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UK: Police to test 'Game Boys' that detect use of drugs

Steve Connor

The Independent

Wednesday 23 Nov 2005

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Government scientists are developing a hand-held, Game Boy-style
computer that will test the reactions of drivers suspected of using
illicit drugs such as cocaine or speed.

Drivers stopped by the police will be asked to play with the device,
which will be programmed with a sequence of game-like tests to analyse
manual dexterity and mental alertness

If drivers fall below a certain standard, a police officer will be able
to arrest them and take them to a station where they can be ordered to
give a blood test.

The device will undergo the first clinical trials in the new year when
more than 100 volunteers of varying ages will be asked to carry out
tests while over the legal limit for alcohol.

Scientists from the Home Office Scientific Development Branch in
Sandridge, Hertfordshire, said that the police have asked them to
develop the road- side device because of the growing number of people
who drive while taking illegal drugs.

A study in 1999 showed that there had been a six-fold increase over the
previous 10 years in the number of people driving under the influence of
cannabis, cocaine, heroin or amphetamines, yet there is still no simple
detection method that traffic police can use to screen for offenders.

'Currently police use field-impairment tests and these are a bit like
the old sobriety tests used in the 1960s before the advent of the
alcohol breathalyser,' a Home Office scientist said.

Six different tests are under development but by the time the device is
ready to be issued to police forces only three of the tests will be
programmed into the hand-held computer.




 

 

 

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