I've seen many posts about not washing chicken, and have read the USDA page. I don't buy it at all because there are so many other ways that raw chicken juice gets splattered:
When you take the chicken out of the package, there is juice everywhere, and it spatters.
When you cut it, juice spatters.
When you pull the skin off, stuff goes flying.
And, of course, your hands are completely contaminated, and then you touch things.
The idea that rinsing the chicken is going to somehow introduce a whole new level of danger makes zero sense to me. In addition, whatever does get splattered is considerably diluted with water that contains (in my house) chlorine, which is added specifically to kill pathogens.
When this has come up before, people have mentioned having seen how poultry is processed in a big poultry processing plant. I saw the big tanks in a poultry processing film, and having seen that, I much prefer to remove the last remains of the "slurry" of stuff that is leftover from the processing, not so much for safety, but for taste.
Some safety advice, such as the steps you should take to prevent cross contamination, clearly make sense. This advice does not, and I have ignored it completely ever since I first heard about it.