By: Brent Scott
Social acceptance and decriminalization
has equated to more people getting behind the wheel after they have consumed
marijuana. However, unlike alcohol, there is no standard measurement to determine
whether someone has had “too much” weed while operating a motor vehicle; if
blood is drawn and there is any THC, the active ingredient of pot, then the
driver is in violation.
THC metabolites can remain in your
system for up to 30-days. Thus, just because a driver has trace amounts
of marijuana in their blood stream at the time of the arrest, does not prove
the individual was feeling the drug’s effect at the time of the traffic
stop. Consequently, this gap in the law has left police, prosecutors, and
Cheech and Chong with an incredible amount of uncertainty.
When an officer pulls a driver over and determines
they have probable cause to believe the driver is under the influence of a
controlled substance, the individual’s blood is drawn to be tested for
THC. This is where the process gets complicated because unlike alcohol
(.08), there is no specific threshold that defines what exact amount of THC in
the blood means a person is under the influence at the time of operation.
[Note: in Washington state, the legal threshold is 5 ng/ml.]
In People v. Koon, the Michigan Supreme
Court held that if you are a medical marijuana patient, you may operate a
vehicle with THC in your system, so long as you are not impaired or under the
influence. From a practical standpoint, this holding makes little
sense. For example, this blogger fails to understand why it is safe for
Mr. Cheech to operating his vehicle with marijuana in his system because he has
his medical marijuana card, but unsafe for Mr. Chong, because he lacks the
state certification.
Law enforcement and members of the
driving public need a standard to measure the legality of operating a vehicle
when the driver uses marijuana.
Currently, patrol officers use methods akin to conducting field sobriety
tests.
Training is available but it is
expensive, and takes 3-weeks. Most
officers will admit they simply use the same subjective tests that are
administered for “drunk” drivers –glassy eyes, smell, speech. This is not a technical analysis.
Last week, Governor Snyder signed
legislation to allow police to conduct a preliminary roadside analysis for
control substances. However, until the actual statute is published, and
it regulations are developed, little is known about the mechanics of how these
tests will be performed.
Earlier this year lawmakers removed a
provision from legislation proposing a roadside saliva test for controlled
substances after concerns were raised about scientific accuracy. Thus, it appears that until marijuana impairment
is better understood, it will be up to police officers to make a subjective
assessment as to whether a driver is “under the influence” of a controlled
substance when operating their vehicle.
This makes us a bit uncomfortable
over here at our law firm. If you or a
friend have recently been subjected to a roadside sobriety analysis, you may
want to give us a call to discuss your options.
6 comments:
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If someone is under influence of weed, will he charged with DUI? My brother was high on weed and officer slapped him DUI felony. Shall we find DUI lawyer to fight the case or appeal against it?
I did not realize how widespread the issue was of driving under the influence of marijuana. It would make sense that an increase in this issue would cause an increase in the demand of a criminal defense lawyer. My friend was just arrested last week and is looking for a well known lawyer to represent him in court. I sure hope he can work everything out and not have to go to jail.
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It would be nice if there was a more accurate way to test for marijuana. As you mentioned, there's no way to decide when someone's had "too much." The criminal law industry is well aware of this loophole, though. So even if an individual is arrested, they can still help. http://www.ormeslawoffice.com/Services/
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