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News (Media Awareness Project) - US IL: Poppy Seeds Tied to DUI Acquittal
Title:US IL: Poppy Seeds Tied to DUI Acquittal
Published On:2005-10-18
Source:Chicago Tribune (IL)
Fetched On:2008-01-15 10:48:40
POPPY SEEDS TIED TO DUI ACQUITTAL

Using poppy-seed muffins as a defense, a Lake Forest man was
acquitted Monday of driving with a controlled substance in his system
in the death of a 15-year-old boy three years ago.

Charles Hausberg, 20, of the 1400 block of North Green Bay Road was
found guilty of making an illegal U-turn.

"The court cannot say that the only cause for this could be the
ingestion of an illegal drug," said Lake County Associate Judge
Patrick Lawler in rendering his verdict. "The court has no
alternative but to find this young man not guilty."

Hausberg was driving on Central Avenue in downtown Highland Park in
October 2002 when he tried to make a U-turn at Central and St. Johns
Avenue, according to testimony. He drove into the oncoming lane,
causing Paul Gitlin of Evanston to swerve.

Gitlin hit the accelerator rather than the brakes, and his car jumped
the curb and hit Joshua Rothstein, 15, of Wilmette walking on the
sidewalk, said Chuck Smith, who prosecuted the case for Highland Park.

Gitlin was ticketed for negligent driving.

Morphine, which is an opiate, was found in Hausberg's blood and
urine, Smith said. Morphine is a controlled substance, and it is
illegal for people to drive in Illinois with the drug in their
system, he said, noting that the law does not require a person to be impaired.

Hausberg said he ate several poppy-seed muffins the night before the
accident and several on the day it happened. Poppy seeds can contain
opiates, and Hausberg's consumption of muffins explains why there was
morphine in his bloodstream and urine, his attorney Tom Moran said.

Cynthia Woods, a chemist at the Northern Illinois Crime Lab, and
James O'Donnell, a pharmacologist hired as an expert witness for
Hausberg, testified that poppy-seed consumption can result in a
person testing positive for opiates.

"There's no way to state with certainty that the defendant consumed
any illegal substances," O'Donnell said.

Woods said she could not identify the source of morphine in Hausberg's system.

In his closing statement, Smith said: "Is it credible that this young
man came home and consumed 20 poppy-seed muffins?

"The poppy-seed defense is contrived. It's forced."

Hausberg was fined $500 and ordered to perform 50 hours of community
service helping children. He must attend a victim-impact panel and
attend a program on substance abuse.

Rothstein's parents said they were disappointed that Hausberg never
apologized or offered condolences.

"The defendant never saw fit to help another family in its time of
need," Stephen Rothstein said after the verdict.
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