Affirmеd and remanded by published opinion. Judge WILLIAMS wrote the opinion, in which Judge MICHAEL and Chief Judge ANDERSON joined.
OPINION
Appellee Lisa Amaechi filed suit in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, Alexandria Division, against Appellant Officer Matthew West in his individual capacity, pursuant to 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983 (West Supp. 2000).
1
Amaechi sought damages arising out of what Amaechi claims was a sexually intrusive search executed upon her by West incident to her arrest for violation of a town noise ordinance. The district court denied West’s motion for summary judgment based upon a defense of qualified immunity, reasoning that West’s searсh, as described by Amaechi, violated Amaechi’s clearly established constitutional rights under the Fourth Amendment. West ultimately disputes Amaechi’s description of West’s search, presenting what the district court referred to as a “factual conundrum.” (J.A. at 306). Because this is an interlocutory appeal from the denial of qualified immunity on summary judgment, however, we must accept Amaechi’s version of the facts surrounding the search as true for purposes of this appeal.
2
See Pritchett v. Alford,
I.
Amaechi and her husband, a guard at the Lorton correctional facility, lived in a townhouse in Dumfries, Virginia. Amae-chi’s young children sometimes played music in the townhouse too loudly, causing neighbors to complain. 3 On August 10, 1997, Officer Stephen Hargrave, of the Dumfries Police Department, responded to a complaint from one of the Amaechis’ neighbors about the loud music coming from the Amaechis’ townhouse. Har-grave instructed Amaechi to turn down the music, and she did so. At that time, Hargrave told Amaechi that he would not arrest her unless he reсeived another complaint about the noise level. Believing that Hargrave was unnecessarily impolite in his handling of the matter, Amaechi called the Prince William County Police Department and complained about Hargrave’s conduct. 4 Hargrave discovered that Amaechi had registered a complaint against him later that afternoon. On August 12, 1997, without any further complaints about the noise level, Har-grave secured an arrest warrant charging Amaechi for the two-day old violation of the Town of Dumfries’s misdemeanor noise ordinance. 5 ’
After 9:00 pm that night, Officer Pfluger took his trainee, West, and other officers to the Amaechis’ townhouse to execute the arrest warrant. 6 When Pfluger and West knocked on the door, a nude Amaechi was in her bathroom preparing for bed. She covered herself with a house dress and followed her husband downstairs. 7
When Amaechi answered the door with her husband, Pfluger told her she was under arrest. Amaechi fully cooperated during the arrest, buP when told that she was to be handcuffed, Amaechi pointed out to the officers that she was completely naked under the dress and requested permission to get dressеd because she would no longer be able to hold her dress closed once handcuffed. This request was denied, and Amaechi’s hands were secured behind her back, causing her dress to fall open below her chest.
Pfluger then turned to West, who was at the door with Pfluger, and told him to complete Amaechi’s processing. West escorted Amaechi to the police car in her semi-clad state, walking past several officers on the way to the car. Amaechi proceeded to enter the back door of the car, which West had opened. West stopped her and told her that he would have to search her before she entered the car. Amaechi protested that she was not wearing any underwear, and West said, “I still have to search you.” (J.A. at 33). West then stood in front of Amaechi, squeezed her hips, and inside her opened dress, “swiped” one ungloved hand, palm up, across her bare vagina, at which time the tip of his finger slightly penetrated Amaechi’s genitals. Amaechi jumped back, still in handcuffs, and exclaimed, “I told you I don’t have on any underwear.” (J.A. at 40). West did not respond and proceeded to put his hand “up into [her] butt chеeks,” kneading them. (J.A. at 41). West then allowed Amaechi to enter the *360 car. This search took place directly in front of the Amaechis’ townhouse, where the other police officers, Amaechi’s husband, her five children, and all of her neighbors had the opportunity to observe.
On June 2, 1999, Amaechi filed a seven count complaint in federal district court, claiming money damages against West in his individual capacity, the Town of Dum-fries, and Pfluger under 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983 (West Supp.2000) and under state law for West’s alleged sexually invasive search. Upon the close of discovery, all defendants moved fоr summary judgment. Amaechi voluntarily withdrew the count alleging the unconstitutionality of the Town of Dumfries’ policy permitting her arrest for violation of the noise ordinance and the count alleging West’s intentional infliction of emotional distress. The district court granted summary judgment on the three counts pertaining to Pfluger and the Town of Dumfries. 8 The district court, however, denied West’s motion for summary judgment as to the two counts against him and denied West’s defense of qualified immunity. 9 West filed an interlocutory appeal with this Court.
II.
The only issue we consider is whether the district court correctly denied West’s summary judgment motion upon determining that West was not entitled to qualifiеd immunity. We review the district court’s ruling de novo.
Hodge v. Jones,
A.
In relevant part, the Fourth Amendment protects “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons ... against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. Therefore, to be constitutional, a search must not be unreasonable.
Vemonia Sch. Dist. v. Acton,
Amaechi contends that West’s search, including the touching and penetration of her genitalia, was unreasonable in light of the circumstances surrounding the arrest. West argues, on the other
*361
hand, that Supreme Court precedent allows an officer, conducting a search incident to arrest, to effectuate a
“full search of the person.”
(Appellant’s Br. at 16) (emphasis in original) (citing
United States v. Robinson,
We believe that West interprets
Robinson
too broadly.
10
Robinson
did not, nor could it, rewrite the Fourth Amendment to exclude the explicit requirement that no search be unreasonable. Nor did
Robinson
hold that all searches incident to arrest, no matter how invasive, are inherently reasonable. To the contrary, since
Robinson,
the Supreme Court has continued to emphasize that Fourth Amendment jurisprudencе prohibits unreasonable searches incident to arrest.
See, e.g., Illinois v. Lafayette,
In
Bell v. Wolfish,
West’s search was highly intrusive without any apparent justification. Amaechi was arrested for a two-day old misdemean- or noise violation, she submitted to arrest peacefully, she аdvised the officers that she had on no underclothes, and she requested the officers to allow her to get dressed before being placed in handcuffs. Instead, the officers secured Amaechi’s hands behind her back and made her walk to the car and stand in the street with her dress open and lower body exposed. West proceeded to search by touching and penetrating Amaechi’s genitalia and kneading her buttocks with his ungloved hand. This invasive search was not conducted in a private holding cell but rather was conducted on the street in front of Amaechi’s home, subject to viewing by Amaechi’s family, the public, and the other officers.
Cf. Polk v. Montgomery Co., Md.,
782 F.2d
*362
1196, 1201-02 (4th Cir.1986) (“[Whether the strip search was conducted in private] is especially relevant in determining whether a strip search is reasonable under the circumstances.”)- West does not allege that he conducted the search in such a manner because of a perceived threat to his or the other officers’ safety.
See generally Bell,
B.
We turn next to the question of whether Amaechi’s right to be free from this sexually invasive search was clearly established at the time West performed the search. For purposes of analyzing whether this Fourth Amendment violation was clearly established, we must -go beyond the general “unreasonableness” of the search and determine “at a high level of particularity” the nature of the Fourth Amendment violation.
Edwards v. City of Goldsboro,
West conceded at oral argument that a strip search or a body cavity search conducted in public violates an arrestee’s Fourth Amendment right to a reasonable search, but he argues that relevant precedent dоes not define his conduct as unlawful because no case holds that the “swiping” and “slight” penetration of an arrestee’s genitalia pursuant to a search incident to an arrest violates the Fourth Amendment. Contrary to West’s argument, the exact conduct at issue need not have been held unlawful for the law governing an officer’s actions to be clearly established.
See Anderson v. Creighton,
For purposes of analyzing whether West was on notice that his search of Amaeehi was unlawful, we agree with the district court that precedent outlining limitations on the right to conduct strip searches are relevant. A strip search under federal law includes the exposure of a person’s naked body for the purpose оf a visual or physical examination.
See United States v. Dorlouis,
Amaechi’s claim involves characteristics of both a strip search and a body cavity sеarch. Although Amaeehi was not per se “disrobed” by West, the officers in effect caused her substantial disrobing by refusing to allow her to change clothes after she informed them that handcuffing her would cause her naked body to be completely exposed from the waist down. Regardless of whether refusing to allow Amaeehi to change was unreasonable,
13
the officers certainly knew or should have known that handcuffing Amaeehi would resuit in publicly exposing a significant portion of her naked lower body. Yet, they nevertheless proceeded to secure Amaechi’s hаnds behind her back. Then, with Amaeehi in this vulnerable position, West, without any suspicion of danger to the officers or the possibility of the destruction of evidence, proceeded to go beyond “visual examination” and a pat down of the outside of Amaechi’s housedress and instead physically touched and penetrated her genitalia and kneaded her buttocks with his bare hand. Public exposure of the genitalia accompanied by physical touching is far more intrusive than directing an arrestee to remove her clothing in private for the purpose of “visually inspecting” the arres-tee’s genitalia.
See Bond v. United States,
Firmly rooted Supreme Court and Fourth Circuit precedent involving strip searches and body cavity searches should have made it apparent to West, as a reasonable оfficer, that his search of Amaechi was unlawful under the Fourth Amendment. It is not a new rule of law that searches involving the public exposure, touching, and penetration of an arrestee’s genitalia are subject to limitations under the Fourth Amendment. Relevant precedent compels the conclusion that West’s search transgressed these clear limitations.
The Supreme Court has expressly disavowed the right of an officer to disrobe an arrestee on the street pursuant to a search incident to an arrest without the presence of justifying factors.
See Illinois v. Lafayette,
This Court also has disavowed the type of public search conducted by West. We have applied the
Bell
analytical framework to set forth clear guidelines as to the manner in which a strip search must be conducted in order to comport with an arres-tee’s Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable searches.
Bell,
Moreover, this Court has recоgnized the fact, first established in
Bell,
that the intrusive, highly degrading nature of a strip search demands a reason for conducting such a search that counterbalances the invasion of personal rights that such a search involves.
Logan,
Our agreement with the district court that West’s search is clearly analogous to precedent involving strip searches is further supported by Virginia’s definition of strip search. 15 Virginia’s statutory law, which is similar to that of most states, provides that, “[s]trip search shall mean having an arrested person remove or arrange some or all of his clothing so as to permit a visual inspection of the genitals, buttocks, anus, female breasts, or undergarments of such person.” Va.Code Ann. § 19.2-59.1(F) (Michie 1999) (emphasis added). Contrary to West’s argument that his search of Amaechi does not meet the requisites of strip search as that phrase is defined by state statute, West’s search actually was self-evidently more invasive than the type of search contemplated by the statute because he went beyond visual inspection into physical inspection.
Those statutory restrictions provided West with ample notice that his search of Amaechi was unreasonable. The statute requires an officer to conduct a strip search only in a private place. See Va. Code Ann. § 19.2-59.1(A). The provision further requires that strip searches, where permissible, be conducted “by persons of the same sex as the person arrested and on the premises where the search cannot be observed by persons not physically conducting the search.” Id. Therefore, West’s search of Amaechi violated every aspect of Virginia’s own law governing the propriety of strip searches. Because the state statute is in accordance with federal law governing limitations on the manner and scope of strip searches, West had no reason to believe his search of Amaechi was reasonable or fell within a questionable area of law. 16
III.
The entire body of jurisprudence applying limits on the type of sexually intrusive search conducted by Wеst provides West with notice that his search of Amaechi was unconstitutionally unreasonable. There was absolutely no justification for this type of public search, in the form of a safety, security, or evidentiary concern; it was made incident to a two-day old arrest for a minor noise violation; and West’s kneading of Amaechi’s buttocks and his touching
*366
and penetration of Amaechi’s exposed genitalia with his ungloved hand affronts the basic protections of the Fourth Amendment, which at its core is designed to protect privacy and personal dignity against unjustified invasion by the State,
see Schmerber v. California,
AFFIRMED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Amaechi also joined the Town of Dumfries, Virginia and Sergeant Bernard Pfluger of the Dumfries Police Department in her § 1983 suit, but the district court dismissed both parties on January 13, 2000.
. Indeed, if West challenged Amaеchi’s version of the facts for purposes of his appeal, we would be without jurisdiction to resolve his qualified immunity defense at this interlocutory stage.
See Johnson v. Jones,
. In August 1997, Amaechi's five children ranged in age from four to eleven years.
. Amaechi did not call the Dumfries Police Department because she believed it would “likely inappropriately рrotect its own." (Ap-pellee’s Br. at 5).
. Amaechi' was never convicted of this offense. She resolved the dispute with her neighbor through mediation.
. This was West’s first arrest of a woman. He resigned from the police force approximately six months later.
. The housedress was made of a light weight fabric, had spaghetti straps, and had buttonholes all the way down the front. It was missing all of its buttons from immediately below the chest, however, requiring Amaechi to gather the dress with her hand to keep it closed.
. The district court held that Pfluger was not responsible for training West and that the town had properly discharged its duty to train West by sending him to a state-approved law enforcement academy. The district court also dismissed the count against Pfluger charging wrongful arrest. Amaechi has not cross-appealed these rulings.
. The remaining charges against West allege an unconstitutional search and assault and battery.
. To demonstrate the breadth of the interpretation West gives to Robinson, counsel for West argued at the motions hearing before the district court that Robinson might permit an officer to examine a person’s private areas and perform a cavity search in рublic, in a "measured way,” regardless of the amount of time such a search required. (J.A. at 253-54).
. West argues that
Bell v. Wolfish,
. To the extent that Amaechi’s hands were secured behind her back, with her shoulders bare and dress open from the waist down, weapons easily could have been viewed without necessitating any pat down. The outline of possible weapons could have been seen through the thin material of the dress, and parts of Amaechi’s body that were not already exposed could have been searched by a pat down.
. In
United States v. Gwinn,
. Additionally, we need not decide whether West's search was a strip search to apply precedent involving strip searches becаuse those cases are not limited to strip searches per se. Rather,
Bell v. Wolfish,
. It is important to note that the technical language of the Virginia statute is not the controlling factor in determining whether this was in fact a strip search. Rather, that determination is informed by federal law.
See Davis v. Scherer.
. In support of our determination that a reasonable officer should have been on notice that his search violated the Fourth Amendment, we note that the Sixth Circuit has held that a reasonable officer should be on notice that simply requiring an individual to sit naked while the officers search the arrestee’s home is a violation of the Fourth Amendment, thereby depriving the officers of qualified immunity.
See Hall v. Shipley,
