Home News-Premium House committee advances bill that tests for drugs following traffic accidents

House committee advances bill that tests for drugs following traffic accidents

Ryan Gatti with Morgan and Kirk Grantham. (Courtesy of Ryan Gatti)

By Lauren Heffker and Hunter Lovell, LSU Manship School News Service

BATON ROUGE — The House Transportation Committee advanced a bill on Monday that would permit drug testing in severe traffic accidents.

Sen. Ryan Gatti, R-Bossier City, sponsored a bill that would mandate either chemical, blood or urine testing in a traffic crash involving serious bodily injury or death. Gatti’s bill defines serious bodily injury as one that is “severe” or “incapacitating.”

Louisiana’s current law allows for post-accident drug testing only when a collision results in an on-site fatality. The proposed bill, however, would expand the existing law. 

If the bill were to become law, it would be known as “Katie Bug’s Law,” named after 4-year-old Katie Grantham of Bossier Parish, who was killed in an auto accident in 2017. Though Katie’s mother, Morgan Grantham, suspected the driver who hit them was impaired by drugs, he was not tested by police since Katie did not die at the scene. 

Katie suffered critical injuries to her spinal cord and was taken off life support after seven days in the hospital. The driver, who ran a red light north of Bossier City, served 10 days in prison. Without more sufficient evidence, such as a drug test, prosecutors could only charge him with a traffic violation, instead of negligent or vehicular homicide. 

Crash fatalities remain at a high rate in the state. In 2018, there were 762 confirmed fatalities in Louisiana, according to data from LSU’s Highway Safety Research Group.

Grantham, who testified at the meeting, said while she expects people to do the right thing, the law should hold them accountable for their actions.

“When you make a choice to commit a traffic crime and someone is hurt…you should be accountable to whatever it is that’s in your system that could be impairing your judgment,” Grantham said. 

Under Gatti’s proposal, law enforcement officers would determine whether an accident involves a serious bodily injury. 

Some committee members, however, questioned police officers’ discretion to decide whether to perform a drug test after an accident.

“I could see a scenario where in a small town the sheriff knows the kid’s father or whoever just ran over somebody and they opt not to take the blood,” said Rep. C. Denise Marcelle, D-Baton Rouge, expressing her concerns about liability and the need for clear language in the bill.

Rep. Terry Landry, D-New Iberia, who is a retired State Police superintendent, mentioned that he voted against a similar bill by Rep. Raymond Crews, R-Bossier City, on the House floor earlier this month. Landry argued that Crews’ bill did not have an amendment to exempt law enforcement officers from liability following auto accidents.

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