Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - US UT: Charges Hinge On Children's Drug Exposure
Title:US UT: Charges Hinge On Children's Drug Exposure
Published On:2007-03-25
Source:Deseret Morning News (Salt Lake City, UT)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 09:47:27
CHARGES HINGE ON CHILDREN'S DRUG EXPOSURE

PROVO -- Just because the mother of three young children is caught
using meth in her home doesn't mean prosecutors can immediately
charge her with child endangerment. "We have to prove actual
exposure," says Utah County prosecutor Dave Sturgill. "We can have
people with 100 pounds of marijuana in the basement and a child
upstairs, and if there hasn't been actual exposure, then we're out of
luck." Exposure would mean the child had touched, consumed or inhaled
the drug. "Our statute should be drafted in such a way that children
and drugs don't mix," Sturgill said. "I don't care if they're not
actually exposed.

If there's drugs inside of a house, there should be a problem.

I don't think we do enough to protect our kids." Prosecutors can add
a possession or drug-distribution charge and the enhancement of
"drug-free zone" wording if there are children around, but they can't
add an additional third-degree felony of child endangerment unless
the adult "knowingly or intentionally causes or permits a child ...
to be exposed to, to ingest or inhale or to have contact with a
controlled substance, chemical substance, or drug paraphernalia,"
according to Utah Code for the third-degree felony. Also, based on
the Utah statute, prosecutors also are prevented from charging a
pregnant, drug-abusing woman with child endangerment. In an attempt
to prove exposure during raids, the Utah County Major Crimes Task
Force often uses an ion sensor, which allows them to take swabs of
children's skin, hair, toys and clothes and run them through a quick
machine that will alert them to trace amounts of drugs, Sturgill
said. However, parents always quick to defend themselves by saying
they never knew their children were being affected, Sturgill said.
Often, when a mom and dad are being led in handcuffs to the back of a
patrol car at 2 a.m., they'll try to pass the blame, said Bill
Duncan, a Utah Division of Child and Family Services supervisor. In
one case, Duncan said the parent told officials that the children
were in an adjoining room to the meth lab -- but the door was closed.

Another father thought shutting the bathroom door and smoking meth
with the fan on would keep the drug away from his kids. Although
Sturgill said removing the wording "knowingly or intentionally" from
the law would make it easier for him to prosecute, it would also
eliminate the necessary element of intent, critical to any alleged
crime, said defense attorney Chris VanCampen. Rather than deleting
those phrases, adding the word "reckless" to the child endangerment
clause would add more protection for children, without creating a
vague statute difficult to defend clients against, VanCampen said.
"That would not take out the element of intent but add a catch-all
for the prosecution," he said. "I wouldn't have any trouble with
that. It's just something that protects children." Because, VanCampen
added, it's still illegal for parents to possess controlled
substances, even if they are safely out of children's grasp.
Member Comments
No member comments available...