Summary
Italian police in Brescia face allegations of degrading treatment after seven female climate activists from Extinction Rebellion claimed they were forced to remove their underwear and perform squats during questioning.
The activists, detained after a protest against Leonardo, an aerospace company, accused police of singling out women for this treatment.
Police denied misconduct, stating the procedure was to search for dangerous objects.
The incident has prompted calls for an investigation from opposition politicians amid debates over a controversial security bill targeting climate activists with harsher penalties.
Lol it’s to make sure you don’t have anything shoved up inside of you. It’s like you guys haven’t ever been arrested before.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_cavity_search#Procedure
Edit: For the record fuck the police always, but this is a pretty standard part of being searched before you are processed
Don’t waste your time, people no longer like facts just feelings
Not everyone lives in the US. If I remember correctly, here in Germany they are not allowed to routinely do these searches (doesn’t mean they can’t do them, but it’s not standard when you are arrested). I think it’s based on EU laws, so the same probably applies to Italy.
Then why are they saying only the women had to do this?
Edit: I’ve never had a cavity search any of the times I have been arrested.
I sorta need this explanation. Some fucked up shit.
A lot of countries require the equivalent of probable cause to do a cavity search before entering institutions like prisons, jails, or asylums as a prisoner or patient.
From the same article
United States edit
In the United States, Bell v. Wolfish is the benchmark case on this issue. In its judgment of the case, the U.S. Supreme Court established a standard of reasonable grounds for performing cavity searches. Among these are security concerns at prisons. Such searches are generally governed by the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which prohibits searches without probable cause.[3]
Which US state is Italy in?
New Jersey
“Everything’s legal in New Jersey”
The point of the matter is the previous poster said that it was standard, my response proved it wasn’t.
If you read even the summary you will see that it wasn’t uniformly implemented.
It’s your loose interpretation of “it’s standard” that’s tripping you up. US case law has no relevance on what’s standard in Italy.
From the summary:
Any other arguments that are D.O.A?
You should ask yourself that question.
Lol, doesn’t read the summary, uses overly broad terms and then points the finger at someone else.
Are ya sure?
Lmao. Rofl even.
I can’t say I have been, so thank you for the explanation.