z z ■ftl Volume XXXXI ‘City of Roses’ Number 49 Ui3 • Happy New Year! s m le r /3 www.portlandobserver.coni Wednesday • Januaiy 2, 2013 P c t o h l ¡ c ,- » íi/d i n 1 0 7 0 E stablished in 1970 Committed to Cultural Diversity ./ *r / r/UHMiimh ufrv comm tun tv vcrvuc Cheech and Chong in the 1978 cult classic ‘Up in Smoke. ’ The comedy duo was known for playing fun with the drug culture, but driving under the influence of cannabis is serious stuff when it comes to driving laws and safety. C ari H achmann T he P ortland O bserver by With legalization of marijuana underway in Washington, the state has adopted a new legal standard for driving under the drug’s influ­ ence, but police say the protocol for checking impaired drivers goes un­ changed. If you’re visibly high, you will be charged with a DUI. Trooper W illiam Finn, spokes­ man for the W ashington State P a­ trol, said w hether its m arijuana, other drugs or alcohol, their main focus is “getting im paired drivers off the road.” As of last month, 21-and-over W ashingtonians are allowed to possess an ounce or less of mari­ juana. But when it comes to driving, there’s a new technical-threshold of five nanograms of marijuana’s psy­ choactive component or THC, per milliliter of blood, as W ashington’s limit for driving under the influence of cannabis. Driving High Pot legalization doesn’t apply to roads If a police officer in W ashing­ ton suspects a driver is impaired when they pull them over, fhey can arrest and charge that person with a DUI, regardless of any blood being drawn. Later, police can offer a blood test and the results can be used in court. But even if the person has less than five nanograms per millili­ ter of THC in their blood, the court can move forward with the prosecu­ tion, Finn said. Some critics argue that the new THC threshold is unconstitutional because marijuana users have no way of knowing when they’re over the limit. Advocates for marijuana legalization say that for the heavi­ est users of the drug, active THC levels may never drop below five nanograms, even when they’re not impaired. But others, including police in Oregon and Washington, maintain that driving under the influence of marijuana remains as illegal as it was before the new law. “Nothing has changed in regards to driving impaired,” said Joshua Ladd, a certified Drug Recognition Expert for the Portland Police Bureau’s traffic division. In both states, a DUII for alcohol is determined when a driver’s Blood Alcohol Content (BAC) is .08 or more, but the threshold for mari­ juana is less clear. The Portland Police Bureau says the threshold for a driver intoxicated on drugs is “impaired to a perceptible degree”. If an officer can’t see it or smell it, but has probable cause that a per­ son is driving impaired, they will ask that person to step out of the car and perform the standard field sobriety test. A few distinguishing factors can help police determine if a person is high on marijuana, said Ladd. Police check the eyes first: di­ lated pupils, bloodshot eyes, de­ layed and slow responses, loss of social boundaries (don’t laugh) and body and eyelid tremors are a few noticeable clues, he said. Visine may help red eyes, said Ladd, but it does not change the size of the pupil, which is often dilated if a person is high. Police may also check the bottom, inner eyelids for a specific type of reddened look, another indicator of marijuana use. Police will then ask the person to walk a straight line and do a one-legged stand. Depending on whether the person passes or fails the sobriety test and their initial probable cause, police can make an arrest. Ladd says, asking the person to take a breath test is next in protocol. The “intoxilyzer” is the first step of the 12-step Drug Recognition Evaluator program, an international program that only a select few of continued on page 2