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          <td valign="top" class="white_background"><P class=black_content><img src="assets/images/latimes.gif" width="200" height="36"><br>
            November 15, 2002&nbsp;<O:P> </O:P></P>
            <P class=MsoNormal><SPAN class=black_content 
style="FONT-SIZE: 10.5pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Trebuchet MS'">THE NATION</SPAN><span class="black_content"><BR>
              <SPAN 
style="FONT-SIZE: 18pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Trebuchet MS'">Laws Lag Technology in Nabbing Drugged Drivers, Study Says</SPAN></span></P>
            <P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 12pt"><SPAN class=black_content 
style="FONT-SIZE: 9pt; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">From Associated Press</SPAN><SPAN class="black_content" 
style="COLOR: black"><O:P> </O:P></SPAN></P>
            <P class=black_content style="MARGIN-BOTTOM: 12pt">WASHINGTON -- State laws haven't kept up with advances in technology making it easier for police to determine whether a driver is under the influence of drugs, according to a study released Thursday.<BR>
              <BR>
  People who drive under the influence are rarely detected, prosecuted or referred to treatment programs, according to the report by <B><FONT color=#ff0000>The Walsh Group</FONT></B> and the American Bar Assn.'s Standing Committee on Substance Abuse. The study was funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and urges state legislatures to pass laws aimed at drugged drivers.</P>
            <P class=black_content>"The law is often behind where the science is," said Linda Chezem, senior judge for Harrison Circuit and Juvenile Court in Indiana.<BR>
              <BR>
  Until recently, drug testing was limited to highly specialized forensic labs, which sometimes took weeks to glean results.<BR>
  <BR>
"People are driving with drugs in their system who shouldn't be, and under many laws cannot be held accountable," said Jerry Landau, county prosecutor in Maricopa County, Ariz.<BR>
  <BR>
  Before new technologies were developed, he said, urine samples would go to a crime lab that might take several weeks to process them. Often, the toxicology report wasn't ready before the case reached court, and the charges had to be dropped because the evidence wasn't ready.<BR>
  <BR>
  Now, rapid tests of urine samples can produce results within minutes. Technology for testing blood and saliva also has improved, making it easier to detect drugs.<BR>
  <BR>
  With drunk driving, many states have a 0.08% blood-alcohol level standard. But there hasn't been a similar standard established for illegal drugs. In 42 states, prosecutors have to prove that a person's ability to drive was impaired because drugs were in their system.<BR>
  <BR>
"This is a problem that everyone recognizes and the scientific society has known about it, but because of difficulties in linking a particular level of impairment to a drug, like it's done for alcohol, people are looking the other way," said Michael Walsh, who headed the team that wrote the study.<BR>
  <BR>
  For now, according to a panel of prosecutors, judges, police officers and health officials, the best way for states to deal with drivers under the influence of illegal drugs is with "per se" drug laws -- making it illegal for a motorist to drive with any measurable amount of illegal substance in the body.<BR>
  <BR>
  Only eight states -- Arizona, Georgia, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, Rhode Island and Utah -- have such laws, according to the report. Other states require proof that the illegal drug affected driving.<BR>
  <BR>
  In Indiana, the per se law has proved effective, Judge Chezem said, citing an increase in drugged driving cases that have been prosecuted since it was implemented in the late 1990s.<BR>
  <BR>
  Most states mandate a treatment program for any driver convicted of having illegal drugs in his or her system. However, Walsh said, "There's a missed opportunity here because it's hard to convict people."<BR>
  <BR>
  The Princeton, N.J.-based Robert Wood Johnson Foundation was established in 1972 as a national philanthropy devoted to health-care issues.</P>
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