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The case could turn on the court's reading of its own decision in 1979 that upheld a blanket policy of conducting body cavity searches of prisoners who had had contact with visitors. The court's reasoning then was that the interaction with outsiders created the possibility that some prisoners got hold of something they shouldn't have. But that ruling depended on suspicion, while the searches of Florence did not. Florence said he would have understood the need for him to undress and then expose parts of his body for a close look if he had been arrested on charges of committing a violent crime. But failing to pay a fine is not a crime in New Jersey. Searching people who have not paid fines or who are picked up for similar, non-violent reasons "cannot be condoned and they cannot be justified," Florence said. Five former New Jersey attorneys general, a group of current and former jail officials and groups that advocate for victims of domestic violence argued that the one-size-fits-all search policy is unnecessary to make jails safer, and it is humiliating. A dozen states, law enforcement and government groups argue that a uniform strip search policy is reasonable under the Constitution. Florence's lawsuit also raised claims of false arrest and imprisonment and racial discrimination while in jail. Those claims are on hold pending the high court's decision, which should come by spring. The case is Florence v. Board of Chosen Freeholders, 10-945.
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