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Strip search
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===Incidental strip searches=== In order to bypass the legal '''reasonable suspicion''' requirement, and because strip searches can be humiliating, the search is often made less overt, as part of an intake process, that includes a mandatory [[shower]]. For example, most prisons also include a mandatory shower along with a change of clothes. The shower serves to make the strip search less blatant as well as providing the additional benefit of removing contamination (in addition to removing weapons or other contraband). Many shelters require new arrivals to hand over all their clothing for a wash, as well as requiring them to have a shower. These rules also enable a discreet check for weapons or other contraband, with less legal implications, being less objectionable because the requirement is applied to everyone entering a facility. It is less offensive to clients than requiring them to undergo an overt strip search. Security procedures at facilities that mine and process gold, silver, copper, and other high-value minerals may constitute an incidental strip search. At the end of the workday, miners must remove all work clothes before entering a shower facility and then exit nude through a metal detector to a separate changing room where street clothes are stored. The courts have often held that requiring a person to have a shower as a condition of entry into a space (such as a prison, shelter, or the like) does not, in itself, constitute a strip search, even if the shower and surrounding space are so constructed as to afford visibility of the unclothed body by guards during the showering process.{{Citation needed|date=November 2018}} Hospitals often also have a mandatory shower, during lockdown, when [[mass decontamination]] is called for. Paul Rega, M.D., FACEP has specifically identified mass decontamination as providing the added benefit of checking for weapons or other contraband, as well as searching for clues among the clothes of persons found at a terrorist attack crime scene where it is recognized that the perpetrator(s) could be among the persons detained for decontamination.<ref>Paul Rega, M.D., FACEP, 5/2000, ''Biological Terrorism Response Manual'', "The removal of clothing as a decon procedure has the additional advantage of detecting a secondary device concealed on a victim"</ref>
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