Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Designer drugs often evade DWI laws

- MICHAEL BALSAMO

MINEOLA, N. Y. — Eighteenye­ar- old Kristian Roggio was riding in a friend’s car when another driver careened across a Brooklyn street, colliding head- on and killing her. That driver had inhaled aerosol dust cleaner moments before to get high, and prosecutor­s say he was impaired enough to be charged with vehicular manslaught­er.

But New York’s top court threw out the case, ruling the chemical compositio­n of the dust cleaner wasn’t on the state’s list of banned substances — a requiremen­t under the law — and that he couldn’t be charged under a statute meant for drunken driving.

That ruling nine years ago underscore­s a loophole that still exists in New York and a dozen other states that base intoxicate­d driving not on a police officer’s observatio­n of impairment but on a specific list of banned substances 34 pages long.

Such laws were intended to give a scientific basis to drugged- driving charges. But some law enforcemen­t officials say they have failed to keep up with the boom in designer drugs — such as synthetic marijuana, known as K- 2 — and homemade concoction­s that are chemically distinct from traditiona­l narcotics, which is leading them to push for a change in New York’s law. They say that even though laws have been passed making it unlawful to sell or possess synthetic drugs, drugged- driving laws haven’t caught up with the rise in those narcotics.

“If we can’t define the chemical and it’s not on the list, we can’t prosecute you,” said Nassau County District Attorney Madeline Singas. “It is really frustratin­g for us in law enforcemen­t especially as these chemical drugs become more and more popular with our kids. We’re basically fight- ing drugged driving with one hand tied behind our back.”

Experts say synthetic and homemade drugs impair a user’s cognitive and motor skills just like their recognized illegal counterpar­ts. And although state banned lists are occasional­ly updated, that’s not happening fast enough to keep up with the black- market chemists who are continuall­y making slight changes in their compounds to stay one step ahead of the law.

“Every kid with access to the Internet has access to unregulate­d designer synthetic drugs that are largely unknown to law enforcemen­t,” said Brendan Ahern, a New York attorney and former vehicular crimes prosecutor who has trained police officers and prosecutor­s on drugged driving. “There are certainly cases that are occurring routinely with drugs that law enforcemen­t has the inability to detect.”

In 2012, in Long Island’s Nassau County, off icers stopped an erratic driver who admitted she snorted a “bath salt” known as “Disco Powder.” Police found traces of the drug in her car, but prosecutor­s couldn’t charge her with intoxicate­d driving because the drug, which was made to mimic an outlawed stimulant, was just different enough chemically to escape legal scrutiny.

“Literally, that’s all it took,” Singas said. “It was to just change the compositio­n.”

It’s not just designer drugs. Some prescripti­on drugs can also escape scrutiny.

In June 2014, a woman who crashed into a parked car in Suffolk County was arrested after telling police that she had taken antidepres­sant and seizure medication before the crash. The officer, who said the woman was stumbling, had slurred speech and failed a field sobriety test, arrested her on a drugged- driving charge. But a judge dismissed the charges against her last year after finding that the prescripti­on pills weren’t on the banned list.

Thirteen states in the U. S., including Arkansas, Minnesota, Massachuse­tts and Ohio, rely, at least partially, on a list of specifical­ly banned substances. Thirty- seven states and the District of Columbia have more expansive definition­s of the word “drug.” Legislatio­n is pending in New York to align its law with other states that rely on an officer’s observatio­n of a driver’s condition or have broader definition­s. California’s law, for example, allows for an intoxicati­on charge if a driver uses any drug that causes impairment.

Peter Gerstenzan­g, an attorney from Albany who specialize­s in DWI defense, questioned whether such a broadening of the law was a good idea.

“The specificit­y of it was designed so that you didn’t get a situation where somebody had some kind of reaction to a nonlisted substance that affected their driving,” Gerstenzan­g said. “You could have a reaction to aspirin, to Advil. It depends on the physiology of the individual.”

 ?? AP/ MICHAEL BALSAMO ?? Maureen McCormick ( left), chief of vehicular crimes at the Nassau County district attorney’s office, and Nassau County District Attorney Madeline Singas talk about the rise in synthetic drugs and its impact on drugged driving during an interview April...
AP/ MICHAEL BALSAMO Maureen McCormick ( left), chief of vehicular crimes at the Nassau County district attorney’s office, and Nassau County District Attorney Madeline Singas talk about the rise in synthetic drugs and its impact on drugged driving during an interview April...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States