Pubdate: Mon, 14 Apr 2008 Source: Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL) Copyright: 2008 The Daily Herald Company Contact: http://www.dailyherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/107 Author: Charles Keeshan Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) SECOND ATTEMPT TO THWART DRUG TEST LANDS MAN IN JAIL If at first you don't succeed, it's not always wise to try, try again. James H. Day should have thought of that last year when he tried, for a second time, to thwart a court-ordered drug test by bringing a bag full of someone else's urine to McHenry County's probation department. For a second time, Day's plot failed, this time when the bag sprung a leak as he stood in a county office June 19 waiting to be tested, sending his friend's urine spilling down his leg as a probation officer looked on. Now the 54-year-old Woodstock man is heading to the county jail to serve a six-month sentence for unlawful defrauding of a drug and alcohol screening test. Day admitted guilt today to the felony charge under a plea bargain in which he was fined $500 in addition to the jail time. "Clearly he was not probationable," Assistant McHenry County State's Attorney Sharyl Eisenstein said. For Day, the jail sentence is an unlikely outcome for a string of legal troubles that began on the Fourth of July 2004 when Crystal Lake police arrested him for possessing a small amount of marijuana. He pleaded guilty to a low-level misdemeanor charge about six months later as part of a deal in which he received court supervision and agreed to undergo three drug tests. In July 2005 he was caught trying to pass off someone else's urine as his own during one of those tests, leading to a felony charge that eventually would be reduced to a misdemeanor as part of another plea bargain. The deal, however, included at least six more drug tests. And Day, it seems, couldn't resist trying again to fool the test. After his second attempt to thwart the test failed, Day admitted he had been using marijuana again, Eisenstein said. Day had been working in a clerical role for the McHenry County Recorder of Deeds, county human resources Director Robert Ivetic confirmed today. The office terminated his employment Friday, Ivetic said, because of attendance issues not directly related to today's court proceedings. Day will be eligible for day-for-day credit while in jail, meaning that with good behavior he could go free in about 90 days. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin