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Lawyer says high profile Saskatoon driving fatality will test cannabis impairment laws

Lawyer says high profile Saskatoon driving fatality will test cannabis impairment laws

CBC
Tuesday, March 15, 2022 10:55:35 AM UTC

Cannabis driving impairment laws will be tested in a high-profile Saskatoon case.

A 28-year-old woman is charged with "impaired operation while exceeding the prescribed blood-drug concentration of THC causing death" after nine-year-old Baeleigh Maurice was killed crossing 33rd Street W in September 2021.

The woman will make her first court appearance in April.

Canada legalized recreational cannabis in October 2018. Since then the laws around assessing and enforcing cannabis impairment have evolved, veteran Saskatoon defence lawyer Ron Piche says

Piche said it's not as straightforward as with liquor.

There is a body of data that police can draw on when a person is suspected of alcohol impairment — blood alcohol levels and how they relate to impairment — and machines available to most police that are capable of giving precise readings in the field.

Not so with cannabis.

Piche said assessing cannabis impairment is a three-step process. The first two steps are relatively subjective, when compared with alcohol impairment.

In the case of liquor, an officer can do a roadside sobriety test on a driver suspected of impairment. Should the driver fail, then they can be taken to the station for further testing and investigation.

"There's supposed to be an approved screening device that tests for drugs but, in the many files we've had, we've yet to see one of those used," he said.

Piche said an officer who suspects a driver is impaired by cannabis can bring that person to the station. That's when step two kicks in, and the suspect is quizzed by a trained drug recognition expert.

"They're looking at everything from visual examinations of injection sites to the muscle tone," he said.

"At the end of that process, if the officer concludes that indeed a demand should be made for urine or blood, then off we go and we have that process completed. Then a toxicologist analyzes the blood or the urine."

Kelsie Fraser with the Saskatoon PoliceService said in an email that this is what happened in this case.

Read full story on CBC
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