Pubdate: Thu, 12 Apr 2001 Source: Plain Dealer, The (OH) Copyright: 2001 The Plain Dealer Contact: http://www.cleveland.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/342 Author: Julie Carr Smyth OHIO TOP COURT RULES ON DRUG CASE WITNESSES COLUMBUS - An experienced pot smoker is as qualified as any expert to identify marijuana in a courtroom, but that ability doesn't extend to just any lay person, the Ohio Supreme Court ruled yesterday. In a unanimous ruling, the court said two Marion County eighth-graders who testified to smoking a marijuana cigarette with Cassandra N. McKee in May 1999 lacked the experience and personal knowledge to recognize the drug. McKee was convicted on two counts of corrupting the girls with drugs. The Supreme Court agreed with an appeal of that conviction, saying the two eighth-graders did not qualify as "drug user lay witnesses." Officials had no physical evidence in the case and had relied on the girls' testimony to convict McKee. "There was no evidence as to how many prior experiences the girls had had with the drug," Justice Francis E. Sweeney Sr. wrote. He noted that one girl said she "assumed it was" marijuana, and that both girls testified the cigarette was in "joint" form without noting the appearance of the drug itself. Although the court disqualified the girls' specific testimony, the justices did acknowledge that it was not necessary for police to seize a controlled substance for expert analysis in order to prove what it is. "The experience and knowledge of a drug user . . . can establish his or her competence to express an opinion on the identity of a controlled substance if the foundation for this testimony is first established," Sweeney wrote. Dan Shifflet, who defended McKee at trial, said lay witnesses in drug cases were nothing new. "If you've been smoking dope for 20 years, you can testify as to its look, feel and smell and how it affects the human body," Shifflet said. "This trend [toward lay witnesses rather than lab tests] started really with the government, with police officers who could identify drugs through seeing the same thing repeatedly. After police officers came drug addicts." Shifflet said drug users who are witnesses in a court case were at little risk of incriminating themselves by revealing their experiences. "I doubt very seriously, if you're laying a foundation and using a person as a lay witness, that anything's going to come back on that person," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth