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UK: Weeding out the drug drivers

Liam Allen

BBC Online

Wednesday 22 Dec 2004

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Drug charities have broadly welcomed new powers for police to carry out
roadside impairment tests on drivers they suspect have been taking drugs.
But how effective are the tests, which include co-ordination challenges, in
identifying drug drivers?

Regular cannabis smoker Michael, 33, from north London, says he has driven
under the influence of the drug on many occasions.

He said: "It is very obvious to me that alcohol impairs my senses.

"I don't need to get into a car to know that so I don't drink and drive.

"But I have no problem with cannabis as I feel perfectly in control."

He is confident he would not get caught drug driving after smoking cannabis
because, he says, the only way he would be pulled over by police would be
as a result of a random stop because "there's no way a policeman would know
otherwise".

Michael believes he would pass a roadside impairment test because he says
he has built up a tolerance to the drug and is therefore able to function
normally after smoking it.

He thinks there are thousands of other cannabis users like him who will
never get caught by the testing system.

'Probably impaired'

A spokeswoman for the charity DrugScope, which welcomed the tests, said
they were in place precisely to assess whether the judgement of people like
Michael had been impaired by drugs.

She said: "In a scenario like Michael's he probably would be impaired.

"If it's immediately after someone's taken drugs then they will be effected
in some way."

DrugScope, like most other drug charities, supports the roadside tests
specifically because they test impairment rather than just the presence of
drugs in the blood stream.

"If someone tests positive for drugs in their bloodstream it doesn't mean
they are under the influence of the drug," said the spokeswoman.

"Cannabis, for example, stays in the bloodstream for weeks," she said.

But the "bottom line", she added, was that "if someone can't pass this test
they're not fit to be driving".

Competence increased?

Transform Drug Policy Foundation spokesman Steve Rolles said it also
supported the impairment tests, as opposed to blood or urine tests, as "a
sensible way forward".

But he suggested some drugs may even increase driving competence.

He claimed the RAC was marketing its own caffeine-based stimulant.

Mr Rolles said: "We've got the situation where the RAC is marketing a
stimulant drug, albeit a legal one.

"So, presumably other stimulants, like amphetamines, may potentially also
increase competence."

Gary Sutton, head of drugs services at Release, said someone under the
influence of amphetamines might fail the impairment test at the first
hurdle - the check for dilated pupils.


Across the board, if the police stop someone and they can't do, for
example, a four times table it's fairly clear that they're motor
neuron-impaired behind a wheel
Release

But were it not for that, it was possible they could give "a relatively
decent performance", he said.

He agreed with the DrugScope spokeswoman that "across the board, if the
police stop someone and they can't do, for example, a four times table it's
fairly clear that they're motor neuron-impaired behind a wheel."

A spokesman for the Association of Chief Police Officers said the tests had
already proved to be "very effective" in identifying drug drivers.

'Back to station'

Before Wednesday, drivers could choose to take part in the tests but
refusal is now an offence in the same way as failure to provide a breath test.

Once a driver had been stopped on suspicion of "driving under the
influence", officers would assess whether they had been drinking alcohol or
taking drugs, the spokesman said.


It's important to use the impairment tests as an indication before going
back to the station to be sure
Acpo

If, for example, the driver had dilated pupils and officers suspected they
had taken drugs, the impairment test would be carried out.

"It's important to use the impairment tests as an indication before going
back to the station to be sure," he added.

He dismissed the notion that people could take illicit drugs without
impairing their ability to drive and said those driving while under the
influence of drugs were likely to be caught.

"At the end of the day, police are trained in this and if they suspect
someone is under the influence they will be stopped."

 

 

 

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