The Phoenix City Council is set to approve a $1.6 million settlement with a woman who reported that a Phoenix police officer subjected her to an unwarranted body cavity search.
Erica Reynolds filed a notice of claim — a precursor to a lawsuit — in June alleging that Phoenix cops ordered her to strip naked in an interrogation room before Officer Timaree Murphy digitally probed her rectum and vagina in search of drugs. No drugs were found.
The procedure did not comply with the Phoenix Police Department’s policy on strip searches, which states that cavity searches can only be conducted with a warrant under approval from a superior officer. The policy also requires a medical professional to conduct any cavity search. Murphy’s search of Reynolds also violated national best practices on cavity searches.
Murphy was suspended by the Phoenix Police Department for 40 hours over the unwarranted search, a spokesperson confirmed. The Arizona Peace Officer Standards and Training Board, a state regulatory commission, in November retroactively suspended Murphy’s police certification for 40 hours.
The settlement comes just before the six-month deadline for Reynolds to file a lawsuit against the city. The agreement is still pending City Council approval on Wednesday, a step that is largely a formality as Council members routinely vote in favor of settlements.
In her claim, Reynolds asked for $12.5 million over allegations of sexual assault and battery, wrongful arrest, false imprisonment, gross negligence, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Attorney Heather Hamel, who represents Reynolds, declined to comment.
The unwarranted search of Reynolds happened about a year ago — the day after Christmas. Officers pulled Reynolds over on December 26, 2018, after surveilling a meeting she had with an alleged drug dealer.
Phoenix police claimed to smell marijuana in Reynolds’ car and used that as a pretext to conduct a search. They found no drugs. A pat-down of Reynolds and a K-9 search also failed to yield any illegal substances.
“At this point, with Erica demonstrably not in possession of anything illegal, the Phoenix PD officers made a choice,” Reynolds’ legal team wrote in her notice of claim. “They did not end the search. They did not secure a search warrant. They did not release Erica.”
Instead, the officers brought her to a substation and ordered her to strip naked. Officer Murphy donned a pair of gloves and began the unwarranted procedure.
“As the officer inserted multiple unlubricated fingers into Erica’s anus, probing her rectum, the tears flowed,” the claim states. “And as the officers aggressively poked and prodded a hemorrhoid, Erica yelped in pain.”
Without changing her gloves, Murphy then searched Reynolds’ vagina. Neither search turned up evidence of drugs.
In addition to the unwarranted cavity search, Reynolds also alleged that Phoenix police arrested her again and coerced a confession out of her the day that she was planning on speaking publicly about the incident during a City Council meeting. Reynolds claimed that police interrogated her for six hours on February 6 until she admitted under duress to having possessed marijuana on the day she was searched in December.
Prosecutors have not charged Reynolds with any crimes stemming from her February 6 arrest.
Reynolds later claimed through a court filing that the Phoenix Police Department withheld information related to her case, including police reports, officer files, and video footage related to the warrantless search of her vagina and rectum.