2021 ==

'''November 16''' – Compensation firm Slater and Gordon releases an update on a proposed class action set to be launched in collaboration with Redfern Legal Centre in relation to unlawful strip searches conducted by NSW Police. It's announced that the proposed class action will focus exclusively on incidents which had taken place at the Splendour in the Grass music festival between 2016 and 2019<ref>Slater and Gordon. [https://www.slatergordon.com.au/class-actions/current-class-actions/splendour Unlawful police searches at Splendour]</ref> (a separate statement suggested that these incidents would only be used as a "[[test case]]").<ref name=":10">1.      Redfern Legal Centre. [https://rlc.org.au/sites/default/files/attachments/Media%20release%20-%20Class%20action%20being%20investigated%20over%20unlawful%20police%20searches%20at%20Splendour%20in%20the%20Grass%20music%20festivals.pdf Class action being investigated over unlawful police searches at Splendour in the Grass music festivals].16 November 2021 [Media Release]</ref>

An article published on the Triple J Hack website features an account from a 25-year-old man who had allegedly been strip searched at the event in 2016 after being stopped by a drug detection dog. "I didn't actually see the dog sit down... and all of a sudden, I just got this forceful grab on the shoulder by an officer," he recalled. "It was kind of just a big shock, I had nothing on me or anything to hide". Despite telling the officer he didn't have any drugs on his person, it's alleged that the officer then proceeded to search the man's pockets and shoes before taking him to a "[[Portable building|demountable building]]" where a strip search was conducted. The 25-year-old was allegedly told to "open his anus" while the search was being conducted. "I didn't actually have to take my shirt off at all, it was just straight 'Take your pants off, turn around, bend over, and open up" he said. No drugs were reportedly found and the 25-year-old was later allowed to enter the festival, suggesting that an [[Injector pen|insulin pen]] he was carrying at the time may have caused the dog to react. "It felt like an invasion of my privacy, like my dignity was just gone for that moment in time and I actually felt quite vulnerable," he told Triple J's [[Avani Dias]]. "At no point in time was I given any rights or asked if I had consent to what they were doing".<ref>1.      Avani Dias. [https://www.abc.net.au/triplej/programs/hack/splendour-in-the-grass-strip-search-class-action-launched/13631790 'Bend over, open up': People strip searched at Splendour in the Grass could be entitled to thousands in compensation in class action]. Triple J Hack (ABC), 16 November 2021</ref>

Calling into the Hack radio program on Triple J that afternoon, one woman said, "Working back of scenes, working in operations in events for the last 25 years, I've seen a lot of what goes on back of house and yeah, a lot of strip searches, a lot of crying, a lot of people in tears and feeling vulnerable and feeling like they'd been violated, and the area that I worked in we were all over the place, in the campgrounds, in front and back of house, so I saw firsthand a lot of people in tears and stuff and had to literally pick up the pieces of these kids and try and make them feel a bit better and try and make their festival experience a happy one". Speaking about an incident she had witnessed at the Splendour in the grass music festival, she recalled that, "My compound at one point was right beside a gate into the festival from the campground, and they actually used my toilet to strip search a girl and had the door halfway open, girl cop, boy cop there, young girl probably 18 years old, made her take her tampon out, door halfway open, one of my staff members went past, saw the whole thing happen, came to me in tears and said, 'you gotta do something about it' and so I went over and dealt with the police and basically told them to 'off it' out of my compound you know. It was quite horrific and then they just left the girl there, didn't find anything, left the girl there in tears, so I just put her in my buggy and go and try and find her friends and try and make her feel better".<ref name=":11">Triple J Hack (ABC). [https://www.abc.net.au/triplej/programs/hack/hack/13626106?fbclid=IwAR0GaGesi1FeW_JmXvMqs5INM7weIgzJieUF1SFPOntJUrhxc7ITIrqXTpQ Young people are suing NSW police]. 16 November 2021 [Audio File]</ref>

Texting into the program, another person said, "If I had known I would have done something about it but having a policewoman in front of you asking you to take all your clothes off ... I just did it because I didn't know any better". The program also heard from a caller who had allegedly been strip searched at the FOMO music festival. "I was strip searched at 17, they knew that I was underage as well. I had told them my age, showed them my ID and yeah, I was asked to squat and cough and take off all my clothes. My parents actually weren't aware of it until after I had been strip searched, so I was just humiliated and disgusting [sic] and they never found anything on me and I just can't believe, I didn't even know that it was illegal until all of this started coming out and I still don't really know how to go about it, because it's been so many years since that event".<ref name=":11"/>

A statement released by Redfern Legal Centre on November 21 featured a separate account from a 23-year-old woman who had allegedly been strip searched at the same festival twice in 2017 after separate indications from a drug detection dog. Speaking about what happened, she said:<blockquote>It was around 2pm on Friday, July 21 and I was entering the festival from the campground. Two police officers, who had a drug detection dog, took me into a tent where they were searching people. When I protested, they told me that if I didn't co-operate with the search in the tent, then they would take me to a police station to be searched. I didn't want to be taken to a police station, isolated from my partner and friends, I was already very frightened. I asked for my partner to stay with me and support me during the search, but it was refused. My partner was then repeatedly ordered by police to move on. I was searched by a female [[Australian police ranks|senior constable]]. The way she spoke to me was condescending and patronising, for example, she repeatedly told me: 'The process will be made easier if you tell me where you are hiding the drugs.' Each item of my clothing was intentionally thrown on the wet and muddy ground by the officer, and I was forced to strip down."

"I told her four times that I had no drugs on me, that I had not taken any drugs, that there was no way any of my clothes could have come into contact with any drugs. I explained that I was [[Diabetes|diabetic]] and was carrying [[Insulin (medication)|insulin]] with me, and if the drug detection dog had detected something, maybe it was the insulin. But she told me 'drug detection dogs are highly trained. We are positive you have drugs on your person'. At one point during the search, a male police officer opened the tent and stared at my naked body. In response, I turned away to hide my body and alerted the female officer that he was watching. She claimed no one was watching and continued searching me, when I could clearly see that the male officer was still looking through the tent. The whole experience was extremely traumatising, especially due to the way the police presumed I was guilty and the way I was both spoken to and physically handled. I felt violated because the male officer starred at me while I was naked. I was so traumatised that I returned to my campsite and changed every item of my clothing, which was also necessary because my clothes were wet and muddy after being thrown on the ground by the police officer, except I kept my socks and the handbag that contained my insulin."

"Around 5pm the same day, while I was attempting to re-enter the music festival again, my jacket was grabbed from behind by a male police officer who I saw signalling the drug detection dog to come and sit at my feet. I believe the male police officer told the dog to sit because I looked nervous due to my previous experience earlier that day. I told him I had already been searched that day and I asked him what the limit was on the number of times an individual could be searched within 24 hours, he told me: 'unlimited'. I said if you're going to search me again, can I at least have the same officer perform the search. Without any effort to honour my request, the officer told me no, she's busy. Then I was taken to the same tent, told to strip naked and was searched for the second time in the same day. Again, I had no drugs on me, I had not taken any drugs, I had not touched any drugs and there was no way my clothing could have made contact with drugs.</blockquote>The 23-year-old described her treatment at the hands of police as "disgusting", stating that "I want to be involved in this case to speak up for myself and for others because this should not be allowed to happen. I shouldn't have been treated like this, no one should be treated like this".<ref name=":10" /> The woman had also spoken about her experience on the Triple J Hack program on November 16.<ref name=":11"/>

==Notes==
{{Noteslist}}

== References ==
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[[Category:Strip search]]
[[Category:Law enforcement in New South Wales]]
__NOINDEX__

Revision as of 23:13, 18 August 2022

A list of publicly reported incidents involving strip searches conducted by members of the New South Wales Police Force. Incidents are listed chronologically in order of the date they were first reported.

2006

June – The New South Wales Ombudsman publishes a comprehensive 400-page review of the Police Powers (Drug Detection Dogs) Act 2001, legislation giving NSW Police the power to deploy specially trained drug detection dogs at large scale public events, licensed venues and on selected routes across Sydney's public transport network.[1] Figures published in the report reveal that during a two-year review period between February 2002 and February 2004, officers had conducted just over 10,000 personal searches resulting from positive drug detection dog indications.[2] Most of those searches had either been a pat down search or a search of a person's belongings, however in rare cases, officers had proceeded to conduct a strip search. The report mentioned two incidents which had been observed by the Ombudsman's office, one involving a woman who had been stopped inside a pub and another involving a man who was stopped at a train station. Drugs and drug paraphernalia respectively had been found in both cases before a strip search was conducted.[3]

In another incident, a complaint had been made after a man was allegedly stopped by a drug detection dog twice within the space of a one-and-a-half-hour period. On the second occasion, the man had voluntarily accompanied officers to a police station where he was "subjected to the humiliation of a strip search". It's alleged that one of the officers suggested to the man that he "might have sat next to someone on a train or bus that had been smoking cannabis" when no drugs were found during the search.[4] The report also mentioned another case which had been recorded on the police database. In that instance, a commuter had been strip searched inside a train station toilet after an indication from a drug detection dog. No drugs were found and the man was later allowed to leave.[3]

2009

February – The New South Wales Ombudsman publishes a final review of the Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002, legislation governing the powers given to police in New South Wales.[5] One key aspect of the review were safeguards in relation to personal searches conducted by NSW Police.[6] A number of case studies were referred to in the report, including one incident involving a drug detection dog operation which was monitored by the Ombudsman's office. A summary of that incident read: "We observed frisk and ordinary searches performed on people attending a youth event who were indicated by a drug detection dog as they moved from the train station to the venue. On this occasion, police set up a number of tents, which provided six separate spaces in which searches could be conducted and advised us that this had been done to provide people with a level of privacy. Once an indication had been made, two police officers were introduced and the person was taken to a tent where the search was conducted. While we only observed frisk and ordinary searches, strip searches were also performed in the tents. We did not observe any searches outside the tents".[7]

2012

January 25 – The Hack program on Triple J broadcasts a half hour special discussing the issue of drug detection dogs at music festivals in New South Wales and other Australian states. The program hears from a number of callers who were searched by police in the aftermath of a positive drug detection dog indication, including some who were strip searched. Many of the callers admitted that were in possession of small quantities of drugs when they were stopped by police.[8]

2013

March 7– A 53-year-old man tells news.com.au that he was strip searched while attending a Mardi Gras afterparty event at the Royal Botanical Gardens. The man says he was stopped by a drug detection dog at the entrance of the event while picking up tickets for a friend. After being taken to a police search area, it's alleged that he was first made to undergo a pat down search before being told to drop his pants and underwear. The 53-year-old says that there was a gap in the tarpaulin covering the area where search was taking place, leaving him exposed to onlookers while this was happening. "They could see] my bare butt," he told news.com.au. "I was not comfortable with that at all". No drugs were reportedly found during the search. Speaking about the incident, the 53-year-old said "It's a complete abuse of their powers ... I feel embarrassed and humiliated." The man subsequently launched legal action against New South Wales Police,[9] with the matter later being settled out of court for an undisclosed amount.[10] The incident was one of dozens of alleged cases of police misconduct which reportedly taken place at the 2013 Mardi Gras Parade and subsequent afterparty celebrations.[11]

2014

October 10 – An article published by Vice reports that NSW Police are routinely using drug detection dog indications as a justification for conducting strip searches, particularly at large scale events such as music festivals. In one instance, a 24-year-old man says he was strip searched while volunteering at the Stereosonic music festival in 2013. The man had reportedly been stopped by a dog at the entrance of the event. "They took me into a little tent. I took off all my clothes. They're like, 'You don't have anything'" the 24-year-old recalled. "It was really humiliating. The fact that they didn't apologise was ridiculous and they were so aggressive with their questioning". In another instance, a 23-year-old student alleged that he had been strip searched three times over the past three years, twice at music festivals and once at King's Cross Train Station. On each occasion, he says he was in possession of a small amount of cannabis, which he claims he handed over to officers before the searches took place. In each instance, he was reportedly asked to remove his clothes, turn his back to police and squat. "It happens at festivals all the time. They've got booths set up to strip search you. It's basically a known thing that where there's sniffer dogs, they'll be strip searches as well" he said.[12]

The article also featured an account from a 39-year-old man who had allegedly been strip searched at the 2012 Mardi Gras Toy Box party after being stopped by a drug detection dog. The man says he had informed officers he was in possession of ketamine before the search was conducted. "I was taken down into the holding pen. It was a fenced off area, with black plastic around chicken wire fencing. I was basically told to strip down. It was very intimidating, because I had these three cops in my face. I was basically bare-naked". Speaking about the issue, drug educator Paul Dillon, Director of Drug and Alcohol Training and Research Australia (DARTA) said: "I can remember one girl who was totally traumatised by the experience" ... "She'd been strip searched and was mortified. The girl had no drugs on her, was not a drug user, but had been through a very traumatic experience. That event got me to question... is the benefit worth the potential risks to people who have no contact with drugs?"[12]

December 2 – The Sydney Morning Herald reports that strip searches following drug detection dog indications have risen 32% since 2009. An article titled "Police in the Doghouse over Strip Searches" features firsthand accounts from two men who were strip searched by police after being stopped during separate drug detection dog operations. Both men had admitted to being in possession of illicit substances before being searched. One man was subsequently issued with a cannabis caution.[13]

December 2 – Speaking to The Project, a 24-year-old commuter says he was strip searched by police at Redfern Train Station after an indication from a drug detection dog. The man says he was heading home after having lunch with a friend when he was approached by a group of four police officers who claimed that they had seen him throw something into a rubbish bin. The 24-year-old said he had been speaking with the officers for several minutes when the dog came over and sat down beside him. It's alleged that he was initially subjected to a pat down search in view of other commuters before having his belongings emptied out onto the ground. The 24-year-old says that when he asked the officers if they felt anything for the embarrassment that they had caused him, one replied, "You should be glad that we're keeping you safe". It's alleged that he was then taken to a private area where a strip search was performed. "Well basically they just take all of your clothes off, they strip you down" ... "it's quite a degrading process" the 24-year-old recalled. "You actually get told to squat and you actually get told to cough". Speaking about the incident, he told presenters that, "I remember a quote somewhere, laws become unjust when they start to effect people that they weren't written to effect" ... "I think that's definitely the case with these laws".[14]

2015

May 31 – Buzzfeed News speaks to a 23-year-old medical student who was allegedly strip searched at the 2014 Defqon Music Festival after a drug detection dog indication. The man says he was stopped at the entrance of the event when the dog began "sniffing around his feet" before being taken to a police search area, which he described as a "tent with makeshift cubicles made out of security fencing". After initially being directed to remove his shoes and empty his bag and pockets, the man says he was then told to take start taking off his clothes, alleging that police told him to "drop your daks" before instructing him to "pick up your balls and move them to one side". The man says he could hear another male festivalgoer undergoing a similar search in the cubicle next to him while this was happening. He was later released when no drugs were found. The 23-year-old described the incident as "embarrassing and humiliating", telling Buzzfeed that it "made for a shit start to a day that was supposed to be a fun day out with my mates".[15]

Sniff Off volunteers at the FOMO music festival in Parramatta in 2020

November 6 – In an article discussing the NSW Greens "Sniff Off" campaign, a 28-year-old electrician says he was strip searched by police at Ashfield Train Station after being stopped by a drug detection dog. Speaking to Vice, the man says he was initially patted down before being taken into a public toilet cubicle and asked to remove his clothes. Recalling the incident, he said that "having to get naked in a small space with a pair of large men with guns strapped to their hips was humiliating". The man claimed that he was deliberately targeted by police on the basis of his looks. "I walked past the dog, then the cop grabbed me and asked me to come back," ... "the dog wasn't really that interested, but then the cop was like, 'The dog's detected drugs on you'". The 28-year-old said he later spoke to another man of similar appearance who was also searched despite having no drugs on his person.[16]

November 28 – A performer says she was made to squat naked in front of a female police officer while being strip searched at the 2011 Parklife Music Festival in Sydney. Speaking to music industry website HowlandEchoes, the woman said she was she was stopped at the entrance of the event after a drug detection dog "decided to take an interest " in her bag. "A cop took me into a prison wagon and made me strip naked, squat... the whole nine-yards. I'd started crying in my show make-up, angry and humiliated that somehow I had no consent in this process. She tried to make small talk with me while my clothes were in a pile against the bars and I'm barefoot on the well-trodden muddy floor".[17]

Describing what happened next, the woman said, "they pulled all my belongings outside onto the muddy ground and went through everything with a fine tooth comb. Nothing. They turn to my costume bag and start pulling everything out onto the dirty ground. Seeing the delicate tulle of my dress covered in mud sent me in near hysterics. I found my voice and insisted they search on a cleaner surface. The male cop ignored me. The female who had searched my body finally took pity and suggested he put the tentacle pieces on the bonnet of the car. His response? Open the stitching on one of the pieces and pull out the stuffing. He shrugged. "You've could have stored something in there". Speaking about the experience, the woman said, "it was violating, destructive and left me totally shaken for weeks".[17]

December 2 – The Hack Program on Triple J speaks to two women who were allegedly strip searched on their way to the Strawberry Fields music festival near the New South Wales – Victoria Border. It's not stated whether the officers involved in the alleged incident were members of New South Wales Police or Victoria Police, though a subsequent report suggested that it may have been the latter.[18] Responding to the story, a caller to the program said he was made to undergo a similar search at a music festival in Sydney. "I was searched at Stereosonic 2014. I had to do some very embarrassing things like take all my clothes off, then I was asked to bend over and squat, then I was actually asked to bens my testicles and my shaft and separate them in case I was hiding anything there and pull back my foreskin". He said he was not carrying any illicit substances and had initially been stopped by police after attempting to move out of the path of a drug detection dog.[19]

Texting into the program, another listener wrote: "My friend had no drugs, was told to strip and squat by New South Wales Police, they even made her remove her tampon".[19]

2016

November 19 – An article published on the Triple J Hack website features a Q and A about the legal rights of patrons at music festivals. One person asks: "My friend had a sniffer dog sit next to him at Big Day Out. So they took him into a back tent and [asked him to] squat and even cough to see if anything came out. I couldn't believe it and said 'Is that legal?' They said yes because the sniffer dog gave them reasonable doubt that my friend had drugs on him".[20]

2017

May 8 – In an article published by University of Sydney newspaper Honi Soit, a 25-year-old political staffer recalled being strip searched by police at the Secret Garden music festival in February earlier that year. The woman had reportedly been stopped by a drug detection dog at the entrance of the event. "The dog was interested in me and sniffing me. It never sat down — something I understood to a be a positive indication" she said. The 25-year-old was reportedly taken into a tent by two female police officers, who then instructed her to remove her clothes. She says she initially took off her shorts before stopping "in the hope that reason would prevail", at which point the officers reportedly told her to "keep going". It's alleged that she was made to perform a naked squat before having to ask to put her clothes back on and collect her belongings, which had been "scattered across the tent floor" by police. "They definitely didn't say sorry. They had no sense that they'd put me through any kind of humiliating or uncomfortable situation. They weren't treating humans like humans," she said.[21]

November 14 – Buzzfeed News reports allegations from two women who say they were strip searched after attending a pro-refugee rally at in Eveleigh. The women, aged 51 and 43, say they were arrested by police when the protest moved into the inner-city suburb of Redfern. It's alleged that officers had cited a "failure to move on" as the reason for the arrest before transporting the pair to Newtown police station. "I was informed that they would need to conduct a strip-search and this was for my protection because I was in their care and custody and there might be something on my person I could hurt myself with" one of the women said. "I was asked to turn around and squat and asked if I had any contraband". It's alleged that the other woman was made to remove her bra but refused a request to remove her underwear. "They said 'take off the bra' at which I was incredulous and then they said 'jewellery and shoes' and asked me to take off my underwear," she told BuzzFeed. "I said 'this is ridiculous, I have my period' and so they did a pat down". Both women were later released without charge.[22]

An excerpt from a video of a drug detection dog operation at Newtown Train Station in 2017

Complaints made by the two women were later the subject of separate internal investigations by NSW Police, who initially recommended that "not sustained" findings be made against the officers who had strip searched the pair. Following the intervention of the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission in May 2018, a subsequent police investigation recommended that "sustained" findings be made against both officers.[23] Earlier sustained findings had already been made against the officer who had ordered that the strip searches be conducted[24] (see Investigation into the Arrest, Detention and Strip Searching of Two Female Protestors). In September 2019, it was reported that NSW Police had issued a formal apology for the "distress and embarrassment" caused by the incident, agreeing to settle a civil case launched by the two women for an undisclosed amount.[25]

December 28 – Speaking to the Hack program on Triple J, one woman says that she and a friend were strip searched by police at a music festival earlier in the year after being stopped by an undercover officer. "Their rationale for pulling us aside was that I tried to avoid the sniffer dogs. This may sound silly but I am genuinely afraid of dogs and I'm not surprised that I unknowingly avoided them. They strip searched us and I was even asked to squat. As a female it was grossly degrading to go through, and they found nothing on us".[26]

2018

May 1 – Writing for news.com.au, a man says that he was made to strip to his underwear at the Groovin the Moo music festival after an indication from a drug detection dog.[27]

May 29 The District Court of New South Wales hands down a judgement in the case of a 53-year-old man who was strip searched at Kings Cross police station in 2015. The 53-year-old had been detained in Darlinghurst in the early hours of March 24 after being approached by three police officers. He was later transported to Kings Cross Police Station where during a strip search he was told to "strip to a naked state, squat and expose his genitals". In handing down his ruling, District Court Justice Phillip Taylor found that the officers involved had acted with "an almost reckless indifference" before awarding the man $112,387 in damages plus legal costs. "The state's concession in relation to the strip-search illustrates that the police officers have used a most invasive power without the slightest justification," he wrote in his judgement.[28]

The incident was later the subject of an investigation by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. In a final report handed down in May 2020, the Commission found that the actions of the senior constable who had made the decision to detain the man and ordered he be strip searched in custody amounted to "serious misconduct",[29] suggesting that the woman was "indifferent to the legal limits of her powers as a police officer"[30] (see Operation Sandbridge).

June 7 – The ABC reports on an upcoming legal challenge being mounted by the New South Wales Greens in response to a proposed plan by NSW Police to deny entry to ticketholders at an upcoming performance by Above and Beyond at Sydney Showground that weekend. Speaking to the ABC, one man recalled being strip searched a music festival several years earlier. "The police officer who was speaking to me said that the dog had indicated that I had drugs on me. And I was like 'Oh, I don't have anything on me'. They wanted to search my wallet and bag I was like 'fine, totally, have a look through it, nothing in there'". It's alleged that police then informed the man that he would be taken to a van to be strip searched. "Everyone walking into the festival can see that you're being escorted over to the van to be searched. So I go over there, more questioning, you have to take off all your clothes, one by one and they search all the lining of all the clothes and then you have to bend over and they search shining a torch into cavities, I had to lift my scrotum, the police search every little bit of me". He told the ABC that the experience was "humiliating".[31]

June 10 – SBS News speaks to a woman who was denied entry to the Above and Beyond performance at Sydney Showground after being strip searched by police. The woman says she was made to "strip and squat" after being stopped by a drug detection dog. "I feel a bit traumatised 'cos like I walked past and then there were just like cops stopping me, and then they're like really intimidating you during the whole strip search. They ask you a lot of questions". The woman had reportedly been ejected from the venue despite no drugs being found.[32]June 12 – The Hack program on Triple J speaks to a ticketholder who was banned from the Sydney Olympic Park precinct for six months after being strip searched by police at the Above & Beyond performance on June 9. The man had reportedly been stopped by a drug detection dog on his way into the event. "I tried to get into the venue with my friends, the dog went up to me once didn't detect went away and comes back... it sat, three officers took me into a side room and searched me," he recalled. "They made me squat and cough and all that... they didn't find anything because there wasn't anything... and then I was issued with a six month ban from the venue." It's alleged that after searching the man, police asked to see his ticket, but he refused. "I didn't want to show them my ticket because it's my private property and I felt like my rights had been violated enough".[33]

A photo of the six month ban notice issued to the man was circulated on social media after the event. Responding to questions from news.com.au, NSW Police denied suggestions that he was banned from the venue on the basis of a positive drug dog indication, instead citing "bad behaviour" while also claiming that the man did not have a ticket for the event. A Sniff Off volunteer spoke to the man in the aftermath of the incident disputed those claims, instead suggesting that the notice had been issued because the man and his group of friends were arguing with the officers who conducted the strip search.[34]

June 16 – A woman who attended the Above and Beyond performance at Sydney Showground on June 9 says she was strip searched and ejected from the event after police witnessed her handing a fifty-dollar note to her boyfriend. Speaking to entertainment news website goat.com.au, the woman says she had given him the money to buy drinks when she was approached by a group of officers. "They just said 'We can't speak to you here, put your hands in a fist behind your back, come outside and we will explain everything'" she recalled. "They took my bag and everything off me [including my phone] and sent me straight to a booth to be searched" ... "I'd already asked multiple times 'Why am I here, what's going on? But [the female officer performing the search] kept saying 'Not sure, I wasn't in there'". It's alleged that another officer then entered the booth to speak with the female officer outside. "She comes back in and says 'It's been reported that you were involved in a drug deal". The woman says that the female officer then proceeded to conduct a strip search, at one point asking her to squat while the search was taking place. "I honestly felt so uncomfortable, and absolutely violated – which she could see – so she then made the comment 'It's more uncomfortable for me, don't worry!'". The woman alleged that police later went through her phone before ejecting her from the event after claiming that she was intoxicated.[35]

November 13 – Speaking to the ABC, a woman says she was left feeling "anxious and paranoid' after being wrongly strip searched at a music festival. It's alleged that her ticket was confiscated by police despite no drugs being found. "Even though I don't carry anything, what's the chances of me getting forced into the booth and strip searched and then be refused entry again?" she said.[36]

October 1 – Writing on Facebook, a woman says that a young female acquaintance was left feeling "distraught" and "humiliated" after being strip searched at the Yours and Owls music festival in Wollongong in the aftermath of a drug detection dog indication. It's alleged that the woman was made to "strip naked in front of other girls" and had her "privates rubbed" by police during the incident. No illicit substances were reportedly found during the search.[37]

November 12 – The ABC reports that the state's newly established police watchdog, the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission, will be launching a formal investigation into the use strip searches by NSW Police, citing an increase in complaints surrounding the practice. The report features a firsthand account from a woman who was strip searched by police while celebrating her 21st birthday in the city. The woman had reportedly been attempting to adjust her clothing when she said she noticed two men looking at her. "They were in, like all black clothing. They were both just standing outside the female bathrooms, staring. They weren't talking to anyone, they weren't really talking to each other. I got really, really nervous, I was just really uncomfortable" she recalled. The woman says she went into the toilets with a female friend to adjust her leotard, alleging that when she came out, she was approached by the two men, who revealed themselves as undercover police officers.[38]

December 20 – Redfern Legal Centre's Samantha Lee speaks to the Hack program on Triple J about the use of strip searches by NSW Police. She says one of her clients was made to strip naked in front of two female police officers after being stopped by a drug detection dog at a music festival. "The dog didn't sit down and indicate [positively for drugs] but the person was escorted to a cubicle and searched," she said. "There was a table, they asked her to put her hands on the table, they then searched her bag, they then asked her to remove all of her clothing. They then inspected her body and continued questioning her while being strip searched. At the end of this process, nothing was found on her but she was then escorted off the premises and her ticket was confiscated".[39]

2019

January 9 – Speaking to news.com.au, a festivalgoer says he was strip searched by policefi at a music festival after being stopped by a drug detection dog. The man says he was preparing to enter the event with his fiancé and 18-year-old brother when they were approached by police. "We were walking to the entrance when an officer clicked his fingers at my fiancée and told the dog to sit". It's alleged that the man was told he would be arrested if he refused to submit to a strip search. "The whole time were treated like criminals and the police officers were aggressive, calling us liars," he said. "My brother was a little scared he was going to miss his first ever event." No illicit drugs were reportedly found and said the man says the experience made him feel "violated and cautious of authorities".[40]

A drug detection dog at the FOMO music festival in Parramatta in 2019

January 25 – Speaking to Buzzfeed News, two festivalgoers say they were strip searched by police at separate music festivals following drug detection dog indications. In one incident, a 25-year-old man says he was stopped by officers as he was preparing to enter a music festival at Sydney Olympic Park in 2016. "They started accusing me of being really nervous and shaky," he said. "At that point I had about four police officers surrounding me." The man says he was then taken to a "cordoned-off area with a number of cubicles", where it's alleged that police initially searched his outer clothing and bag before taking him into a cubicle and instructing him to remove his clothes. "They ask you to lift up your genitals, my penis and whatever, to show it to them. Then I had to turn around, squat down, and get back up" he recalled. The man says that one of the officers continued to question him while the search was taking place, while another began "sniffing my phone as if he had some sixth sense, like he had drug detection powers with his own nose". He says he was released after "about five minutes", recalling that the officers were "a little peeved" that no drugs had been found during the search. "I was a little bit shocked because I hadn't [ever] had to get naked in front of people I don't want to get naked in front of, especially strangers," the 25-year-old said, recalling that he had "a bit of Stockholm Syndrome" and thanked the officers after the strip search had been completed. "They ignored me — they were visibly annoyed that they hadn't found anything."[41]

Several months later, the same man said he was again stopped by police when a drug detection dog "leapt on to him" as he was preparing to enter the Midnight Mafia music festival, which was being held at the same venue. It's alleged that officers told the man he "looked nervous" before leading him away to be strip searched. The 25-year-old said that this time the door of the booth was left open while the search was being conducted, recalling that when he asked the officers to close it, they told him that "it didn't matter and that nobody was looking". Speaking about the incident, he said the experience made him feel "powerless", telling Buzzfeed that "you're completely naked in front of two police officers who really have the ability to decide your night".[41]

Also speaking to Buzzfeed, a 19-year-old woman who attended the Midnight Mafia music festival in 2018 recalled being strip searched at the event after being approached by a drug detection dog. "I was feeling a bit uneasy because I understand if the dog sits down that's a reasonable excuse to take me to the back, but it had, what, two sniffs, and then it's accusing me of carrying things," she said. It's alleged that the 19-year-old was taken to an area inside the venue where police had setup a van and several tables. Despite insisting that she wasn't carrying any illicit substances, the woman says she was taken into a booth with two female police officers, describing it as being reminiscent of a "larger toilet cubicle". It's alleged that the officers initially searched the 19-year-old's bag before asking her to remove her jacket. Recalling what happened next, she said "And then they asked me to take off my shirt and then my shorts," ...  "And then my socks inside out with my shoes. And then I was completely naked". It's alleged that one of the officers spotted a string between the woman's legs, recalling that she told the officer "Oh, that's a tampon" when asked what it was. Speaking about the incident, the 19-year-old said it was "humiliating and embarrassing", telling Buzzfeed that "I was feeling violated and very upset". It's alleged that the woman's ticket was cancelled and she was ejected from the event despite no drugs being found. She said she was considering making an official complaint against NSW Police, stating that "I don't ever want to go through that process again or wish it upon anyone else. [The police are] supposed to serve and protect us but I felt really unsafe".[41]

February 11 – Speaking to TheMusic.com.au, a festival patron recalls being ejected from the Knockout Circuz music festival after being strip searched by police in the aftermath of a drug detection dog indication. "They then pull me out of the line and told me to get into my underwear. They searched my clothes and found no drugs on me. I was then told that I wouldn't be allowed to enter the festival. I asked the policeman why I wasn't allowed in and they told me it was the venue policy" they said. "I later found out it wasn't the venue policy, it was police policy. I did get refunded and HSU were very apologetic and assured [me] this would not happen again".[42]

February 26 – It's reported on social media that a 21-year-old performer was strip searched by police at the secret garden music festival in South-Western Sydney after an indication from a drug detection dog. No drugs were reportedly found and it's alleged that after the search had been completed, a male officer jokingly threatened to arrest the woman before laughing when she became upset. "Shout out to the cops at Secret Garden festival for STRIP searching my artist on her way in to perform, giving her the all clear, stopping her AGAIN to tell her they were going to be "pressing charges" then laughing & telling her to learn to take a joke when she got upset" said the woman's manager in a post uploaded to Facebook.[43]

The incident later formed part of a wider internal Investigation conducted by NSW Police in relation to complaints of unlawful strip searches (see Strike Force Blackford Report). That investigation had been overseen the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. In a complaint made by the woman's parents following the incident, it was alleged that the 21-year-old had been taken to a tent and made to "pull her underpants down and bend over".[44] In findings published in July 2020, police investigators found that there was "no apparent justification" for strip searching the woman, alleging that the officer who had conducted the search was under the belief "that she had been directed to search all persons upon whom the drug dogs had detected". When questioned about the matter, the officer claimed to have no specific recall of the incident, telling investigators that "I don't recall the female herself at all. I recall on the day I strip searched alot of females. And the majority of those females I witness(ed) (sic) the drug dog indicate on".[45] It was also acknowledged that after the search had been completed, a male officer had spoken to the woman, making comments to the effect that "the drug dog sat for you again, we will have to press charges", while other officers had laughed and told the 21-year-old that she should "take a joke". Speaking to investigators, the officer conceded that his comments were "inappropriate and unprofessional", claiming that he was attempting to "make light of a difficult situation". The report found that the officer's conduct constituted a "breach of the NSWPF Code of Conduct and Ethics".[46]

March 3 – Writing on Medium, a performer who attended the final Secret Garden Music Festival in South-Western Sydney reports on the large-scale police operation at the event. He speaks to a 21-year-old woman who was strip searched after an indication from a drug detection dog. The woman had been charged with drug possession after attempting to conceal a small amount of cannabis internally. "We were all visibly anxious and the police were talking to us about how angry drugs and liars make them, they were also making comments about how much they liked the girls in tiny shorts. When I was searched they told me they knew I had something and made the dog sniff me separately first. I was made to get completely naked and squat down, and then the officer told me to pull my ass cheeks apart. They then made me remove the drugs I had inside myself, told me to get dressed, and took me away for questioning". Speaking about the experience, the 21-year-old said, "I have never felt more dehumanised in my life. I am still quite anxious now, as someone who has never been to court or had much interaction with the police".

The author had also spoken to a solicitor who was operating a legal advice stall at the festival. Commenting on the police operation, she said it was "beyond noticeable and substantially harsher than other events. I have no doubt it was designed to intimidate". The woman said she had spoken with a number of festivalgoers who had been strip searched by police. "Some that approached us were distraught, having been subjected to a strip search in what they describe as particularly degrading circumstances. Most notably, in police tents with entrances that didn't close and afford proper privacy. Others described friends being whisked away to police stations and not having a clue how to help or contact them. That police don't explain this to young people increases their distress".[47]

March 5 – Writing on Facebook, a 19-year-old woman says she was left feeling "humiliated and embarrassed" after being strip searched by police at the Hidden music festival at Sydney Olympic Park the previous weekend. The woman had reportedly been made to strip naked and "squat and cough" inside a booth at the event after being stopped by a drug detection dog. It was also alleged that the door of the booth had been left open while the search was being conducted, leaving the woman exposed to police and other festivalgoers outside. Despite no illicit drugs being found, the 19-year-old was issued with a 'ban notice' prohibiting entry to the Sydney Olympic Park precinct for 6 months. A recount of the incident uploaded to Facebook later went viral, attracting more than 13,000 reactions and over 3000 comments, with many users alleging that they had been subjected to similar treatment by NSW Police.[48] Several media outlets also reported the story.[49][50][51]

A complaint made by the 19-year old's mother later formed part of a wider internal investigation into allegations of unlawful strip searches conducted by NSW Police. That investigation had been undertaken by officers from the Force's Professional Standards Command and was overseen by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission (see Strike Force Blackford Report).[52] In findings handed down in July 2020, police investigators found that there was "insufficient lawful basis" for both the strip search and the 6 month ban notice that was issued to the woman at the event.[53] It was also acknowledged that the door of the booth used to conduct the search had been left open, with the report noting that "in terms of the location provided to conduct the searches... the doors were unable to be fully closed as they apparently locked automatically" and suggesting that "officer safety required the door to remain unlocked".[54] Police investigators recommended that "sustained" findings be made against two officers in relation to the ban notice, however it was unclear if any disciplinary action would be pursued in relation to the strip search of the 19-year-old.[45] The Commission did however recommend that NSW Police consider issuing an apology to the woman.[55]

In an article published by The Guardian in June 2020, it was revealed that one of the officers involved in the incident had since resigned, while another had been "counselled by a senior officer and referred for additional training". Speaking to the Guardian, the woman's mother said that the family had not been informed of the outcome of the investigation by NSW Police. "All we've ever really wanted was for them to admit that they didn't follow their procedures, and that what they'd done wasn't what they were supposed to do," she said. "For me, I know they're not all bad, but you know it just feels like I've brought up my children to respect police and feel like they're there to protect you and I don't feel that's the case any more. That's really hard for me. I work in childcare and I have to tell these children the police are the good guys when that's not what I feel any more".[56]

March 7 – In a Reddit thread discussing 19-year-old's Facebook post, one person says that a family member was subjected to similar search at a separate event. It's alleged that the woman was made to squat naked over a mirror after being stopped by a drug detection dog. "A similar incident also happened to my cousin at a festival last year. On entry to the event, the officer walked past her with the dog and the dog did not sit. He walked past her again, and again the dog did not sit and yet she was told to come with him. She was courteous (she hates confrontation and never wants to do the 'wrong' thing). She was breath tested, drug tested, strip searched and asked to squat over a mirror. All tests clear (because she really didn't have anything on her). She was then breath tested and drug tested a second time, you know, just in case the first tests were somehow wrong). After complying and being proven to have not broken any laws, she was still escorted out of the event, with her hands being held behind her back and told she was not allowed back in. The officer ended the interaction by saying 'you and people like you are the reason why people die at these events'".[57]

Police using the same black partitions during a detection dog operation at Central Station in July later that year

March 10 – A story printed in The Daily Telegraph reports on the use of drugs at music festivals in New South Wales. Speaking to the Telegraph, two women recall being strip searched at the Groovin the Moo and Rolling Loud music festivals, describing their experiences as "scary" and "invasive". "A dog came up to me and sat down, which was terrifying, then two female police officers strip-searched me," one of the women said.[58]

May 2 – A study published by RMIT criminology researcher Dr Peta Malins highlights a number of issues relating to the use of drug detection dogs by police. Writing in the International Journal of Drug Policy, Dr Malins found that the presence of the dogs at music festivals increased the risk of overdoses and did not deter attendees from consuming illicit substances.[59] As part of her research, Dr Malins interviewed 22 festivalgoers who had been searched by police following positive drug detection dog indications at music festivals in New South Wales and Victoria, including some were strip searched.[60] "Strip search experiences were particularly traumatic, disempowering and dehumanising," she said in relation to the study's findings. "The trauma associated with any of these searches, but particularly strip searches, can be long-lasting, so not only affecting people for the rest of that day, but also into the future".[61]

One participant described the experience of being strip searched as "the most embarrassing and invasive process in my life", while another said that "being ordered to strip, it felt ... dehumanising ... it put images in my mind of being a prisoner". Describing her own experience, one woman recalled, "I was in the corner ... my back against the wall, and I was just shaking because I thought strip-search meant cavity search, and I was saying "you don't have the right to touch my body! I don't give you permission to touch my body! ... I thought she was going to pin me down and put her hands inside my body". The woman had reportedly suffered ongoing trauma as a result of the incident.[62]

May 11 – A 22-year-old man says he was strip searched at the Midnight Mafia music festival after an officer accused him of being on drugs. Speaking to Yahoo news, the 22-year-old said he was lining up with friends to enter the event when he was singled out by police. "A police officer grabs me by the arm and links arms with me as he drags me away," ... "He said: 'Mate you're chewing your face off, we're going to have to search you'". The 22-year-old claims he then attempted to explain the situation. "I pulled out my gum and told him I'm chewing gum but he said 'you're obviously under the influence'". After being questioned by officers, he said he was told he would need to submit to a strip search. "I was really eager to get into the festival so I was like 'lets do this'" he recalled.

Despite no drugs being found, it was alleged that a senior officer had refused the man entry to the event after the search had been completed. "He said 'I'm still going to void your ticket because I believe you're under the influence'". When the officer reportedly asked the man why his pupils were dilated, he recalled telling the officer that he was "nervous" because of the search. It was later alleged that another officer had told the 22-year-old he would be allowed to enter the event if he purchased another ticket, reportedly doing so because he had been "co-operative" during the incident. After spending $150 to purchase another ticket, the 22-year-old said he was allowed to the festival, telling Yahoo news he was "pissed off" about what had happened. "If they thought I was under the influence why would they let me back in?" he said. A statement issued by NSW Police after the event revealed that officers had searched 272 patrons, 32 of whom were charged with drug possession offences. It's not clear what percentage of the 272 searches conducted at the event were strip searches.[63]

May 11 – Writing on Facebook, a man says that he and his girlfriend were strip searched by police before being ejected from the Midnight Mafia music festival at Sydney Showground earlier that evening. Neither were reportedly carrying any illicit drugs. A journalist covering the event spoke to the pair and the incident was later reported by The Sunday Telegraph. The matter was later investigated by NSW Police as part of a wider investigation into complaints of unlawful strip searches. The findings of that investigation were published by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission in July 2020 (see Strike Force Blackford Report).[52]

June 4 – The Sydney Morning Herald speaks to a 20-year-old woman who was allegedly strip searched at the Midnight Mafia music festival in 2018. The woman had reportedly been the victim of a sexual assault and said the experience of being "cornered" in a booth with two female police officers was a refresher of the incident. "I had to be stripped naked and I felt completely helpless, and I was scared" the 20-year-old recalled. "It was horrible, that's how they made me feel. All I wanted was to go to the music festival". It was alleged that the woman's ticket had been confiscated by police despite no drugs being found, however a refund had reportedly been issued by organisers after the event.[64]

A drug detection dog at Hornsby Train Station in 2019

June 18 – The ABC reports on the increasing use of strip searches by NSW Police. The story features an account from a 23-year-old woman who was allegedly made to strip naked in front of a female police officer at a music festival earlier in the year. Recalling the incident, the woman said, "I was strip searched in a booth this year. The female officer took me over to the metal round hut, conducted the strip search, even made me squat, looked behind my hair my feet everything. I felt like I was going into jail. The whole strip search made me a bit scared. It was a horrible experience when you just want to have some fun with your friends".[65]

June 23 – The Sydney Morning Herald speaks to a 22-year-old woman who was allegedly strip searched and ejected from a music festival at Sydney Olympic Park earlier that year. The woman said she was queueing up at the entrance of the event when she was approached by an officer with a drug detection dog. "It didn't sit down at any stage, but the officer stopped me and said the dog had indicated that I did have something on me". She said she was told to place her hands in front of her body before being taken to a police search area inside the event. "I remember the officer who interviewed me initially was rude. I was crying, and he said something along the lines that I was only crying because I knew I was guilty".

After initially being questioned, the woman said she was taken into an "enclosed cubicle" with a female police officer, who then instructed to remove her clothes. "First the officer told me to take off my top. Then my bra. She touched the seams of my clothing to make sure I hadn't hidden anything inside. She did the same with my hat. Then she gave me back those garments and told me to take off my pants and my underwear so she could inspect those items as well. The officer even took the inner soles from my shoes to see if anything was concealed in there" she said. "At the end she looked through my bag, even questioning why I had $60 in there. All up it took about 10 minutes, but it felt like an eternity. After I dressed we sat back at the table where she had taken my details, handing back my bag and my identification".

The woman claimed that despite no drugs being found, her ticket was confiscated by police, with officers allegedly citing a "previous offence" as the reason for denying her entry into the event. Speaking about the incident, the 22-year-old said it left her feeling "vulnerable and exposed". "You just feel so humiliated, and it's horrible because you haven't done anything wrong" she told the Herald. "Now when I go to an event I feel sick when I'm waiting to get in. I know I don't have anything on me, but it doesn't matter. I did nothing wrong that day and I was penalised for it".[66]

July 11 – A witness breaks down in tears at a coronial inquest as she describes how an officer reportedly threatened to subject her to a "nice and slow" strip search at the Knockout Circuz music festival in 2017. The 28-year-old said she was entering the event at Sydney Olympic Park when a drug detection dog sat down beside her. It was alleged that she had then been taken to a ticket booth, which she described as a "metal room", where a female officer instructed her to remove her clothes.[67] "I had to take my top off and my bra, and I covered my boobs and she told me to put my hands up, and she told me to tell her where the drugs were" ... "She said, 'If you don't tell me where the drugs are, I'm going to make this nice and slow" the 28-year-old recalled. "She made me take my shorts off, and my underwear, and she made me squat and cough, and squat and cough, and squat and cough, and I had to turn around and squat and cough". It was alleged that the officer had opened the door of the booth while the woman still naked to hand her wallet to someone outside.[68]The woman had originally been called to give evidence in relation to the death of an 18-year-old festivalgoer who had died in hospital after consuming a fatal dose of MDMA at the same event earlier that day.[67] In a final report from the inquest handed down in November, Deputy State Coroner Harriet Grahame made reference to the woman's testimony, describing it as "palpable and disturbing".[69] In handing down her findings, Ms. Grahame called for an end to the routine use of strip searches at music festivals in New South Wales, suggesting that they only be undertaken in cases where, "there is a reasonable suspicion that the person has committed or is about to commit an offence of supply a prohibited drug" and "there are reasonable grounds to believe that the strip search is necessary to prevent an immediate risk to personal safety or to prevent the immediate loss or destruction of evidence".[70]

August 22 – The Hack program on Triple J reports on the increased use of strip searches by NSW Police. Texting into the program, one person writes, "I was apparently detected by a sniffer dog at a festival in Sydney. I was then treated quite roughly and I was strip searched in full view of the entry line. I had no drugs in my possession, I was then released after having my details taken". Also texting into the program, another person wrote, "I got strip searched at Secret Garden festival too, had absolutely nothing on me whatsoever, the dog indicated while going through the car and I got taken away and strip searched. It was really intimidating and rude".[71]

August 22 – Speaking to the ABC, a 21-year-old woman says she has been strip searched six times while attending separate music festivals in New South Wales. In one incident, the woman recalled being made to strip naked and "squat and cough' while she was on her period. "I was made to take my clothes off completely, squat and told I'd have to take my tampon out if they believed I had something concealed inside me" she said. "She was a woman herself so surely she could have understood how uncomfortable that would have made me feel". The 21 year old said she was not carrying any illicit substances and that the experience made her feel "humiliated and embarrassed".[72]

August 23 – A caller to the Hack program on Triple J says he was strip searched at a music festival after an indication from a drug detection dog. "I went to a festival when I was about 17 years old and I got sat down by the dogs" ... "They took me out back and they said, 'You need to come for a strip search'. I told them that I was underage, and they were like 'yeah, well, still gotta do it otherwise we'll rip up your ticket'" he said. "I was kind of left in a position where I had no other option. I had to go in and get strip searched. They found nothing". The caller says the experience made him feel "super uneasy and just kind of violated in a way".[73]

September 5 – Speaking to news.com.au, a man says he was ejected from a music festival after being strip searched by police. "I was singled out as I was there by myself waiting for a mate who was coming from the other side of Sydney, so I was texting a lot and walking from stage to stage depending who was playing". The man says that he and his friend were later approached by officers on the dancefloor before being asked to follow them outside. It's alleged that the man was taken to a separate area where police and security guards made him "drop his pants and underwear and pull up his shirt to be patted down". "It made me feel very uncomfortable and like a criminal for doing absolutely zero wrong," he said. "I asked the security why we were targeted. They said that they had seen me walking around texting constantly on my phone and then meeting my mate, they followed us in to where we were dancing". Speaking about the incident, the man said that "getting pulled out in front of others we knew as well and explaining it to them after was a sh*t feeling".[74]

October 21 – Operate Brugge Hearing commences. The Law Enforcement Conduct Commission opens a four-day public hearing in relation to a complaint made by a 16-year-old girl who had allegedly been strip searched by police at the Splendour in the Grass music festival in 2018 (see Operation Brugge). The girl had reportedly been stopped by a drug detection dog at the entrance of the event.[75] In a statement read by Counsel Assisting Dr. Peggy Dwyer on the first day of the inquiry, the Commission was told how the 16-year-old had been left feeling "completely humiliated" after being taken into a tent and made to strip naked in front of a female police officer. "I could not believe this was happening to me. I could not stop crying" she recalled.[76]

The Commission was told that police had conducted 143 strip searches at the Splendour in the Grass music festival in 2018, with more than 90% of those searches resulting in no illicit substances being found. Seven of the festivalgoers strip searched at the event were recorded as being under the age of 18.[77]

November 6 – Speaking to The Guardian, a 23-year-old woman recalls being made to strip to her underwear before a female officer "jiggled" her bra at a police station in 2011. The woman was fifteen at the time of the alleged incident and described the experience as "intimidating" and "traumatic".[78]

November 9 – A 19-year-old man says that he was made to "lift his shirt, drop his pants and hold on to his genitals" while being strip searched inside a tent at the Lost Paradise music festival in December 2018. Speaking to the Guardian, the man says he was sitting in his car with a friend when a female police officer approached the vehicle with a drug detection dog. It's alleged that the officer claimed the man "looked nervous", before telling him that "if you have drugs on you then you might as well tell me now or I'll take you to the strip-search tent and we'll find them that way". The man said he was then strip searched by two male police officers. No drugs were reportedly found during the search and the 19-year-old said he felt "shook up" after the incident.[79]

A drug detection dog at a pub in Randwick in 2019

November 28 – Doctors at Sydney's St Vincent's Hospital deliver a signed letter to then NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian calling on the state government to introduce pill testing and end the use of strip searches at music festivals in New South Wales. It follows an incident in the hospital's emergency department involving an 18-year-old woman who was allegedly brought in by police earlier in the year. The woman had reportedly sought police assistance at a music festival after admitting to internally concealing two MDMA tablets. It's alleged that the 18-year-old was then strip searched by officers before being subjected to three internal medical examinations. "Strip searches, as currently conducted, demean both the individual and the police conducting the search", wrote Dr Jennifer Stevens, the letter's author.[80]

Speaking to Steve Price on 2GB that afternoon, Dr. Stevens also revealed that a colleague's daughter had been left feeling "absolutely devastated" after being strip searched by police at a separate event. "Where you go along to this music festival, something you love doing, somebody asks you to get naked and then, you know if you're not carrying anything that's fantastic, but then to expect somebody to put their clothes on, go into the festival and have a good time, without this having effected them profoundly I think is extraordinary" she said.[81]

December 2 – Operation Gennaker Hearing commences. The Law Enforcement Conduct Commission opens a four-day public hearing centred around allegations of unlawful strip searches at an under 18s music festival earlier in the year (see Operation Gennaker). The Commission investigates complaints from three teenage boys who had attended the Lost City music festival at Sydney Olympic Park in February. All three had allegedly been strip searched by police at the event, with no illicit substances being recovered during any of those searches.[82] In a final report handed down in May 2020, the LECC found that each of the three strip searches investigated during the hearing was "unlawful",[83] however the Commission declined to make "serious misconduct" findings against any of the officers involved, citing a "lack of training and direction provided to those officers".[84]

2020

February 7 – The Hack Program on Triple J discusses revelations that NSW Police had set personal search quotas for officers to meet during the 2018 and 2019 financial years. The program hears from a girl who was attending the Splendour in the Grass music festival in 2018. She and a friend had reportedly been strip searched at the event. Both were 15 at the time of the alleged incident. "We'd just gotten off the public buses and we were pretty much, like filtering into the festival when we got approached by a policeman and the dog" she recalled. It's alleged that the dog then indicated on the girl's friend. "The police officer pretty much straightaway was like, 'alright, come with us' and since I really didn't understand the system very well, I said to my friend, 'Oh, I'll take your bag for you, because I didn't realise they would need to go through it".

She said that they were then taken to different tents, which were "separated by a white sheet". "Pretty much he[a] took me in there, asked me to take everything off except my underwear but including my bra. I pretty much just felt like I was doing what an adult told me to, and since I saw the officer as an authoritive figure and I was just the subordinate in that situation" she recalled. "I was a bit teary, and I felt very intimidated as sort of as though I didn't really have any say or idea of what was going on". Neither person was reportedly carrying any illicit drugs. Speaking about the incident, the girl said she would not have consented to the strip search if she was better informed of her legal rights. "We should have had our rights explained to us or we should have had what was happening explained to us further" she said.[85]

May 8 – The Law Enforcement Conduct Commission releases the findings of five separate investigations relating to the use of strip searches by NSW Police. These include final reports from two public hearings held in 2019 centred around unlawful strip searches of minors at the Splendour in the Grass and Lost City music festivals, as well as an investigation into a 2015 incident which saw a Darlinghurst man awarded $112,000 in damages after being wrongfully strip searched at Kings Cross Police Station.[86] Two additional reports released by the Commission related to separate incidents involving strip searches of indigenous persons in custody in 2017 and 2018. In one incident, a 16-year-old aboriginal boy had allegedly been subjected to two strip searches in regional New South Wales after being stopped by police with a small amount of cannabis in his possession.[87] The Commission also investigated a complaint from a 29-year-old Aboriginal man who had reportedly been strip searched in custody at a Sydney police station in 2017. In both cases, the Commission found that the conduct of police was "unsatisfactory" but did not amount to serious misconduct[88] (see Law Enforcement Conduct Commission Investigations).

May 27 – Speaking at the launch of a class action investigation, a 25-year-old British woman says she felt "numb all over" while being strip searched at the Lost Paradise music festival on the Central Coast in 2017. The woman had reportedly been queueing with friends to enter the event when a drug detection dog sat down beside her. It's alleged that officers then told the 25-year-old that they suspected she was in possession of illicit drugs before her to consent to a search. "I felt I had no choice but to comply, otherwise I'd be left stranded in the middle of nowhere, with no way of getting home" she told reporters.[89]

The 25-year-old was then reportedly escorted to a police search area inside the venue by a male officer. Before handing her over to a female officer, it's alleged that he told the woman to "go easy on her, I don't think she's got anything on her". Recalling the comments, the 25-year-old said, "that's when I started feeling really scared".[89] After handing over her ID and having her belongings searched, she said she was taken into a large police transit van, alleging that the windshield of the van was uncovered and that three male officers could be seen standing outside. "I was just so aware that people could look in. My main concern was the male police officers being so close at the time. There was no real privacy... It just felt very perverted, to be honest".[90]

The 25-year-old said that the female officer first asked her to lift up her top. When she informed the woman that she wasn't wearing a bra, it's alleged that she was told to "just do it quickly". She says that the officer then asked if she was on her period. When she said yes, the officer reportedly told her that "we still need to do this anyway" before instructing her to remove her pants and underwear. The 25-year-old says she was then told to "drop, squat and cough", at which point the female officer squatted down and looked at her genital area. The woman says she had a tampon inserted at the time, After the search had been completed, the 25-year-old's belongings were returned and she allowed to leave the area, recalling that she began "sobbing uncontrollably" when she returned to her friends. Speaking about the incident, she said "I had done nothing wrong. I felt violated like I was just another body and not a human being".[90]

July 21 –The Law Enforcement Conduct Commission releases the findings of an internal police investigation carried out by Strike Force Blackford, a specially formed task force made up of officers from the Force's Professional Standards Command (see Strike Force Blackford Report). The investigation was overseen by the Commission and centred around five separate complaints made in relation to unlawful strip searches, four of which had allegedly taken place at music festivals. In each incident, the person had initially been stopped by police following a drug detection dog indication. None of the individuals searched were found in possession of any illicit drugs.[91]

December 15 –The Law Enforcement Conduct Commission hands down a final report detailing the findings of its two-year inquiry into strip search practices employed by NSW Police. The report makes reference to several previous investigations undertaken by the LECC, including several investigations which had not previously been disclosed to the public. In one of those investigations, an Aboriginal man had allegedly been strip searched by police in regional New South Wales after officers had suspected he was in possession of a weapon.[92] In another case, two young people had been allegedly been strip searched at a shopping centre on the state's Mid North Coast after staff at a jewellery store had accused them of shoplifting. A summary of that incident included in the report stated that:

On the advice of an Inspector, who was not in attendance but who had been contacted to provide advice about whether the young people should be searched, police decided to strip search both of the young persons at the shopping centre. A female officer attended to assist. Both young people were taken to the store lunch room where their pockets were emptied and bags searched. The male young person was asked by Police whether he would submit to a search on the basis that there were reasonable grounds to suspect that they had the ring. He was strip searched behind a cupboard, in the break out room of the store. The ring was not located. The female young person was strip searched in the disabled toilets of the shopping centre, by the female officer. Male police officers were standing outside the first cubicle while the female young person was strip searched inside the second cubicle by the female officer. The door of the cubicle was held ajar by a plastic tub during the search. The ring was not located on her.[93]

2021

November 16 – Compensation firm Slater and Gordon releases an update on a proposed class action set to be launched in collaboration with Redfern Legal Centre in relation to unlawful strip searches conducted by NSW Police. It's announced that the proposed class action will focus exclusively on incidents which had taken place at the Splendour in the Grass music festival between 2016 and 2019[94] (a separate statement suggested that these incidents would only be used as a "test case").[95]

An article published on the Triple J Hack website features an account from a 25-year-old man who had allegedly been strip searched at the event in 2016 after being stopped by a drug detection dog. "I didn't actually see the dog sit down... and all of a sudden, I just got this forceful grab on the shoulder by an officer," he recalled. "It was kind of just a big shock, I had nothing on me or anything to hide". Despite telling the officer he didn't have any drugs on his person, it's alleged that the officer then proceeded to search the man's pockets and shoes before taking him to a "demountable building" where a strip search was conducted. The 25-year-old was allegedly told to "open his anus" while the search was being conducted. "I didn't actually have to take my shirt off at all, it was just straight 'Take your pants off, turn around, bend over, and open up" he said. No drugs were reportedly found and the 25-year-old was later allowed to enter the festival, suggesting that an insulin pen he was carrying at the time may have caused the dog to react. "It felt like an invasion of my privacy, like my dignity was just gone for that moment in time and I actually felt quite vulnerable," he told Triple J's Avani Dias. "At no point in time was I given any rights or asked if I had consent to what they were doing".[96]

Calling into the Hack radio program on Triple J that afternoon, one woman said, "Working back of scenes, working in operations in events for the last 25 years, I've seen a lot of what goes on back of house and yeah, a lot of strip searches, a lot of crying, a lot of people in tears and feeling vulnerable and feeling like they'd been violated, and the area that I worked in we were all over the place, in the campgrounds, in front and back of house, so I saw firsthand a lot of people in tears and stuff and had to literally pick up the pieces of these kids and try and make them feel a bit better and try and make their festival experience a happy one". Speaking about an incident she had witnessed at the Splendour in the grass music festival, she recalled that, "My compound at one point was right beside a gate into the festival from the campground, and they actually used my toilet to strip search a girl and had the door halfway open, girl cop, boy cop there, young girl probably 18 years old, made her take her tampon out, door halfway open, one of my staff members went past, saw the whole thing happen, came to me in tears and said, 'you gotta do something about it' and so I went over and dealt with the police and basically told them to 'off it' out of my compound you know. It was quite horrific and then they just left the girl there, didn't find anything, left the girl there in tears, so I just put her in my buggy and go and try and find her friends and try and make her feel better".[97]

Texting into the program, another person said, "If I had known I would have done something about it but having a policewoman in front of you asking you to take all your clothes off ... I just did it because I didn't know any better". The program also heard from a caller who had allegedly been strip searched at the FOMO music festival. "I was strip searched at 17, they knew that I was underage as well. I had told them my age, showed them my ID and yeah, I was asked to squat and cough and take off all my clothes. My parents actually weren't aware of it until after I had been strip searched, so I was just humiliated and disgusting [sic] and they never found anything on me and I just can't believe, I didn't even know that it was illegal until all of this started coming out and I still don't really know how to go about it, because it's been so many years since that event".[97]

A statement released by Redfern Legal Centre on November 21 featured a separate account from a 23-year-old woman who had allegedly been strip searched at the same festival twice in 2017 after separate indications from a drug detection dog. Speaking about what happened, she said:

It was around 2pm on Friday, July 21 and I was entering the festival from the campground. Two police officers, who had a drug detection dog, took me into a tent where they were searching people. When I protested, they told me that if I didn't co-operate with the search in the tent, then they would take me to a police station to be searched. I didn't want to be taken to a police station, isolated from my partner and friends, I was already very frightened. I asked for my partner to stay with me and support me during the search, but it was refused. My partner was then repeatedly ordered by police to move on. I was searched by a female senior constable. The way she spoke to me was condescending and patronising, for example, she repeatedly told me: 'The process will be made easier if you tell me where you are hiding the drugs.' Each item of my clothing was intentionally thrown on the wet and muddy ground by the officer, and I was forced to strip down."

"I told her four times that I had no drugs on me, that I had not taken any drugs, that there was no way any of my clothes could have come into contact with any drugs. I explained that I was diabetic and was carrying insulin with me, and if the drug detection dog had detected something, maybe it was the insulin. But she told me 'drug detection dogs are highly trained. We are positive you have drugs on your person'. At one point during the search, a male police officer opened the tent and stared at my naked body. In response, I turned away to hide my body and alerted the female officer that he was watching. She claimed no one was watching and continued searching me, when I could clearly see that the male officer was still looking through the tent. The whole experience was extremely traumatising, especially due to the way the police presumed I was guilty and the way I was both spoken to and physically handled. I felt violated because the male officer starred at me while I was naked. I was so traumatised that I returned to my campsite and changed every item of my clothing, which was also necessary because my clothes were wet and muddy after being thrown on the ground by the police officer, except I kept my socks and the handbag that contained my insulin."

"Around 5pm the same day, while I was attempting to re-enter the music festival again, my jacket was grabbed from behind by a male police officer who I saw signalling the drug detection dog to come and sit at my feet. I believe the male police officer told the dog to sit because I looked nervous due to my previous experience earlier that day. I told him I had already been searched that day and I asked him what the limit was on the number of times an individual could be searched within 24 hours, he told me: 'unlimited'. I said if you're going to search me again, can I at least have the same officer perform the search. Without any effort to honour my request, the officer told me no, she's busy. Then I was taken to the same tent, told to strip naked and was searched for the second time in the same day. Again, I had no drugs on me, I had not taken any drugs, I had not touched any drugs and there was no way my clothing could have made contact with drugs.

The 23-year-old described her treatment at the hands of police as "disgusting", stating that "I want to be involved in this case to speak up for myself and for others because this should not be allowed to happen. I shouldn't have been treated like this, no one should be treated like this".[95] The woman had also spoken about her experience on the Triple J Hack program on November 16.[97]

Notes

  1. ^ The girl uses the word "he" though it's not clearly stated if the strip search was conducted by a male police officer.

References

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