Woman Files Human Rights Complaint After Strip Search

21 December 2009

Woman Files Human Rights Complaint After Strip Search

By William Miller

Impunity Watch Reporter, North America

Sarah Archer
Charmaine Archer filed a complaint with the Canadian Human Rights Commission after she was forced to submit to a strip search at an Ottawa Airport (PHOTO: Montreal Gazette)

OTTAWA, Canada – A woman has filed a complaint with the Canadian Human Rights Commission claiming she was racially profiled when authorities selected her for a strip search at an Ottawa Airport. Charmaine Archer, a duel citizen of both Canada and Jamaica, and her four-year-old son were pulled aside by authorities upon returning from Jamaica.

Archer went to Jamaica for four days to attend her grandmother’s funeral. She was stopped after exiting a plane coming from Philadelphia to the Ottawa airport.

Authorities claim that they selected her for screening because of her short stay in Jamaica and because she purchased her ticket at the last minute. She however claims that her selection was racially motivated. As archer points out, “I was the only black person on that flight and I was the only one in there being searched. I have all reason to assume it was racial profiling.”

Authorities unpacked her suitcase and tested her belongings for the presence of drugs. They claimed that her tooth brush tested positive for Marijuana and heroin during the search. Archer maintains that this was a lie: “I don’t do drugs, I don’t know anybody that does drugs and I wasn’t around drugs when I was in Jamaica. … I come from an upstanding family and nobody touched that toothbrush but me.”

Archer complied with the guards when they first pulled her aside and continued to cooperate as they searched her belongings. It was not until they told her she would have to be strip searched that she protested saying she would rather be arrested. She was handcuffed and forced to comply with a full cavity search despite her protest. She has now decided to file a complaint. No drugs were found during the strip search.

Archer says that her goal is to show that authorities faked the presence of drugs on her toothbrush and to make sure the video tape goes public so people will know she was compliant up until she was strip searched. She has contacted the Human Rights Commission and expects to hear back from them next week.

For more information, please see:

Winnipeg Free Press – Strip Search Criticized – 21 December 2009

Montreal Gazette – Woman to File Human Rights Complaint after Airport Strip Search – 20 December 2009

Montreal Gazette – Woman Claims Profiling Following Strip Search – 19 December 2009

Author: Impunity Watch Archive