Aрpellants Blanca Nuba Vidal-Garcia (Vidal-Garcia) and Leonor Amanda Afana-dor De Cabrera (Afanador) were charged in the Southern District of Florida with importation of cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 952(a) and 960(a)(1) and 18 U.S.C. § 2, and possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and 18 U.S.C. § 2. An evidentia-ry hearing on a motion to suppress the cocaine seized from both apрellants was held on February 17,1977. The U.S. Magistrate, on the basis of the facts developed at that hearing, denied the motion to suppress. On March 7, 1977, the district judge, after argument, reaffirmed his earlier adoption of the magistrate’s ruling and, in a joint bench trial, adjudicated the defendants guilty on all counts. The sole question presented on appeal is whether the cocaine, discovered in the сourse of “strip searches” of the appellants conducted by customs officers on appellants’ entry into the United States, should have been suppressed as the product of an illegal search. 1
I. Facts
The facts are largely undisputed. Appellants Vidal-Garcia and Afanador were stewardesses for Aerocondor Airlines. On either the first or second day of January, 1977, Gaston Cairo, a special agent for the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in Miami, received information that appellant Vidal-Garcia would be coming into the country carrying an unknown quantity of cocaine. While Agent Cairo apparently had not had prior contact with the informant, Cairo did determine that the informant had no criminal record. The informant had not previously supplied information to the DEA and was not paid for the information regarding Vidal-Garcia. The confidential source stated that Vidal-Garcia would be bringing in the contraband; that she would be traveling as a stewardess for Aerocondor Airlines; that she would be arriving in Miami from a foreign country (Colombia) on a particular flight (Aerocondor 204) and date (January 3, 1977); and that she would be “carrying” 2 a particular type of contraband, cocaine.
Upon the Aerocondor flight’s arrival from Bogota at Miаmi International Airport, the information received by DEA was partially verified by customs authorities: Vidal-Garcia indeed arrived as a stewardess on the specified flight and date. A primary examination of the crew’s luggage was conducted at the customs enclosure. There is nothing in the record to suggest that this examination revealed anything suspicious. Nor is there any suggestion that Vidal-Garcia or оther members of the crew were subjected to questioning on their arrival by the customs authorities. Solely on the basis of the partially verified confidential tip regarding Vidal-Garcia, customs inspectors were instructed by their supervisor, Senior Inspector Anthony Hopkins, to search ■ all six members of the Aerocondor crew.
A body search was first performed on appellant Afanador. After dеtermining that nothing was concealed on the upper *1328 portion of Afanador’s body, the female customs inspectors directed Afanador to lift her skirt and lower her girdle. After some confusion resulting from language difficulties, Afanador did so, revealing two packages, later determined to contain cocaine, one located on the body surface in the crotch area and оne taped slightly below the waist. Afanador then removed the packages and handed them to the customs inspector. A similar strip search of Vidal-Garcia, conducted somewhat later, revealed two packages carried in the same manner. These packages were also determined to contain cocaine. Customs inspectors failed to discover contrаband in their searches of the other four crew members.
II. The Legal Standard
Appellants contend that they were searched illegally in that the customs inspectors lacked the requisite degree of suspicion to conduct strip searches. Appellants recognize “that certain genres of search or seizure based upon less than probable cause are constitutionally legitimate,”
United States
v.
Himmelwright,
III. The Standard Applied: Vidal-Garcia
The government does not, nor could it, contend that the confidential tip received here meets the twin tests of
Aguilar v. Texas,
two-prong Aguilar-Spinelli standard requires that before probable cause for a *1329 search with or without a warrant can be said to exist, based on information acquired from a tip, the reliability both of the informant and of his information must be indicated. If the tip itself combined with the officer’s knowledge of the informant cannot provide probable cause, a search may still be sustainable if the information supplied consists of such detail or is corroborated from independent sources аs to remove the doubt that it is worthy of reliance.”
United States v. Montgomery,
IV. The Standard Applied: Afanador
As we have stated, despite the fact that the informant’s tip related solely to illegal activity by Vidal-Garcia, 5 the customs authorities in Miami ordered strip *1330 sеarches of all six Aerocondor crew members. Nothing was found on four; however, a quantity of cocaine was discovered under the girdle of appellant Afanador. We conclude that the reasonable suspicion standard was not satisfied as to Afanador and that her motion to suppress should have been granted.
The government advances two theories to justify the strip search of appellant Afana-dor. First, the government maintains that Afanador matched the “smuggling profile” discussed by this court in
United States
v.
Forbicetta,
The government’s second argument, stripped to its essentials, is that the reasonable suspicion estаblished as to Vidal-Garcia somehow carries over to Afanador and other members of the Aerocondor crew. The government’s brief is admirably forthright in its explanation of the factual basis for this search:
the customs inspectors were instructed by their superiors to search the entire crew, because they had a tip that one crew member was a body carrier. [A cjustoms inspector . . . testified that it is routine practice on the part of the inspectors to conduct a secondary body search *1331 [strip search] of the entire crew if there is suspicion as to one and that to her knowledge the inspectors never single out a specific crew member.
Lest there be any doubt, we state here that “reasonable suspicion” must be specifically directed to the person to be searched. While in narrowly limited circumstances the degree of suspicion as to an already suspicious individual may be somewhat enhanced by virtue of suspicious activity by a closely linked traveling companion at the border,
United States v. Wilson,
While we are cognizant of the serious problems of controlling drug traffic at Miami International Airport, we are not prepared to create there a special enclave exempt from the operation of the United States Constitution. The balance we have sought to strike in border search cases between the level of official intrusion into individual privacy and the public interest to be served by such intrusions,
Himmel-wright, supra,
AFFIRMED as to appellant Vidal-Garcia.
REVERSED as to appellant Afanador.
Notes
. The trial below was conducted almost entirely on the basis of stipulated evidence. Appellants proceedеd on the basis that there were virtually no issues of fact in this case; nevertheless, appellants pleaded not guilty in order to preserve their right to an appeal on the suppression issue.
See United States v. Sepe,
. The printed record is somewhat ambiguous as to whether the confidential informant specified the mode of carrying. Both the government and the appellants apparently understood Cairo’s testimony as referring to a body carry, and we find nothing in the record inconsistent with that understanding. The government’s brief refers to the tip as identifying Vidal-Garcia “as a potential body carrier.” Government Brief at 6. The appellants’ brief confirms this understanding at two separate points. Appellants’ “Statement of the Facts” specifies that “a confidential informant advised . . . Cairo . . . that Vidal-Garcia, a stewardess, would body carry cocaine from Colombia into the United States . . . Appellants’ Brief at 4. The same brief later states “The tip was that a body carrier would arrive.” Id. at 20.
. We note here, as we did in
Himmelwright, supra,
. In
Himmelwright,
we stressed that in the context of intrusive border searches, the “reasonable suspicion” standard “includes a requirement that customs officials have cause to suspect that contraband exists in the
particular place
which the officials decide to search.”
. There is a suggestion in the record that the informant may have mentioned the names of other Aerocondor employees, but no indication that the tip linked any other members of the crew to importation or possession of contraband.
. [A] high percentage of the individuals discovered in the act of attempting to smuggle cocaine at the Miami International Airport arrived on flights from Bogota; the American women discovered in this activity were usually young, clean looking, and traveling alone; women discovered carrying cocaine on their persons usually wore loose-fitting dresses to conceal the bulkiness of the packages hidden beneath their clothing; usually when an official could not see the contours of a feminine figure under loose-fitting dresses, even when the subject was in a bеnding position, the wearer generally had something strapped to her waist; individuals attempting to smuggle cocaine usually carried only one suitcase and no items to declare so as to clear customs quickly; it had been observed that it was very unusual for young people to go on vacations to Colombia if they had no relatives there; and the usual airline female traveler ordinarily wore tight-fitting clothes.
We note that subsequent cases have cast considerable doubt on whether these characteristics standing alone would justify a body search today.
See Himmelwright, supra,
. Afanador’s mode of dress does not closely resemble the profile. It cannot be said that she selected her outfit for the purpose of concealing contraband, nor is there any suggestion that Aerocondor Airlines included potential for concealing contraband in its design specifications for stewardess’ uniforms. The other elements of the profile are almost completely in-apposite. To permit the profile to establish reasonable suspicion on the facts of this case would sanction indiscriminate strip searches of virtually all airline stewardesses at the whim of DEA agents. This we refuse to do.
. In the
Wilson
case, Jones, a young man, and Miss Wilson, a young woman, arrived together on a flight from the Bahamas and so presented themselves at customs “so the inspector assumed they were married or traveling together and before examining any of their luggage inquired whethеr they were traveling together.”
