Current weather: 
60° F   mostly clear
sponsored by:

printer-friendly  |  e-mail this story

Bra check upsets court visitor


A Bonners Ferry woman says she was humiliated when security guards at the federal courthouse in Coeur d'Alene told her she'd have to remove her underwire bra to get inside.

Lori Plato said she was going into the courthouse for a court hearing Sept. 20 when the metal detector went off as she passed through security.

"When I walked through, the gentleman said, "'Do you have an underwire bra on?'." Plato said. "I said, 'Yeah.' He said, 'You have to remove it.' "

But there was nowhere private to remove her bra, she said. The guards suggested she go out to her car to do it.

Instead, Plato — who describes herself as "not petite" — said she removed her bra while her husband tried to shield her from view of others in the crowded lobby by holding up his coat.

She said she had to put the bra on a conveyor belt and send it through an x-ray machine.

"After I got through the metal detector and waited for my bra to come through the conveyor belt, one of the security guards said, "'That's a girl,'" Plato said. She thought the guard was making fun of her.

ADVERTISEMENT

The U.S. Marshal's Service, which supervises security at the courthouse, said Plato was given options and chose not to exercise them. She was told she could have gone to her car or to a neighboring business to remove the bra, U.S. Marshal Patrick McDonald said.

"She's inflating it," McDonald said.

He said Plato turned her back on the security officers, who thought she was simply going to talk to her husband.

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

Though he said Plato wasn't ordered to remove her bra, McDonald said she was told she couldn't pass through security wearing it.

He also said Plato is the first person he knows of who has been asked to remove a bra at the courthouse. Ordinarily, bras don't set off the metal detectors, he said.

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

When Plato contacted the Marshal's Service office seeking an apology, Plato said she was told the guards could have been more sensitive, but no apology was offered.

She also said the Marshal's Service told her that other women had been asked to remove their bras in the past and some simply left the courthouse. But McDonald said he was unaware of similar instances or complaints.

There are private areas on the first floor of the courthouse, McDonald said, but it wasn't an option for Plato to use those rooms to remove her bra because there were no female guards to accompany her past the checkpoint.

At the Kootenai County Courthouse, Peter Barnes, the head of security, said he's not aware of an underwire bra ever setting off metal detectors there.

If that were to occur, Barnes said, security guards likely would use a handheld wand to sweep over the woman's chest.

"We never run into a problem where we thought anything like that was a weapon or looked like a weapon," he said.

McDonald declined to discuss other ways the federal courthouse guards could have screened Plato. "I don't want to get into security matters," he said.

Nobody should be forced to remove their undergarments to enter the courthouse, Plato said.

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


back to top


Search:
Advertisement

GU basketball

See our Gonzaga hoops page for photos, game results, stories and more. Also see:

SportsLinkFan forumZags mobile

Sponsored by:

WSU basketball

See our Cougar hoops page for photos, game results, stories and more. Also see:

SportsLinkCougs mobile

Holiday Gift Guide

Cold Case stories »

For three decades, Kathy Forech had nightmares that her daughter would disappear on her birthday and be found in the Spokane River. It's just a mother's fear, she thought. It was more of a premonition. »

Sponsored by:

High school sports

High school sports Get schedules and scores for football, volleyball, slowpitch softball, girls and boys soccer and cross country.

High school news

Check out the Vox Box, online companion to the high school newspaper, The Vox.

Download The Vox in PDF

Gas prices

Readers report local prices here.

Ongoing coverage

Kendall Yards
Otto Zehm death
Spokane Diocese bankruptcy
Met Mortgage bankruptcy
Duncan investigation
River Park Square development
River Park Square crash
Archived sections:
Jim West investigation
Morning Star investigation

Assisted living database

Search for information about local assisted living and skilled nursing facilities.

Local bloggers

See our list of Inland Northwest bloggers. If you live in the Inland Northwest and are a regular blogger, we might link to your blog.

 

9-1-1 Calltaker/Dispatcher
Multi Agency Communications Center, Moses Lake WA

Assemblers, Machinists, Electricians, Welders, etc, etc.
ASC

Billings, MT
Border States Electric Supply

Business Office Manager
Life Care Center of Post Falls, ID

Construction Bookkeeper/Office Manager

Coordinator/Trainer - Simulated Client & Community Volunteers
Washington State University

Director of Patiently Care
Mid-Valley Hospital

Lead Cook
Evergreen Fountains

REGISTERED NURSES
Quincy Valley Medical Center

Roofer (Cyclic)
Washington State University

PROMOTIONS
   HOT DEALS | About
FOR RENT
   509-467-2870
Gov't Owned Free List 8 Homes
   Realty West 509.370.0221
Warehouse to lease 7000 sq ft
   Call 953-0304
Corbin Park Neighborhood, Just Listed $79,950
   Don Priest Realty, Don 924-3406 or Terry 216-0755
Appliances at Super Low Prices
   Appliance Recycling, Spokane