Pubdate: Tue, 06 Jan 2004 Source: Greenville News (SC) Copyright: 2004 The Greenville News Contact: http://greenvillenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/877 Author: Tim Smith, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) URINE SALE CONVICTION UPHELD The South Carolina Supreme Court on Monday upheld the conviction of a Marietta man accused of selling urine kits to defraud drug tests. Kenneth Curtis, 44, who no longer sells urine, had argued that his conviction should be overturned because the charges were vague, the law constitutes an unwarranted intrusion of privacy and there was insufficient evidence that he intended to defraud a test in selling the kits. The justices disagreed, finding the law and evidence sufficient to convict him. Curtis' lawyer, C. Rauch Wise of Greenwood, said he would file a request to rehear the case. "It's disappointing our Supreme Court has given employers a license to test their employees for any drug that employee may be taking," he said. "They have basically said testing for prescription medicine is fine. I had always thought somewhere in our state constitution we had a specific right to privacy. But apparently that was mistaken." Curtis was sentenced to six years in prison in December 2001, suspended to six months, after an undercover officer purchased one of his kits containing urine, a heating pack and tubing. Wise argued before the justices in October that the charges were vague because they did not distinguish between defrauding a test for legal or illegal drugs. He said then the issue was one of privacy and whether citizens had the right to hide legal drugs or even pregnancy from their employers. The justices ruled that Curtis had no legal standing to argue the privacy rights of anyone other than himself. They also found no vagueness in the Legislature's wording. "The Legislature, had it chosen to do so, could easily have specified that only the sale with the intent to defraud drug tests for illegal drugs was prohibited," Justice John Waller wrote on behalf of the court. "Its failure to do so indicates its intent that the intent to defraud any drug test is illegal. Further, the statute merely prohibits the sale of urine with intent to defraud a drug test; it does not give businesses unfettered discretion to test." The court also noted printed materials with the kits, as well as business cards and an email from Curtis' company provided sufficient evidence that the kits were designed to defraud a test. "Further, Curtis' Web site makes the claim that 'Our Complete Urine Substitution Kits allow anyone, regardless of substance intake, to pass any urinalysis within minutes,'" Waller wrote. "We find this ample evidence to submit to the jury on the issue of whether Curtis was selling urine kits with the intent to defraud drug tests." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager