A woman sued an Atlanta police officer for her breasts exposed when allegedly brought her breasts from the house to a squad's car - she sat for hours, nude photos while police stopped to look at her and a masked officer opened the car door to take pictures.
The incident took place on February 8, 2024, during a SWAT-style raid from the FBI, tobacco, guns and explosives (or ATF), and agents from the FBI and the Alcohol, Tobacco, Guns and Explosives Bureau, on February 8, 2024, on February 8, 2024. These brokers seek evidence. The evidence seeks evidence to compete with the police's driving center, which is in increasing approvals, which is involved in the Internet, the company's competition center is competitive, the driving center is in competition, and the driving center is a criminal act. Media attention.
The Guardian reported the raid - including the woman's experience of being nude for hours. On May 23, Atlanta area attorneys Jeff Filipovits and Wingo F Smith filed a lawsuit on May 23, asserting that the woman's Fourth Amendment rights protected her from irrational epilepsy seizures during the raid and derive details based on details in the Guardian's story.
Federal complaints are important, a test of the police's ongoing claims of qualified immunity nationwide, and it is "the only thing between the government and the people seeking to defend their constitutional rights", where Patrick Jaicome, a senior attorney who works on "Immunity and Responsibility" in the public interest law firm.
An Atlanta police spokesman said it did not comment on the pending lawsuit.
The lawsuit alleges Amy Smith as plaintiff; Atlanta policeman Frances Raymonville-Watson was appointed as the defendant for "detaining Ms. Smith without clothing, with no purpose other than embarrassing and humiliating her."
"They grabbed me and led me to handcuffs outside - to let me be totally discovered," Smith told the Guardian anonymously last year. She said at the time that the officer placed her in a squad car where she stayed "looked like a few hours."
"When Ms. Smith was nude in the back of the squad, an unknown male officer with a face covering opened the back door of the squad's car and took a picture of Ms. Smith," the lawsuit said.
“While Ms. Smith’s chest was found, several officers walked around the squad’s car and looked at her through the window,” it continued. "The security of the site and the officers conducting the search need not be held with naked breasts." Ms. Smith was eventually released.
The February 2024 campaign lasted several months, including $200,000 in information, rewarded $200,000, resulting in arson and 450 billboards arrests, facilitating rewards in New York, Seattle and other cities.
Controversial Training Center - The doors officially opened at an invitation-only ceremony in April, attracting global headlines after police shot and killed the dead Manuel Paez Terán or the environmental activist "Tortuguita" in January 2023.
The Opposition Training Center, built on a 171-acre footprint in Southeast Atlanta forests, includes local and national organizations and protesters, centers on concerns such as unchecked police militarization and clearing forests in the age of climate crisis.
Atlanta police officials said “world-class” training needed the center and attracted new police officers.
Jaico said police officers found people's homes over hours every day and could find some clothes or nude, making the incident described in the lawsuit important. He noted that Georgia's 2015 Eleventh Circuit case confirmed the district court's findings, "a broad, clearly determined principle that individuals detained by police have constitutional privacy rights."
Jaico asserted that the Atlanta lawsuit made sense because “any situation with a chance to overcome qualified immunity is likely to set a precedent.”
At the same time, he said, “the traumatic experience will stick with her for the rest of her life,” referring to Smith. He called the incident “an example of police doing things to humiliate and punish people” and “thousands of constitutional violations occur every day, and if not appointed, the government will use it more frequently.”