Pubdate: Fri, 15 Nov 2002 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 2002 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Contact: http://www.jsonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/265 Author: Lisa Sink, Jessica Hansen TOUGHER DRUGGED DRIVING LAWS URGED Family Mourns Boy Killed In Crash As Study Advocates Changes A call for Wisconsin and other states to beef up their laws to allow for more harsh prosecution of drugged drivers hit home Thursday as a Glendale couple grieved for their 10-year-old son, killed when the family car was read-ended by a suspected drug-impaired driver in Illinois. Asad Ali's family had pulled over about 8 p.m. Wednesday on the Tri-State Tollway in Deerfield because the boy was sick, said Master Sgt. Emmit Clifton of the Illinois State Police Department. The boy's parents, Mohammad and Samina Ali, were standing outside their 1994 Mercedes-Benz, and Asad was leaning out of an open car door vomiting, when they were struck from behind by a 1987 Plymouth Reliant. The boy was later pronounced dead at an area hospital. A 40-year-old man, the Reliant driver, was still hospitalized Thursday. Clifton said cocaine was just one of the illegal substances found in the Zion, Ill., man's blood. The man could face several charges, including reckless homicide, Clifton said. News of the boy's death came on the same day a national organization said Wisconsin and most states have laws that are woefully inadequate in prosecuting drugged drivers. The groups said the state should pass legislation that would bar people from driving with any amount of illicit drugs in their system. About 9 million Americans have driven within two hours of using marijuana or cocaine, according to a study by The Walsh Group and the American Bar Association that was released Thursday. But only eight states - not including Wisconsin - have zero-tolerance laws when it comes to drugged driving. That could change. Drugged driving bill State Rep. Mark Gundrum (R-New Berlin) is drafting a bill that he says would beef up Wisconsin's laws and allow prosecutors to deal more harshly with those who drive while on drugs, much like the law now allows for drunken drivers. Dubbed the "Baby Luke" bill in memory of the newborn son a Waukesha woman lost when a cocaine-addled driver plowed into her car, Gundrum's bill would shift the burden from the prosecution to the defense that illegal drugs in a driver's system did not cause impairment. Gundrum said he was surprised to learn recently that there is a big discrepancy in the way prosecutors are able to charge drugged drivers, compared with drunken drivers, in fatal crashes. Lawmakers have made homicide by drunken driving a felony carrying up to 40 years in prison upon conviction. But drugged driving fatal crashes often end up charged as homicide by negligent driving, which has a maximum two-year prison term. That's because prosecutors and toxicologists have no scientific standard to prove how much marijuana, cocaine or other illegal drug causes a driver to become impaired. For adult drunken drivers, all a prosecutor has to show is that their blood-alcohol level exceeded the state's 0.10 limit. But experts say that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to set such levels for other drugs because they affect people differently. Only Nevada has set such standards. "The conclusion of the scientific community is that it's virtually impossible to set a level of a drug that would be indicative of impairment," said Michael Walsh, lead author of the study. "So that's why the states have basically taken the legal strategy of per se laws," where it is illegal to have any amount of illicit drugs regardless of impairment, Walsh said. Prosecutors support change Gundrum and two area prosecutors said that concept was long overdue in Wisconsin. "I've said before that I think it's ridiculous that we don't have that," Waukesha County District Attorney Paul Bucher said. "Why in God's name would we let someone drive a motor vehicle after ingesting any illegal drugs?" Milwaukee County District Attorney E. Michael McCann said he, too, supports a per se law. "Either to set a standard or to set an absolute prohibition - that if you have any marijuana or cocaine or crack or heroin or Ecstasy, you cannot drive," McCann said. "The penalties should be equivalent to drunk driving." McCann and Gundrum cited the case of Michelle Logemann, a Waukesha woman who was 30 weeks pregnant when Paul D. Wilson, who had ingested cocaine, ran a red light and rear-ended Logemann's car Dec. 11 in Milwaukee. Her son Luke was delivered prematurely, and Logemann said Thursday that he was able to grasp the hands of her husband before dying in his arms 12 hours later. McCann said that even though Wilson had enough cocaine in his system to make forensic toxicologists believe he was impaired, they could not prove it scientifically. "No one would testify that it influenced his driving. Everyone believed it did . . . but they couldn't give an opinion under a reasonable degree of scientific certainty," he said. So prosecutors offered Wilson a deal in which he pleaded no contest to homicide by negligent use of a vehicle and was sentenced to the maximum two-year prison term. He also must serve another 20 months for his reckless driving causing injury conviction for Michelle Logemann's injuries. But Logemann said that he should have faced the same 40-year maximum penalty that convicted drunken drivers who cause deaths face. "This guy got off with a slap. . . . That's just not right," she said. "I don't know if it would curb the use of drugs," Logemann said of stiffer penalties. "But it would provide better justice for victims." Gundrum said his bill, which is still being researched, would target only drivers involved in crashes, not those stopped for erratic driving. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens