Pubdate: Sat, 24 Jul 2004 Source: Bowling Green Daily News (KY) Copyright: 2004 News Publishing LLC Contact: http://www.bgdailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1218 Cited: Western Kentucky University http://www.wku.edu/ Cited: Murray State University http://www.murraystate.edu/ STATE CONSIDERING GIVING SOME LAB WORK TO UNIVERSITIES The state Justice Cabinet is considering handing off some of the testing work done by state police labs to state universities, including Western Kentucky University. Lt. Gov. Steve Pence, who heads the Justice Cabinet, said some of the lab work is simple and procedural, such as testing seized marijuana. Pence said the testing could be done by students or university lab workers. "We are researching opening more labs on the college campuses and using their facilities," Pence said. Another potential site is Murray State University, he said. Pence said using campuses would help streamline the process of testing drugs and would be cost-effective. It also would allow the state labs' highly trained workers to focus on more complex cases, he said. Marijuana, for example, can be identified by police officers who confiscate it, he said, but certified lab tests are needed for verification so it can be used in a criminal proceeding. "It is a very simple test," Pence said. "There's no need to send it to Frankfort or one of the other labs. It can be done closer to home." Western President Gary Ransdell said the university would welcome the opportunity to help fight the backlog of testing waiting to be done in the state's crime lab and is holding a potential space for this type of work in the Center for Research and Development in the old Bowling Green Mall. "We are very interested in assisting the state in a crime-lab which would include drug testing, DNA analysis, presumably the whole range of forensic analysis," Ransdell said. "Our students and our faculty are prepared to provide whatever capacity might be appropriate." Western has already had preliminary discussions with local judges, prosecutors and law enforcement agents about the matter and is looking forward to more formal discussions with the Justice Cabinet, he said. "Law enforcement workers and prosecutors in this part of the state are really pushing for a lab in this region," Ransdell said. "If we can help with that, we'd be glad to." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake