Pubdate: Fri, 05 Dec 2003 Source: Waukesha Freeman (WI) Copyright: 2003 The Waukesha Freeman Contact: (262) 542-8259 Website: http://www.freemanol.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/770 Author: Dennis A. Shook LUKE'S LEGACY Infant Killed In Accident Remembered In New Law Waukesha couple pushed for measure to punish drugged drivers MILWAUKEE - It was almost exactly two years ago when Michelle Logemann's life changed forever and the life of her unborn son was snuffed out. The Waukesha woman had entered the intersection of 16th Street and North Avenue in Milwaukee - with the green light - when a man entered the intersection and collided with her car. A few hours later at the hospital, efforts to save her unborn child failed. The baby had also been injured in the accident and despite an emergency Cesarean section, the baby - who was to be called Luke - died six minutes after being brought into the world. What has happened since that tragic event of Dec. 11, 2001, will not bring back her child but Logemann hopes it will help others avoid a similar fate. Logemann, and her husband, Bill, have pushed for a bill that would provide for harsher punishment for "drugged drivers" like the one who struck her car. They were moved to action when the driver, Paul D. Wilson, Kenosha, was sentenced to a maximum of only two years in jail after he pleaded no contest to the charge of homicide by negligent use of a vehicle. That came despite forensic toxicologists finding Wilson had traces of cocaine in a blood test conducted after the accident and who the experts believe was impaired at the time of the accident. Bill sought So the Logemanns worked with state Rep. Mark Gundrum, R-New Berlin, to increase the range of penalties for people who cause death while driving under the influence of a controlled substance. And on Thursday at the Milwaukee County Courthouse, just a few blocks from where the accident occurred, the Logemanns watched Gov. Jim Doyle sign the bill into law. The bill was noted as Assembly Bill 458 but has come to be known as the "Baby Luke" bill. The bill makes it easier to prosecute drivers who have been using illegal drugs by requiring only a showing that the driver did have drugs such as marijuana, heroin, methamphetamines or cocaine in their system when an accident occurred. Current law requires prosecutors to prove that the illegal drugs being used might have impaired the driver. Unlike drunken driving, there is no set level of controlled substances appearing in the blood, such as the .08 percent blood-alcohol concentration standard that proves intoxication. "In this case, we believe the two experts who said the driver was under the influence but we couldn't prove he was impaired," said Milwaukee County District Attorney E. Michael McCann. The bill means that if drivers are found to have illegal substances in their system, they are presumed to be impaired in their driving. Gundrum said if they are convicted of homicide by the intoxicated use of a vehicle, they could serve up to 26 years in prison. Logemanns pleased, praised "We are glad that Governor Doyle signed the Baby Luke bill and we are very pleased with the responsiveness of Wisconsin's state Legislature," Logemann said in an emotion-filled statement after the signing. "We are especially impressed with the hard work of Representative Gundrum and his staff and are thankful for (District Attorney) E. Michael McCann's support." But the Logemanns, who declined to make any other comment, were the ones who the others wanted to focus all the praise on. "We all search for some good that could come from a tragedy of this type," Doyle said, saying the bill might be that one positive outcome. "It takes a lot for people like Michelle and Bill to take their tragedy and do something about it to possibly save other parents the grief they have gone through," the governor added. "It is not going to bring your child back, but it should save many lives." Doyle also praised McCann for "recognizing a flaw in the law that needed to be corrected and working with (Gundrum) who understood what this issue was and what was needed to be done and correct it." Gundrum, who sponsored the bill, added, "We all want to thank you for making the roads a whole lot safer and for the strength it took to relive this accident time and again. "How you have the strength to come forward and remember such a tragic day and again and again ... where that comes from is hard to imagine," Gundrum said. "But I know this will help prevent this from happening to others." Gundrum said the goal of the bill was to make "drugged driving" punishable at least to the level of drunken driving, if not more. "These drugs are so dangerous that you can't even possess them, much less sell or distribute them, so why in the world should you be able to get behind the wheel of a 2,000-pound bullet and endanger people's lives on the road," Gundrum said. Among those who could be helped in the future are the Logemanns themselves. They attended the press conference with their 2-week-old daughter, Alana Marie. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom