News (Media Awareness Project) - US ID: Driving High OK In Idaho, Court Rules |
Title: | US ID: Driving High OK In Idaho, Court Rules |
Published On: | 2002-01-15 |
Source: | Missoulian (MT) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-24 23:59:51 |
DRIVING HIGH OK IN IDAHO, COURT RULES
SAN FRANCISCO - You can drive high in Idaho, as long as you can drive straight.
In overturning an impaired driving conviction, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals ruled Monday that a loophole in Idaho law means marijuana users
can drive legally as long as they don't drive erratically and can pass a
field sobriety test.
A three-judge panel of the San Francisco-based court wrote that Idaho's
impaired driving law makes it illegal to drive under the influence of
alcohol and narcotics. But Idaho doesn't list marijuana as a narcotic.
The court said that because marijuana is not listed as a narcotic, Matthew
Patzer could not automatically be presumed impaired, like motorists who
have been drinking alcohol.
In overturning the 21-year-old's conviction, the court wrote that he was
pulled over for a broken tailgate light, wasn't driving erratically and
passed a field sobriety test.
"Given the distinction drawn by the statute, there is no basis to conclude
that impairment may be presumed upon admission of use of a non-narcotic
drug," the appeals court wrote.
After a New Plymouth police officer noticed his glassy eyes, Patzer
admitted to smoking marijuana at a party on Sept. 27, 1998. Patzer passed
two field sobriety tests before being arrested for driving impaired.
Idaho Senate Judiciary Chairman Denton Darrington said he had assumed
marijuana was a narcotic under state law, and that the statute might need
to be reviewed. But he questioned whether Monday's decision would hold up
on appeal.
"My guess is, in light of the record of the 9th Circuit with the U.S.
Supreme Court ... that the government will take it on up," Darrington said.
"We may have to evaluate our law, but first we'll see what the government
does here."
Darrington was referring to the circuit's reputation of being overturned by
the U.S. Supreme Court.
Patzer's attorney, Fredilyn Sison of the office of the Federal Defenders of
Eastern Washington and Idaho, applauded the decision.
"Just having smoked marijuana doesn't give somebody cause to arrest you for
that when driving," Sison said.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael J. Fica, in Pocatello, Idaho, said the
government was considering asking the circuit to review its decision or
requesting the U.S. Supreme Court to hear the case.
The circuit's decision also reverses Patzer's illegal weapons convictions.
In his Chevrolet Blazer, police found four illegal homemade grenades, a
sawed-off shotgun and a modified rifle with a homemade silencer.
SAN FRANCISCO - You can drive high in Idaho, as long as you can drive straight.
In overturning an impaired driving conviction, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals ruled Monday that a loophole in Idaho law means marijuana users
can drive legally as long as they don't drive erratically and can pass a
field sobriety test.
A three-judge panel of the San Francisco-based court wrote that Idaho's
impaired driving law makes it illegal to drive under the influence of
alcohol and narcotics. But Idaho doesn't list marijuana as a narcotic.
The court said that because marijuana is not listed as a narcotic, Matthew
Patzer could not automatically be presumed impaired, like motorists who
have been drinking alcohol.
In overturning the 21-year-old's conviction, the court wrote that he was
pulled over for a broken tailgate light, wasn't driving erratically and
passed a field sobriety test.
"Given the distinction drawn by the statute, there is no basis to conclude
that impairment may be presumed upon admission of use of a non-narcotic
drug," the appeals court wrote.
After a New Plymouth police officer noticed his glassy eyes, Patzer
admitted to smoking marijuana at a party on Sept. 27, 1998. Patzer passed
two field sobriety tests before being arrested for driving impaired.
Idaho Senate Judiciary Chairman Denton Darrington said he had assumed
marijuana was a narcotic under state law, and that the statute might need
to be reviewed. But he questioned whether Monday's decision would hold up
on appeal.
"My guess is, in light of the record of the 9th Circuit with the U.S.
Supreme Court ... that the government will take it on up," Darrington said.
"We may have to evaluate our law, but first we'll see what the government
does here."
Darrington was referring to the circuit's reputation of being overturned by
the U.S. Supreme Court.
Patzer's attorney, Fredilyn Sison of the office of the Federal Defenders of
Eastern Washington and Idaho, applauded the decision.
"Just having smoked marijuana doesn't give somebody cause to arrest you for
that when driving," Sison said.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael J. Fica, in Pocatello, Idaho, said the
government was considering asking the circuit to review its decision or
requesting the U.S. Supreme Court to hear the case.
The circuit's decision also reverses Patzer's illegal weapons convictions.
In his Chevrolet Blazer, police found four illegal homemade grenades, a
sawed-off shotgun and a modified rifle with a homemade silencer.
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