Pubdate: Wed, 29 Aug 2007 Source: Kelowna Capital News (CN BC) Copyright: 2007, West Partners Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.kelownacapnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1294 Author: Cheryl Wierda Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) 'HE SHOVED THE BALL OF COCAINE IN HIS MOUTH' TO AVOID JAIL The man who died after apparently ingesting drugs in the back of a police car earlier this month may have already been under the influence of drugs prior to encountering police. RCMP have said Michael Stein was arrested after police pulled over an erratic driver, and that he apparently ingested drugs while in the back of the police cruiser on Aug. 7. However, an information to obtain (ITO) a search warrant in the case reveals new information about the circumstances that led up to the 35-year-old's death. After spending "days" awake smoking crack cocaine, Stein and a female companion went to the McDonald's in Glenmore that Tuesday morning for a snack and also bought a quarter to half an ounce of cocaine, the ITO indicates. An RCMP officer meanwhile, was dispatched to a break and enter that had just occurred on Whitman Road in Glenmore, and other officers joined the search for the female suspect. A pair of officers decided to start their search at the Glenmore Plaza on Kane Road, and arrived at around 10:20 a.m. to find a Honda Civic hatchback stopped in the middle of the Tim Horton's parking lot "obstructing the free flow of traffic." "The driver of the Honda Civic exited the car and the driver's movements were erratic and jerky, suggesting he may be under the influence of a drug," the ITO indicates. The driver then got back in his car and drove to the Petro-Can gas station and came to stop in between a semi truck trailer and a pickup truck, "completely obstructing" gas station traffic. Officers decided to pull over the vehicle and when an officer activated his emergency lights, "the driver of the Honda Civic ducked down, under the dashboard....he was out of view for several seconds," the ITO indicates. He then "sprung up" and placed his empty hands on the wheel of the car. His female friend later told police he uttered "something about not wanting to go back to jail [and] then shoved the ball of crack in his mouth." When officers approached the vehicle, they spotted drug paraphernalia between the front seats. A search netted two crack pipes, four segments of clear rubber tubing, two mini digital scales, a white powder residue, a small clear plastic bag with white residue, two butane lighters and a canister of butane fuel. The man, identified as Stein, was handcuffed, seated on the ground, and informed he was being detained for impaired driving and a drug possession investigation. He was later placed in the back of an RCMP cruiser with his female companion, where he spit the remains of an "eight ball" of crack onto the floor of the police car and swallowed part of it, his companion told police. An officer then took the couple to the RCMP station, and, while en route, noticed in his rear view mirror that Stein's head "periodically" disappeared from view. "Const. McNeil suspected that Michael Stein was in possession of an illegal drug and was attempting to destroy it by ingesting it," the ITO says. The officer pulled over the vehicle to inspect Stein closer, and when he opened the rear door, Stein began to "scream frantically that he ate two grams of 'crack.'" The officer spotted several small pieces of white rock, believed to be crack cocaine, on the floor of the police cruiser, and noted Stein had small white specks, believed to be drug residue, on the corners of his mouth. The officer radioed the police dispatcher to request paramedics meet him at the RCMP detachment. "Upon arrival at the Kelowna detachment, Michael Stein's behaviour became more aggressive and erratic," the ITO indicates. "Michael Stein uttered... that he was overdosing." "When the paramedics arrived, Michael Stein's behaviour became increasingly violent and out of control." Two officers placed Stein on a gurney and had strapped on wrist and leg restraints when he "suddenly went into full cardiac arrest." Paramedics revived him, but he died in hospital on Aug. 16. The death remains under investigation by the coroner's service, and a coroner's inquest is expected to be held in the death. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake