Pubdate: Tue, 26 Oct 2004 Source: Daily Times, The (TN) Copyright: 2004 Horvitz Newspapers Contact: http://www.thedailytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1455 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Drugged+Driving DRUGGED DRIVING Testing Needs to Be Greatly Accelerated Drugged driving or driving while impaired because of the use of drugs - - prescription or otherwise - is becoming a major problem. A case in Ohio has attracted attention. Ohio Highway Patrol Trooper Leonard Gray had stopped to direct traffic around a jackknifed truck in December 2002 when a car, traveling about 50 mph, hit him. Gray, 53, was flipped into the air, his head crashed into the car's windshield and he landed, unconscious with his legs broken and head bloodied, on the pavement. The driver who hit Gray, 61-year-old Ronald Hamrick, had been convicted of drug possession previously and had cocaine in his system when he was tested seven hours after the accident, Hocking County assistant prosecutor David Sams says. If Hamrick had been drinking alcohol and had registered a blood-alcohol level of 0.08 percent, the case against him would have been open and shut, Sams says: aggravated vehicular assault, with drunken driving as a factor in the charge. However, Ohio, like most states, has no legal standard for determining what level of drugs in a person's system makes him too impaired to drive. The lack of such a guideline often makes it difficult for prosecutors to prove cases of "drugged driving." While it is a felony under Ohio law to possess, much less use, cocaine, Sams says, thousands of dollars were spent on experts to extrapolate back to the accident to prove the driver had enough cocaine in his system that he shouldn't be driving. Currently in Tennessee, law enforcement agencies use field sobriety tests to determine whether to charge a driver with being under the influence of alcohol or a drug. However, this cannot be easily administered in all cases, especially if the driver was injured in an accident. Drivers apparently guilty and charged with driving under the influence are taken to a lab and two vials of blood are taken and analyzed. However, it takes about four weeks to get the results of the test and if further testing is needed, as would be the case for other drugs, it could take as long as six months. There is opposition to zero tolerance as proposed by many. The 11 states with zero-tolerance laws are Arizona, Georgia, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Utah, and Wisconsin. Six devices are now available and are being tested and five other devices for measuring drugs in drivers recently became available for testing. Most of them are simple such as a taking a saliva sample on a swab and inserting it into a machine or placing a device resembling a thermometer under the suspect's tongue. Whatever the answer, we think it is urgently important to have action in this area. The increasing use of meth as reported in Tennessee greatly adds to the problem. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake