Pubdate: Sun, 10 Oct 1999 Source: Mail on Sunday, The (UK) Contact: http://www.mailonsunday.co.uk/ Author: Chester Stern, Crime Correspondent JPS DEMAND NEW LAWS TO BAN DRUGGED DRIVERS Drug-using motorists could soon face stiffer penalties than drunk drivers with courts and police demanding a zero-tolerance policy. Police are blaming an alarming increase in accidents and road rage incidents on drugs and the Magistrates' Association wants the new Government to create a new offence to complement the campaign against drink-driving. But, unlike drinks-related charges, there would be no safe or unsafe levels. Automatic bans would follow any traces of drugs in a driver's blood, with only the length of the ban determined by the class and amount of the drug. The move is backed by the Police Superintendents' Association. 'We have to tackle this problem to save the lives of both the abusers and the victims,' said national president Chief Superintendent Peter Gammon. 'A huge proportion of people in accidents have drugs in their bodies.' Thw woman behind the campaign is Bournemouth magistrate Hilda Brownlow, chairman of the Dorset Youth Courts. She said: 'Thousands of people in the past year have been passengers in cars driven by somebody under the influence of drugs. I am amazed all this has gone unchecked.' Because doctors have difficulty proving how much drugs impair a driver's ability, the law against driving under the influence of drugs is seldom applied. Mrs Brownlow, a JP for 20 years, has not heard of a single prosecution. Now she is calling on her 30,000 fellow JPs to campaign for the new law. She is backed by Stevenage JP Melvyn Hoffman, who also has never dealt with a charge for driving under the influence of drugs. He said drugged drivers should be banned because, as well as being potential killers, they are contributing to the upsurge in road rage. 'One of the side-effects of drugs is the loss of rational thought and an off-shoot of this is loss of temper,' he said. Mr Hoffman, a Customs officer at Luton Airport, is currently investigating a potential roadside device - using a light pointed into a driver's eyes to detect drugs in the system - which could provide evidence on which to take the driver to a police station for further tests. Another prototype device analyses sweat for traces of drugs. At present, police have to judge drug usage only by a driver's behaviour. Mr Hoffman said that because of possible confusion with legitimately prescribed drugs, motorists should carry cards signed by a doctor specifying what drugs they take. If they failed to produce the card they would have five days to do so at a police station. When the Magistrates' Association meets to vote on the proposed new law at Guildhall in London on October 30 there is bound to be a backlash from some JPs who support the legalisation of cannabis. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake