Source: San Francisco Chronicle Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Pubdate: Wed, 25 Feb 1998 Author: Manny Fernandez, Chronicle Staff Writer WOMAN WINS COURT BATTLE AGAINST U.S. CUSTOMS Agents at SFO suspected traveler carried drugs A woman whose trip around the world turned into a nightmare when she was strip-searched for drugs and detained for almost 24 hours by federal agents in San Francisco was awarded $451,000 in damages yesterday. ``No other person should go through this hell,'' said Amanda Buritica outside of the federal courthouse in San Francisco. Buritica, a Colombia-born school-crossing guard from Port Chester, N.Y., took a trip around the world in 1994 that ended traumatically, she said, when she arrived at San Francisco International Airport on September 22. U.S. Customs Service agents suspected Buritica of swallowing and transporting drugs because she was born in Columbia and was a woman traveling alone, said her attorney, Gregory Fox. After searching her luggage, agents conducted a strip-search and, finding no sign of drugs, had her X-rayed and transported to San Mateo County hospital, Fox said. At the hospital, she was given more than a gallon of a powerful laxative to drink. She defecated repeatedly for 16 hours, Fox said. ``I was very confused and wondering, `Why are these people doing this to me?'' Buritica recalled. No drugs were ever found. At the end of the 22-hour ordeal, agents dropped Buritica off at the airport and released her without an apology or explanation, Fox said. Buritica filed a lawsuit in 1995 in U.S. District Court in San Francisco, charging five customs inspectors with violating her Fourth Amendment constitutional rights. After a two-week trial and two days of deliberation, a seven-person jury awarded Buritica $450,000 in compensatory damages and $1,000 in punitive damages. Fox said the case is far from over, however. He wants the search techniques at SFO to be declared unconstitutional by a federal judge and litigation is still pending against San Mateo County and several doctors involved in the case. Customs officials declined to comment on the case. Buritica said she can't imagine returning to SFO anytime soon. Her around-the-world trip -- visiting India, Germany, Singapore and Hong Kong - -- had been enjoyable until she stepped into the airport's terminal, she said. )1998 San Francisco Chronicle Page A14