Police can use force to move body parts during strip-searches, NSW argues in appeal court
The Guardian World ·

The state of New South Wales is arguing that police have the power to forcibly move body parts when conducting a strip-search, as it seeks to appeal a landmark class action ruling. …
The state of New South Wales is arguing that police have the power to forcibly move body parts when conducting a strip-search, as it seeks to appeal a landmark class action ruling. Thursday was the first day of a two-day hearing where NSW is seeking leave to appeal after losing a class action brought by Slater and Gordon lawyers and the Redfern Legal Centre over unlawful strip-searches conducted at music festivals between 2018 and 2022. The state is arguing that Justice Dina Yehia erred in September when ruling that police do not have the express power to use reasonable force to move someone’s body parts during a strip-search. NSW is also arguing in its appeal that the judge erred in awarding the lead plaintiff, Raya Meredith, aggravated damages for the state’s conduct in the case, which was heavily criticised during last year’s hearings. The state admitted in May 2025 to unlawfully strip-searching Meredith. This reduced the hearings from a scheduled 20 days to just five after police withdrew 22 witnesses called to contest Meredith’s version of events. Meredith was the only witness to appear in the class action, which has more than 6,000 members. She was postpartum and 27 years old when, in 2018, she was strip-searched on her way into Splendour in the Grass in Byron Bay. A female police officer asked her to take all her clothes off, bend over and bare her bottom, drop her breasts and remove her tampon. At one point, a male officer walked in unannounced. …
Original source: The Guardian World