Woman Says She Was Forced to Remove Bra

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A woman says security workers forced her to remove her bra before she was allowed entry into a federal courthouse. "I was embarrassed and humiliated," Lori Plato said Wednesday. "I am a modest person and I know that I am not the first woman this has happened to."

Plato and her husband, Owen Plato, went to the U.S. District Courthouse in Coeur d'Alene on a civil matter on Sept. 20, she said. The couple was stunned with security workers with the U.S. Marshals Service asked her to remove her bra after the metal underwire supports set off a metal detector.

"I asked if I could go into the bathroom because they didn't have a privacy screen and no women security officers were available," Plato said. "They said, 'No.' I wasn't carrying a shank in my bra. If it's so dangerous, why did they give it back and let me put it on?"

Patrick McDonald, a U.S. Marshal in Boise, released a statement about the bra flap, saying "appropriate security protocols" were followed in the incident and that Plato was given "a number of options by the court security officers that would have ensured her privacy and enabled her entry into the courthouse. The individual, however, chose not to follow any of the options."

Security guards suggested that Plato simply remove the bra in her car outside, or find a restaurant bathroom, McDonald said. But Plato said she was parked on a busy street, and wasn't familiar with downtown Coeur d'Alene businesses. Instead, her husband held up his coat to shield her from the rest of the people in the courthouse lobby while Plato removed her bra underneath her shirt.

"The security didn't bat an eye," she said. "I put it on the security conveyor belt. One of the officers said, 'It's a girl.' It was mortifying."

McDonald acknowledged that security workers told Plato that she couldn't pass through security wearing the bra but said she wasn't ordered to remove it.

"She's inflating it," U.S. Marshal Patrick McDonald said. "All of a sudden she just took it off. It wasn't anything we wanted to happen and it wasn't anything we asked for her to do. She did it so fast."

McDonald said Plato is the first person he knows of who has been asked to remove a bra at the courthouse, but Plato maintains the Marshal's Service told her that other women have been asked to remove their brassieres to go through security.

Generally, McDonald said, undergarments aren't considered a danger to security.

"I don't think they're considered a weapon, really, the last time I looked," he said.

Still, he declined to discuss other ways the federal courthouse guards could have screened Plato for weapons.

"I don't want to get into security matters," he said.

Plato wants the Marshal's Service to apologize and stop forcing women to disrobe, she said.

"It was very humiliating," her husband, Owen Plato, said. "They could have handled it with a much more professional attitude. There should have been a privacy screen there at the very least."

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{"commentId":1074635,"authorDomain":"kimmy123"}

I hear too many news pieces about the police overreacting.
They have lost a woman in Phoenix.
As far as I can see, they were lying.
Too much power and covering them up with lies will destroy their positions. Bring back humanity.
Bring back mutual trust.
Get rid of power seeking personnel.

{"commentId":1074635,"threadId":"158053","contentId":"1003826","authorDomain":"kimmy123"}
    Reply#1 - Thu Oct 4, 2007 9:31 PM EDT
    {"commentId":1075197,"authorDomain":"softfacts"}

    Patrick McDonald, a U.S. Marshal in Boise, released a statement about the bra flap, saying "appropriate security protocols" were followed in the incident and that Plato was given "a number of options by the court security officers that would have ensured her privacy and enabled her entry into the courthouse. The individual, however, chose not to follow any of the options."

    "She's inflating it," U.S. Marshal Patrick McDonald said. "All of a sudden she just took it off. It wasn't anything we wanted to happen and it wasn't anything we asked for her to do. She did it so fast."

    I see a whole lot of idiotic melodrama on both sides of this argument. Let's call it a wash.

    {"commentId":1075197,"threadId":"158053","contentId":"1003826","authorDomain":"softfacts"}
    • 7 votes
    #1.1 - Fri Oct 5, 2007 3:27 AM EDT
    Reply
    {"commentId":1075249,"authorDomain":"fastnet"}

    I wonder what would have happened if she had tried to board an America West flight?

    {"commentId":1075249,"threadId":"158053","contentId":"1003826","authorDomain":"fastnet"}
      Reply#2 - Fri Oct 5, 2007 5:22 AM EDT
      {"commentId":1075250,"authorDomain":"fastnet"}

      Must have had some serious steel work in the structure.

      {"commentId":1075250,"threadId":"158053","contentId":"1003826","authorDomain":"fastnet"}
        Reply#3 - Fri Oct 5, 2007 5:25 AM EDT
        {"commentId":1075314,"authorDomain":"cartooncat"}

        I doubt it. A normal underwired bra always trips the metal detectors at the airport... but they just do a second check with one of those hand-held devices... I never heard of anyone actually being asked to remove their bra by security before...

        {"commentId":1075314,"threadId":"158053","contentId":"1003826","authorDomain":"cartooncat"}
        • 4 votes
        #3.1 - Fri Oct 5, 2007 7:31 AM EDT
        Reply
        {"commentId":1075253,"authorDomain":"krishna109"}
        Generally, McDonald said, undergarments aren't considered a danger to security.

        Well-- I should certainly hope not!

        {"commentId":1075253,"threadId":"158053","contentId":"1003826","authorDomain":"krishna109"}
        • 3 votes
        Reply#4 - Fri Oct 5, 2007 5:32 AM EDT
        {"commentId":1075278,"authorDomain":"softfacts"}

        I really want to hear about that one time it was...

        {"commentId":1075278,"threadId":"158053","contentId":"1003826","authorDomain":"softfacts"}
        • 2 votes
        #4.1 - Fri Oct 5, 2007 6:24 AM EDT
        Reply
        {"commentId":1075254,"authorDomain":"krishna109"}

        Actually, reading the article, its hard to know exactly went on.

        {"commentId":1075254,"threadId":"158053","contentId":"1003826","authorDomain":"krishna109"}
        • 5 votes
        Reply#5 - Fri Oct 5, 2007 5:33 AM EDT
        {"commentId":1075638,"authorDomain":"TeddRi"}
        Security Guards Attacked in Coeur d'Alene Federal Courthouse by woman with a under-wire bra

        I think perhaps both sides overreacted just a little in this whole thing. Why didn't she just change in the restroom or why didn't the guards just use a hand scanner ?

        {"commentId":1075638,"threadId":"158053","contentId":"1003826","authorDomain":"TeddRi"}
        • 1 vote
        Reply#6 - Fri Oct 5, 2007 10:48 AM EDT
        {"commentId":1075773,"authorDomain":"chewb1zz"}
        Why didn't she just change in the restroom

        They wouldn't let her.

        why didn't the guards just use a hand scanner ?

        With the comment they made of "it's a girl", it strikes me that they were just abusing their authority. I see this quite bit from security and police officers. There are a lot of good ones, but there are a lot of equally bad ones. I am coming to the conclusion that security and police should have audio monitors, kind of like the camera's in police cars, so if a complaint is brought up it can be investigated without the he said she said routine, listen to the tape, and find out who said what. The "it's a girl" comment is way out of line, and if it was made the officer should suffer some consequences. police officers and security is paid to protect and serve, not be an ass, and with or without the badge they need to act like decent human beings, authority and bad behavior destroys the very purpose of the profession.

        {"commentId":1075773,"threadId":"158053","contentId":"1003826","authorDomain":"chewb1zz"}
        • 2 votes
        #6.1 - Fri Oct 5, 2007 12:01 PM EDT
        Reply
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