Pubdate: Sun, 25 Nov 2012
Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA)
Copyright: 2012 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Contact: http://www.ajc.com/opinion/content/opinion/letters/sendletter.html
Website: http://www.ajc.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/28
Author: Andria Simmons

COPS TARGET DRUGGED DRIVERS

It is the eyes that often betray a drugged driver.

If they are glassy or blood shot, pupils dilated or constricted, or 
if they exhibit a jerky motion when following a smooth horizontal 
movement, it tells a police officer a lot about the type of drug 
someone has used. But not if they don't know what to look for.

An advanced police training course gaining in popularity in Georgia 
called the drug recognition expert program goes a step beyond 
Standardized Field Sobriety training, which is focused on alcohol 
impairment, to help police identify if a driver is under the 
influence of drugs.

Drug recognition experts complete 240 hours of field and classroom 
training that teaches them to recognize the effects of seven 
different categories of drugs: depressants, stimulants, anesthetics, 
hallucinogens, narcotics, inhalants, and marijuana. Signs and 
symptoms of drug impairment vary depending on the type of drug used.

"It's also common to see people under the influence of three, four 
and five different drug categories at one time," said Jonathan Fuss, 
who manages the alcohol and drug impaired driving program for the 
Georgia Public Safety Training Center. "When you see someone 
completely obliterated and behind the wheel of an automobile, it's scary."

DRE students participate in training exercises where they examine 
volunteers who are already under the influence of drugs and figure 
out what they've taken. A urinalysis test then confirms if they are correct.

Recently, a woman who had been partying at a nightclub in Duluth 
volunteered to be examined by 10 students in training who were 
stationed nearby. (Volunteers sign waivers saying they agree to help 
police in the training exercise in exchange for the assurance that it 
will not be held against them.)

She was fidgety, messing with her hair and picking at her fingernails.

Her pupils were dilated and she talked fast, indicating she was on a 
stimulant, said J.R. Harper, the state DRE Coordinator for Georgia. 
The woman tested positive for five kinds of drugs in her system.

"The only thing she didn't come back positive for was PCP and 
methadone," Harper said in wonder.

There's little research on the prevalence of drugged driving in 
America compared to drunken driving. A national survey found that in 
2007 about one in eight weekend, nighttime drivers tested positive 
for illicit drugs, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety 
Administration.

Currently only about 150 of the state's 26,500 sworn law enforcement 
officers are DRE certified. An additional 45 officers statewide have 
obtained instructor-level training.

The program has been available in Georgia since 1991, but Harper said 
he has noticed an increased amount of interest in DRE training over 
the past decade.

The Marietta Police Department has a relatively large contingent of 
DRE certified officers - three officers and an instructor out of its 
total 132 sworn officers. Department spokesman Officer David Baldwin 
said the training is more valuable now than ever because of the 
increased popularity of prescription and designer drugs like bath 
salts and synthetic marijuana.

Marietta Police Officer Justin Rutland, who received his DRE 
certification about five years ago, described one instance where the 
training came in handy. After talking to a male driver who traveled 
on the wrong side of the road and ran several red lights, eventually 
crashing his car, Rutland was able to determine that the driver was 
not drunk or drugged but was suffering from a diabetic episode.

"Ironically, the driver of the car that he crashed into was DUI," 
Rutland said. "She was coming home from (a restaurant) where she had 
several drinks. She was arrested and went to jail. He went to the hospital."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom