Pubdate: Sun, 28 Jan 2007 Source: Daily Advance, The (NC) Copyright: 2007sCox Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.dailyadvance.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1700 Author: Chris Whipple TROOPER'S REPORT ON DRUG IMPAIRMENT QUESTIONED Local Highway Patrol troopers sometimes file accident reports that suggest the driver may have been impaired by drugs besides alcohol - even when there is no evidence to support that suspicion. If that's the case, says a spokesman for the Highway Patrol in Raleigh, the troopers aren't following the state agency's policy. Information about the local Patrol's practice came to light recently when relatives of William Kevin Perry, 28, asked why veteran Trooper K.W. Bray indicated that drug and alcohol impairment were suspected in Perry's fatal Jan. 5 traffic accident. Family members knew Perry had been to a local bar the night he died. But they said they were shocked when a news story published in The Daily Advance about the accident indicated Bray suspected Perry may have been impaired by drugs in addition to alcohol. Information for the newspaper's story came from a Patrol spokeswoman, who was reading from Bray's report. According to that report, Bray checked a box that indicated that alcohol and other drugs of impairment were suspected in Perry's wreck - even though there was no evidence Perry had used any drug but alcohol. Asked recently why he had filled out the report that way, Bray said troopers routinely do it when completing reports on fatal accidents. The accident itself can be an indication of impairment, he said, and writing that both drug and alcohol use are suspected covers the trooper's bases until a postmortem toxicology can sort out the truth. That practice runs against policy, however, according to an N.C. Highway Patrol official in Raleigh. Lt. Everett Clendenin, a spokesman for the Patrol, said troopers must list the most appropriate answers to a set of questions listed on accident reports. In the box that deals with impairment, a trooper's choices are: 1) alcohol is suspected, 2) alcohol is not suspected, 3) an intoxicant other than alcohol is suspected, 4) no drugs other than alcohol are suspected, 5) alcohol and other drugs of impairment are suspected, 6) no impairment detected or, 7) unknown. In Perry's case, Bray filled in number 5 - alcohol and other drugs of impairment are suspected - instead of number 4. "If that's the case, that is not the right response," Clendenin said, referring to Bray's report of Perry's accident. "If that's happening down there then potentially that is a training issue." Sgt. C.D. Gould, the officer in charge of the local Highway Patrol office, disagreed with Clendenin's assessment that there may be a problem with how local troopers are being trained to fill out accident reports. "We would indicate alcohol was related to the accident if there was some reasonable suspicion to believe it was an alcohol-related accident," Gould said. "On the drug part, if the trooper feels like the driver is impaired they may indicate drug involvement until we get the toxicology (report) back. But we don't indicate that on every fatality, unless there is some other evidence to go on." Gould did agree with Clendenin that troopers should choose the most appropriate response on the fatal accident report. "I will review details of the case," Gould said. "That doesn't mean I will review training or anything. I don't need to. I agree with what (Clendenin) said." Meanwhile, members of Perry's family say the way the accident report was originally filed has caused them some emotional distress. Initially, they were shocked by the idea that Perry might have been using drugs other than alcohol on the night he died. But even after they cleared that up with Bray, who visited their home, they said they still had to deal with friends asking them whether Perry was a drug user. They said it has made the process of trying to grieve for Perry's death that much harder. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman