The motoring organisation says the Crime and Policing Bill introduced in Parliament last week should be amended, giving the Government an opportunity to address what it calls “the growing epidemic of drug driving and its devastating consequences”.
If the bill isn’t amended, the AA says the Government must find an alternative means to deliver critical legislative reform. “Dangerous drivers must be stopped before they kill, and our justice system must no longer enable offenders to walk free. This is a matter of life and death with nearly five fatalities every day,” it said.
D.tec International is the company that makes DrugWipe, which the Home Office has approved for police roadside testing. “For over a decade, we have allowed a broken system to keep drug drivers on our roads while victims and their families continue to suffer,” said managing director Ean Lewin.
He added: “Right now, a driver who fails a roadside drug test can legally remain behind the wheel for up to six months – and if they plead ‘not guilty’, potentially for over a year. This is solely because outdated laws force police to rely on impractical blood confirmation testing, plagued by inherent laboratory delays.
“Worse still, an unknown number of offenders escape justice entirely when these delays exceed the six-month prosecution window. That is nothing short of a national disgrace.”
Australia and France are among the countries already using evidence gathered at the roadside to tackle drugged drivers.
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