California inmates are dying from drug overdoses at three times the national level.
Some lawmakers are even securitizing the need for strip searches.
"It's [strip searches] a humiliating process, can be easily used to humiliate and demean people, and was only for visitors, often women," said Sen. Loni Hancock according to AP. "There are many concerns about the dogs, which have historically been emblematic of intimidation of many communities of color, most notably during the civil rights movement."
Corrections Secretary Jeffrey Beard defended the measures saying drug use is rampant in the prison system.
"What we are trying to do is send a message to people to not try to smuggle drugs in to the institution," Beard. "If we don't do this, we're going to have people keep dying; we're going to have continued violence in the prisons."
Beard is now seeking more funding to expand the program. He said he is seeking alternatives to strip searches but denied that the method is wrongfully isolating innocent individuals.
Tania Gamboa of Riverside found herself in similar situation when she visited her brother at Kern Valley State prison.
The scanner detected traces of heroin and she was led through a strip search by two female correction officers.
“It doesn't make sense for me, knowing that I don't do all that and I got detected for it," Gamboa said.