Pubdate: Sun, 25 Feb 2001 Source: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (AR) Copyright: 2001 Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Inc. Contact: 121 East Capitol Avenue, Little Rock, Arkansas, 72201 Website: http://www.ardemgaz.com/ Forum: http://www.ardemgaz.com/info/voices.html Author: Linda Satter WOMAN SUES OVER CAVITY SEARCH An Izard County woman complained in a federal lawsuit that she was illegally forced to undergo a body cavity search when sheriff's deputies searched her house without a warrant on March 4, 1998. Kitty Eaddy filed the lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Little Rock. She seeks compensatory and punitive damages for what she says were violations of her civil rights. Eaddy said she and her boyfriend, Michael Leggett, were asleep in her house in Oxford about 10 p.m. when her 17-year-old daughter woke her, saying "the cops" were there looking for Leggett. Before Eaddy or Leggett could answer the door, the lawsuit alleges, Izard County Sheriff Donnie Joe Yancey, four male deputies and Leggett's male parole officer entered the living room with a police dog. The parole officer announced that Leggett had failed a monthly drug test two days earlier, and the group was there to retest him, the lawsuit states. Gary Clayton, the parole officer, took Leggett into the bathroom and administered a urinalysis test, which the sheriff then said Leggett had failed, the lawsuit says. Next, the lawsuit asserts, Yancey and his deputies searched the house without a search warrant and without Eaddy's consent. Yancey, who is no longer the sheriff, then summoned his female chief deputy, Willene Bray, to the house, Eaddy claims. The lawsuit contends that Bray took Eaddy into the bathroom and ordered her to strip and bend over. According to the lawsuit, Bray "visually peered into all of plaintiff's body cavities" and her "digitals penetrated her vagina." Bray then left the room and told the sheriff that Eaddy was "clean," the lawsuit states. Eaddy "was extremely shocked and mentally and emotionally damaged permanently as a result of this improper and illegal conduct in examining her body and invasion of privacy," asserts the lawsuit, filed on Eaddy's behalf by Mountain Home attorney Edward Witt Chandler. The lawsuit contends that "the degrading practice of human strip-searchers, visual and physical penetration of body cavities, based upon mere suspicion, was a policy of Izard County established by the sheriff, Donnie Joe Yancey, as policy-maker." Yancey, whose last year as sheriff was 1998, couldn't be reached for comment. Bray, who now works at Mount Pleasant High School, said she remembers the events referred to in the lawsuit, but, "I don't recall all of that." Asked if it was common for her to conduct strip searches, she replied, "I'm sure it was or I wouldn't have done it." The county's attorney, Linda Boone, was out of the office Friday and couldn't be reached for comment. The case has been assigned to U.S. District Judge George Howard Jr. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk