Pubdate: Thu, 10 Dec 2009 Source: Carroll County Times (MD) Copyright: 2009 Carroll County Times Contact: http://www.carrollcountytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1524 Author: Ryan Marshall, Times Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) STATE POLICE TO TAKE OVER DRUG TESTING PIKESVILLE -- Police and law enforcement officials hope that a new arrangement for testing blood samples of people suspected of driving under the influence of drugs will make it easier and cheaper to charge and prosecute those cases. Testing for police departments around the state will now be done by the toxicology unit of the State Police Forensic Sciences Laboratory in Pikesville, Col. Terrence Sheridan, superintendant of the Maryland State Police, said at a press conference Wednesday. The state had run into a problem because there were only two labs on the East Coast that could perform the tests, and those labs had become reluctant to send their experts to testify in Maryland courts because of the cost and time involved, Sheridan said. Sheridan said he hoped the new lab would give police and prosecutors a one-stop solution for handling drugged driving cases. The equipment for the lab was purchased using a $159,000 grant obtained with the help of the State Highway Administration and the Maryland Highway Safety Office. Sheridan said state police troopers have been told to make stopping suspected impaired drivers a priority, especially during the holiday season. The testing program has already begun operating and cases are being analyzed for pending trials, according to a state police release. Scientists at the lab expect to test between 300 and 500 blood samples for drugs in the coming year. Carroll County Chief Deputy State's Attorney Dave Daggett said he believes having the lab will be incredibly helpful to prosecutors. Daggett said his office has had a difficult time recently proving drugged driving cases without experts available to testify. "It's long overdue and I'm glad they're going to start doing it again," he said. Baltimore County State's Attorney Scott Shellenberger said prosecutors want the best evidence possible when they go into the courtroom, and he believed the state police program will be a significant advance in proving cases that can be very difficult to prosecute. Wednesday's press conference followed a morning event in Annapolis in which Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown joined family members and friends of people killed in drunken or drugged driving crashes. On Tuesday, Gov. Martin O'Malley signed an executive order calling for a task force to develop a program that can track impaired driving offenders from arrest, through the legal process and continuing through treatment and beyond. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D