Pubdate: Mon, 06 May 2002 Source: Inquirer (PA) Copyright: 2002 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc Contact: http://inq.philly.com/content/inquirer/home/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/340 Author: Will Van Sant OFFICERS LEARN TO RECOGNIZE DRUG-IMPAIRED DRIVERS PENNSAUKEN - Police say it's one of the more frustrating parts of the job. An officer stops a lurching, swerving vehicle and finds a clearly intoxicated driver whose eyes are like burning suns. But a breath test detects no alcohol in the driver's body, and he ends up behind the wheel again. As part of a statewide push, officers from across South Jersey are at Pennsauken police headquarters this week to learn the telltale signs of intoxication produced by drugs other than alcohol, determine the class of drug involved, and, most important, get convictions for driving while intoxicated. In police parlance, they are training to become "drug-recognition experts." "This is truly a thing of the future," said Lt. Thomas Connor of the Pennsauken Police Department, a drug-recognition instructor. "It's the missing link in DWI prosecution." If all 28 officers - who are converging from police departments from the Shore to the Delaware River - complete their training, they will join 161 drug-recognition experts certified in the state. State Police Sgt. Mark B. Kolodzieski oversees the program. Currently, he said, New Jersey has no statistics on the number of DWI arrests involving recognition experts in recent years, or what percentage of those convicted were high on something other than alcohol. Even so, Kolodzieski said, the experience of officers throughout the state points to a glaring need for drug-recognition training, which is funded by federal grants. By increasing the number of trained officers and establishing case law around drug-recognition evidence, "it's my intention to bring it to the next level," Kolodzieski said of the program. Connor estimated that 10 percent of the 420 DWI arrests last year in Pennsauken, which has five recognition experts, involved drug use. People arrested on suspicion of driving while intoxicated are taken to a police station and checked to see whether injury or alcohol is responsible for the erratic driving. If neither is detected and the department is fortunate enough to have a recognition expert, the real work of making the charge stick begins. What the evaluation involves, and what the officers in Pennsauken are learning, is how to measure a host of vital signs much like a doctor would. A good deal of technical terminology is involved, and some officers find the work bewildering and give up. Elevated blood pressure and pulse rate suggest the use of stimulant drugs, officers are taught, and low blood pressure and pulse may denote use of narcotics. Flaccid muscle tone also can be a sign of narcotics use, while rigid muscles may mean the suspect is high on PCP. The officers are also taught how to conduct a dark-room examination of the eyes. Dilated pupils may reveal use of speed or hallucinogens, and constricted pupils may be a symptom of depressants. "The eye exams are a window to the soul," said Larry Wachter, a state trooper and recognition instructor. After the evaluation, recognition experts select one of seven classes of drugs that best fits the symptoms, and a sample of the suspect's urine is taken. Traces of drugs are present in the urine long after they are ingested and their effects disappear. Crucial to getting a DWI conviction, Kolodzieski said, is marrying the observation of the recognition expert with what is found in the urine. "When you have a [drug-recognition expert] at the scene, it makes it so much easier to get a conviction down the road," said Pennsauken Police Chief John Coffey, whom many credit with raising the profile of recognition training in the region. Once the classroom study is completed Friday, the officers will embark on what could be months of field training in which they will evaluate suspects in police stations. A rigorous final exam must be passed before certification. Recertification is required every two years. In the past, Connor said, drug-intoxicated drivers may have had an easier time avoiding prosecution. But as the number of recognition experts grows, that's getting tougher. "Those people no longer slip through the cracks," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk