Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

DUI patrol program grows

Medical profession­als expedite blood draws at Metro traffic stops

- By Michael Scott Davidson

The clock starts ticking when police pull over a suspected impaired driver.

Minutes add up as officers conduct field sobriety tests, make arrests and transport the suspects to jail.

Driving under the influence is Nevada’s leading cause of serious and fatal crashes, state officials report. But time can hinder the prosecutio­n of an intoxicate­d driver.

State law gives police a two-hour window to collect a blood or breath sample from a suspect if they want it used as evidence in a DUI case, Las Vegas defense attorney Thomas Moskal said. Otherwise, an expert witness is needed to help prove the suspect was intoxicate­d when they were behind the wheel.

“All of that is just too resource intensive for the misdemeano­r arrest and prosecutio­n,” said Moskal, a former Clark County prosecutor.

Nevada’s largest law enforcemen­t agency will soon expand a program to ensure officers beat the clock.

Starting in October, medical profession­als will patrol with the Metropolit­an Police Department seven nights a week to collect blood samples at traffic stops, rather than wait until a suspect is taken to jail.

Phlebotomi­sts started riding with officers in late 2018 as volunteers. The position became paid two years later, as part of $250,000 in grant funding from the Nevada Office of Traffic Safety. They now work 10-hour shifts every weekend and on holidays.

Blood tests are the norm

at Metro because they measure the presence of both drugs and alcohol, traffic bureau Lt. Bret Ficklin said.

“People need to understand that DUI goes beyond just driving drunk,” he said. “We’ve seen an uptick in a combinatio­n of alcohol and marijuana.”

The phlebotomi­sts’ skills are in biggest demand during Metro’s proactive “DUI blitz” events. The approach has been more successful than setting up stationary checkpoint­s, Ficklin said.

During one such event in April, Ashley Webber-gamboa donned her scrubs and hopped into the passenger seat of an unmarked black SUV filled with forensics equipment.

As officers fanned out from the Spring Valley Area Command, she and Sgt. David Stoddard waited for their first call of the evening.

About an hour later, Stoddard pulled the SUV into a cul-de-sac near the intersecti­on of Decatur Boulevard and Twain Avenue. He pulled a metal folding chair from the trunk as Webber-gamboa slipped on a pair of black gloves.

Camryn Grant was already in handcuffs. Officers said they had seen her speeding in a silver Honda Civic before following her down the residentia­l street.

Grant, 24, told police she and her friends were headed from a beach club on the Strip, according to the department. She agreed to have her blood drawn after taking a field sobriety test.

Webber-gamboa wrapped an elastic band around Grant’s arm, extracting a small vial of blood within a few minutes. Officers arrested Grant on suspicion of DUI and shuttled her blood sample to a refrigerat­ed vault until it could be tested.

During the busiest blitz operations, Webber-gamboa said she can make almost 20 blood draws. The work is more fast-paced than the athome services she provides medical patients during the day, but she believes both jobs are providing vital services to Las Vegas.

“With the DUI program, we’re also helping save someone else’s life,” said Webber-gamboa, who owns Sunrise Pathology Services.

Suspects can still choose to have their blood drawn at the jail. If they refuse altogether, officers can get a warrant from an on-call judge to forcibly make a draw.

Stoddard said the blitzes are designed to not only catch impaired drivers but also train patrol officers to better conduct DUI investigat­ions.

That includes spotting immediate signs of impairment, filling out paperwork and conducting various field sobriety tests. Officers track how suspects complete the test tasks and how well they remember instructio­ns.

Metro leaders believe the more confident patrol officers are at making impaired driving arrests the less they’ll rely on specialize­d traffic officers for assistance, Stoddard said.

The department received a $545,000 grant in June to expand the phlebotomi­st program to seven nights a week. The money will also pay for a new, specially outfitted van for the blood draws.

Overall, officers participat­ing in the April blitz made more than 100 traffic stops, issued dozens of citations and arrested 13 people on DUI charges.

“The key to this is numbers,” he said. “The more people you encounter, the more chance you have catching someone DUI.”

 ?? L.E. Baskow
Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images ?? Left: Soto sits for a blood sample during the Metro DUI Blitz. Blood draws during DUI stops will increase in October to help catch impaired drivers.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images Left: Soto sits for a blood sample during the Metro DUI Blitz. Blood draws during DUI stops will increase in October to help catch impaired drivers.
 ?? ?? Above: Metro officer Anthony Manginelli, left, helps calm impaired driving suspect Mike Soto as phlebotomi­st Ashley Webber-gamboa with Sunrise Pathology Services, right, draws a blood sample during a DUI Blitz on April 16 in Las Vegas.
Above: Metro officer Anthony Manginelli, left, helps calm impaired driving suspect Mike Soto as phlebotomi­st Ashley Webber-gamboa with Sunrise Pathology Services, right, draws a blood sample during a DUI Blitz on April 16 in Las Vegas.
 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images ?? Metro officer Garrett Jones uncuffs Camryn Hailee Grant as phlebotomi­st Ashley Webber-gamboa, left, readies to take a blood sample during a DUI blitz in April. During the blitz operations, Webber-gamboa said she can make almost 20 blood draws.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images Metro officer Garrett Jones uncuffs Camryn Hailee Grant as phlebotomi­st Ashley Webber-gamboa, left, readies to take a blood sample during a DUI blitz in April. During the blitz operations, Webber-gamboa said she can make almost 20 blood draws.
 ?? ?? Metro officers gather for a briefing prior to an April DUI blitz. The blitzes are designed to catch impaired drivers and to train officers to better conduct DUI investigat­ions.
Metro officers gather for a briefing prior to an April DUI blitz. The blitzes are designed to catch impaired drivers and to train officers to better conduct DUI investigat­ions.

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