Houston Chronicle Sunday

Local officers find themselves on high alert for impaired drivers

- By Dug Begley and St. John Barned-Smith STAFF WRITERS dug.begley@chron.com st.john.smith@chron.com

Impaired driving in Texas doesn’t start and end with the 12pack or the little brown bottle. It also comes from the medicine cabinet.

In Houston and across the country, police contend with drivers high on prescripti­on drugs, PCP and painkiller­s. And detecting drug impairment isn’t anywhere near as easy as smelling alcohol or reaching for a breathalyz­er.

“Someone on ecstasy is not going to look like someone on alcohol,” said Sgt. Erik Burse with the Texas Department of Public Safety office in Conroe.

More than 35 percent of the 2,608 Texas drivers found with hydrocodon­e in their system from 2015 to 2017 were apprehende­d in the southeast Texas DPS region dominated by Houston. More than half the 1,593 Texans found with Carisoprod­ol — a powerful muscle relaxant — were driving on streets around Houston. Half of those driving in Texas who tested positive for etizolam, another sedative, were found in the Houston region. (Houston, however, trails other areas in the state in surveys involving drug use.)

In several high-profile cases, officers have allowed drivers impaired by drugs to leave the scene of crashes — decisions with lethal consequenc­es.

Three years ago, Blaine Boudreaux, then 34, got into his Dodge Ram and set into motion a deadly path of destructio­n that claimed two lives and sent three others to a hospital.

Boudreaux, who authoritie­s said moved to Houston from Louisiana around 1999 after two previous DWI arrests, crashed around 3:30 p.m. on April 26, 2015, in the Texas Medical Center. Police responded to the crash and ticketed him for failing to control speed but didn’t arrest him. Two people in the car he hit were hospitaliz­ed.

After he left that crash, Boudreaux is accused of driving several miles west and rear-ending a 72-year-old man at Weslayan and Westpark at about 5:30 p.m. Police responded to that wreck, too, but again allowed Boudreaux to drive away. Half an hour later, prosecutor­s say, Boudreaux drove several miles east, only to crash into a homeless veteran sitting on the side of the road near the University of Houston.

The crash killed Leonard Batiste, 61. Boudreaux fled the scene, prosecutor­s say, then took a right onto Lockwood and traveled north, leaving behind his bumper and license plate. Two miles away, at approximat­ely 6:10 p.m., Boudreaux crashed again, hitting a Honda Civic carrying Cynthia Medrano and her 6-yearold son, Joshua. The crash injured Cynthia and killed Joshua.

After they arrested him, Boudreaux told police he was taking a drug used to treat opiate addiction. He faces murder charges.

Matthew DeLuca, his attorney, said Boudreaux maintains his innocence and is awaiting trial.

“We look forward to presenting his case at trial,” he said.

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