The Telegram (St. John's)

Pot breathalyz­ers ready for market

- ALEX DOBUZINSKI­S

LOS ANGELES — One toke for the road could end up being a total bummer for drivers who smoke pot, with several companies in the United States preparing to market cannabis breathalyz­ers as legalized marijuana spreads across the U.S.

Law enforcemen­t agencies will require breathalyz­ers to detect marijuana as they are “faced with the necessity of stopping more and more motor vehicles being operated under the influence of THC,” said Brett Meade, a retired police chief and a senior program manager for Washington-based non-profit group the Police Foundation.

Nearly a dozen U.S. states allow recreation­al marijuana consumptio­n and 33 states permit pot for medical use. But all states prohibit driving under the influence of marijuana.

Oakland, California-based Hound Labs is one of the companies developing a breathalyz­er to detect THC — the component in marijuana that gets people high — and plans to market it in 2020.

Constructi­on companies could be a big part of its market, said Hound Labs Chief Executive Officer Mike Lynn.

“Nobody wants a crane operator 50 stories up to be smoking a joint,” he told Reuters.

Lynn, a physician, said pregnancy tests, which can detect minute quantities of hormone, inspired him to tackle the challenge of measuring THC on users’ breath.

Separately, Cannabix Technologi­es Inc based in the Vancouver suburb of Burnaby is testing a pair of devices at different price points.

Its THC Breath Analyzer could be cheap enough at a few hundred dollars per unit to potentiall­y allow parents interested in testing their teenager before turning over the keys to the family car, said Cannabix CEO Rav Mlait.

The U.S. court system would need to consider how to treat evidence from THC breathalyz­ers.

Assuming a motorist who tested positive with a THC breathalyz­er was impaired behind the wheel could be “problemati­c,” said Stanford University law professor Robert Maccoun.

Unlike with alcohol, scientific research has not yet establishe­d firm correlatio­ns between the amount of marijuana people consume and how impaired they become, Maccoun said in an email.

Paul Armentano, deputy director of the National Organizati­on for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, expressed similar concerns.

But he welcomed breathalyz­ers as an improvemen­t over existing tests used by police and employers, such as urine analysis that is unable to determine whether marijuana was used recently with the potential for impairment, or days or weeks in the past.

Breathalyz­ers are likely to only detect a user who consumed cannabis within the last few hours.

 ?? JANE ROSS/REUTERS ?? A Hound Labs marijuana breathalyz­er, which the Oakland-based company says can detect minuscule amounts of THC on a user’s breath, lies on top of its base-station in Newark, Calif., earlier this month.
JANE ROSS/REUTERS A Hound Labs marijuana breathalyz­er, which the Oakland-based company says can detect minuscule amounts of THC on a user’s breath, lies on top of its base-station in Newark, Calif., earlier this month.

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