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About Keizertimes. (Salem, Or.) 1979-current | View Entire Issue (June 16, 2017)
JUNE 16, 2017, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A3 It’s offi cial KEIZERTIMES/Eric A. Howald Joyce Phelps, the fi rst resident to put down a deposit at Bonaventure at Keizer Station and, Director McKenzie Owens cut the grand opening ribbon at a ceremony Saturday, June 10. Residents and visitors check out the buffet spread celebrating the grand opening. KPD offi cer tapped for major award By ERIC A. HOWALD Of the Keizertimes Offi cer Martin Powell of the Keizer Police Department (KPD) can tell a lot about you just by looking into your eyes. He’s particularly adept at determining whether you are or have recently been under the infl uence of an intoxi- cant or drug. Not only that, he could tell you what classi- fi cation of drug you ingested with an accuracy rate of bet- ter than 80 percent. For instance, he might ask you to follow his fi nger with your eyes as he traces a line across your fi eld of vision. A sober person could do so with ease, but certain intoxi- cants will cause pupils to stut- ter – like when you turn on the windshield wipers on a dry day – a “nystagmus” in his terminology. “There will be small paus- es and then spurts of move- ment,” said Powell. “Depres- sants will cause pupils to constrict to pinpoints even at nighttime. Stimulants and hallucinogens will cause pu- pils to dilate at a much slower rate than normal.” Those are just a few of the more than 200 clues he can use to make his assessments, and he is very good at it. He’s kept up his 80 percent accu- racy rate for fi ve years run- ning in addition to racking up a number of DUII arrests and training his fellow offi cers in- house and at other agencies. It was those combined ef- forts that led KPD Sgt. David LeDay to nominate Powell for the Kenneth Snook Drug FEEL GOOD STORY Saluting the people that make us proud of our community capitolauto.com Recognition Expert (DRE) Award of Excellence. Powell was selected as the winner by the award committee last week. “You have to be above and beyond the average offi cer for the DRE fi eld and you have to go above and beyond that to be worthy of this award, but that is Martin. He does this for no extra pay or extra incentive than what he gets out of it,” LeDay said. Powell is only the seventh offi cer to receive the award since its inception in 2010, but he’s now joined the ranks of the very same people who trained him in drug recogni- tion techniques. “Those people on that list (of award winners) were the ones that instructed me and they know the material in- side and out as far as teach- ing. It was humbling to even be considered for that list, much less have my name on it,” Powell said. Powell started as a reserve offi cer with Polk County in 2002 and caught the DUII- KEIZERTIMES/Eric A. Howald Offi cer Martin Powell, of the Keizer Police Department was re- cently honored with the Kenneth Snook Drug Recognition Ex- pert (DRE) Award of Excellence. recognition bug from his fel- low offi cers. “I learned their passion. The reason I liked it is it’s an opportunity to prevent crime, it’s proactive,” Powell said. LeDay equates a DUII ar- rest to stopping a homicide in progress. Not every instance of driving under the infl u- ence ends in a fatality, but the ones stopped before reaching that point can save lives. Powell had to undergo a rigorous selection process to qualify for DRE classes and then had to complete the classes themselves before be- ing certifi ed fi ve years ago. While drunk driving can be assessed with the assis- tance of technology, Powell’s DRE skills are brought into play when a breath test yields negative results. When that happens, Powell is brought in for an assessment that covers everything from basic physi- ology, like pulse rate, to be- havior to recent history. In the best cases, he can help divert someone from their trajectory into rehab or open up a single arrest into a larger investigation into the production or delivery of controlled substances. “I get letters from people I arrested that thanked me for doing it. They know it was terrible at the time, but they’ve changed their life or helped others after getting clean or sober,” Powell said. Powell doesn’t come out and say it, but he takes a lot of pride in his work and seeks out arrests – DUIIs – that other offi cers are less com- fortable with because of the amount of work they entail and the scrutiny that follows in court. “There is no purpose for a DUII. Most people have the ability to take a taxi or walk. They just don’t think anything bad is ever going to happen to them. We hope to curb that behavior in others with the arrests we make,” Powell said.