The variables of the Gas Chromatography process

I have posted before on Gas Chromatography and its principles. 

  1. Gas Chromatography and why is it is so important to Pennsylvania DUI arrests
  2. Crimping a Headspace Vial in Gas Chromatography: How not putting the "lid on the jar" can lead to disaster in a DUI case
  3. A large problem in Gas Chromatography: No uniform standard for GC run position or composition

As I have written before:

As headspace gas chromatography (as opposed to direct injection) is based upon Henry’s law. Henry’s Law states that at a constant temperature, the amount of a given gas dissolved in a given type and volume of liquid is directly proportional to the partial pressure of that gas in equilibrium with that liquid. Or stated differently, an equivalent way of stating the law is that the solubility of a gas in a liquid at a particular temperature is proportional to the pressure of that gas above the liquid. Headspace gas chromatography requires a closed system (i.e. no pressure leaking from the gaseous phase). As a result if the crimping of the headspace vial (which is typically a manual process) is not complete, then it is not a closed system. Hence, without assurances that the crimping is properly done, there is a large possible source of error as Henry’s Law is violated. It is indeed the entire principle upon which Headspace Gas Chromatography is based.

Henry's Law depends upon several key variables In the entire apparatus reamin constant throughout the run to work.  These are:

  • Flow/pressure rate
  • Temperature of the headspace vial incubation oven
  • Temperature of the oven
  • Injection port temperature

If any of the variables change and there is a "cold spot" or a pressure dip, then Henry's Law is violated.  The ultimate alleged and reported result is not accurate.  It is an isothermal process when Headspace Gas Chromatography with Flame Ionization Detector is used in ETOH determination.  But guess what is not recorded and reported at all times during the run of the analytical device? 

  • Flow/pressure rate
  • Temperature of the headspace vial incubation oven
  • Temperature of the oven
  • Injection port temperature

Interesting, huh?  In the Courtroom, we must not guess; we must not accept assertions based upon faith. it's not Amen. But rather, data, facts and proof.

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

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If he was an analytical chemist or a DUI defense attorney he would say "Show me the separation!!"

Who can forget Cuba Gooding Junior in the movie Jerry McGuire shouting "SHOW ME THE MONEY!"???

If he was an analytical chemist or a DUI defense attorney facing a purported result from a Headspace Gas Chromatograph with a Flame Ionization Detector, he would yell:

 

"SHOW ME THE SEPARATION!!!!!!" 

 

Well, that is one of the things that a good criminal defense attorney who specializes in defending the citizen among us who has been accused of a DUI should always demand whenever there is a reported result from a chromatographic process. 

Why?

As I posted before in Gas Chromatography and why is it is so important to Pennsylvania DUI arrests:

Chromatography is strictly and simply speaking "separation science". It is the study of how an analyst can take a complex matrix (compound) and separate it out into its component parts.

If you can't prove separation between like analytes, then your result means nothing.

Much like I posted before "A large problem in Gas Chromatography: No uniform standard for GC run position or composition".  There is also no uniform nomenclature for what this is called.

I have seen it called:

  • Harrisburg DUI Lawyer verifier and resolution chromatogramResolution Control Standard
  • Separation chromatogram
  • Matrix chromatogram
  • some don't call it anything at all (because they don't do it)

For ETOH determinations at a minimum we need to see this proof of separation for from standards that are NIST certified values or comprised of USP grade materials (see generally:  Metrology in DUI prosecution for the importance of these concepts):

  1. acetaldehyde
  2. acetone
  3. acetonitrile
  4. ethanol
  5. ethyl acetate
  6. isopropanol
  7. methanol
  8. methyl ethyl ketone
  9. butanol

 Below is an example of just such a type of proof:

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer verifier and resolution chromatogram2

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

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Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
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A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

The Carry-over Effect: Lack of Blanks between tests leads to false positive or inflated BAC results

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer false BAC resultImagine. You go into your doctor’s office for a routine physical. As part of that routine physical, the doctor takes your blood. You come back two weeks later where the doctor delivers the single worst sentence you have ever heard in your life: “I’m sorry but you have cancer.” Then comes ever worse news from the doctor when the doctor says: “You have one possible chance at living. You have to undergo radical chemotherapy and a bone marrow transplant immediately.” You are shocked. You are young. You feel healthy. There is no family history of cancer.


After you recover as much as you can from the initial shock, you ask the doctor: “How do you know?” The doctor tells you that your blood sample that the doctor took two weeks ago was sent to the lab for routine testing using a test called a Complete Blood Count (CBC) examining your blood contents along with many other people from his practice. The doctor informs you that based upon the test run you have an abnormally high White Blood Cell Count (WBC) which is indicative of malignancy. You are floored. Still in disbelief, he shows you the result. As the doctor hands you the result, the doctor explains to you that at this lab, the lab runs a bunch of CBC tests right in a row using the same single testing instrument. That as a cost and time saving measure, the lab does not perform tests in-between each of his patient tests to make sure the device is clear thus making sure each test is only a report unique to that particular test and not due to the previous test.
 

While looking at the result, you note that your sample was labeled as sample 14 meaning that there were 13 others tested before yours. You ask the doctor about that. He pulls out his other reports and discovers that immediately before your test, there was a test done of his other patient who was unfortunately in Stage III or terminal end stage of cancer but who is still fighting with a superhigh WBC result. The doctor tells you about this other patient’s results and condition. The doctor gets a visible frown on his face. Despite all of this information, the doctor still tries to schedule the chemotherapy and the bone marrow transplant.
 

You have got to be thinking to yourself…no way. I would not undergo all of that based upon the way the tests were performed. That’s crazy.

Well, exactly that type of testing and evidence is what happens in Court every day and all day long in DUI and DUI Drug cases in the United States. It is reckless and shameful.
 

When you are accused of a crime that is almost entirely based on a numeric value, which is essentially what occurs in a prosecution based strictly on a reported Blood Alcohol Content result or a DUI Drugs case, we all want to be sure that the result is accurate, precise, repeatable, reliable, traceable, reproducible, robust and true being unique to that individual accused and that individual accused alone. However, as we discussed before "A large problem in Gas Chromatography: No uniform standard for GC run position or composition", namely there is no order or reason as to what goes into the autosampler carousel and in what order the samples go into the autosampler.
 

This lack of standardization, even within the same lab and even from run to run made by the same technician, and especially with the nearly absent use of blanks is one of the fundamental flaws of Gas Chromatography for ETOH or drugs of abuse testing in America. In my considered opinion and in the general scientific community (as opposed to the law enforcement community), it is the single largest and most basic systemic problem with the way that Gas Chromatography is practiced in forensic testing today.
 

With this post, I will explain how the lack of using a blank before and after each unknown sample run invites well-deserved scientific scrutiny and rightly calls into question the conclusory reported and alleged result in every single case.
 

But first some background:
 

What is a blank?
 

Simply and generally, in analytical chemistry a blank is a sample that is prepared using the same methods that an unknown would be prepared within the run simply without the unknown added.
 

Ok, let’s translate that. In our case of assaying an accused’s blood which contains an unknown amount of analyte of interest (e.g., drugs of abuse or ETOH) is typically prepared by diluting the sample by adding a known amount of internal standard which is typically n-propanol when the unknown looked for is ETOH. [Blogger’s note: in the future a detailed post will be used to examine the use and potential problems when internal standards are used]. When a blank is created, the same exact amount of n-propanol that is added to the accused’s blood is added to a sample jar (in our case a headspace vial) but with no blood added. In simpler terms, it is a virgin sample with only n-propanol added. As a result, as there is only n-propanol, there should only be one peak on the chromatogram which corresponds to n-propanol. The lack of any other peaks is where the name of “blank” comes from in the analytical world.
 

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer blank chromatogram carry over effect
(Pictured above:  a blank with only n-propanol)

 

Why is this important?

In a phrase “carry-over effect” in another phrase an inaccurate inflated reported Blood Alcohol Content. Simply put, a false Blood Alcohol Content result. Think of it as contamination.
 

In analytical chemistry, carry-over effect can be thought in terms of pick up. When a carry-over event occurs the sample “picks up” the analytes of interest from a previous sample. A carryover effect is an effect that "carries over" from one experimental condition to another. It is a form of contamination from one sample to another.

Carry over in gas chromatography analysis can come from three typical sources: first, autodiluting [Blogger’s note: an entire future post will be dedicated to this concept]; second, injector contamination [Blogger’s note: an entire future post will be dedicated to this concept]; and third, remaining analyte on the column.
 

Whether direct injection or an autosampler is used, without a blank inserted before and after an unknown, then there is no way of scientifically knowing the alleged reported result is unique to that particular sample.
 

Until this very basic systemic flaw is solved, then it cannot be responsibly and scientifically asserted that the reported result is unique to the unknown analysis and not carried over from another analysis.

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer carry-over effect in gas chromatography
  (Pictured above:  an over lay of chromatograpms where in green there is the electrical signal as detected by a Flame Ionization detector when a Resolution Control Standard or Separation chromatogram is generated and in black is the blank run)

It is so easy to solve, yet no one seems to care. You just insert a blank. I guess the forensic science community doesn’t care because the result doesn’t affect them.
 

As an illustration, I draw your attention to a past post as a concrete example for this discussion.  In "Highest reported BAC .708: I call Shenanigans", we discussed an extremely high reported BAC result.  Much like our cancer example, would you like to be the next test sample after that superhigh result?  I would think not.

How about we start doing things in a scientifically responsible manner and run blanks in-between unknowns????

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

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A wakeup call: Independence in Crime Labs is not enough

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer blood testingWhile independence is necessary for any laboratory to insure against bias, it is just a start. Without meaningful double blind unannounced proficiency-based testing of every technician conducted by yet and another independent certified set of laboratory auditors, then it means nothing. We also need the technicians to be true credentialed scientists having graduated from brick and mortar post-secondary institutions employing the scientific method in the discipline that they are formally trained in and not testifying beyond beyond the scope of their expertise. Finally, to make it have any sort of testing scientific meaningful, the methods must be robust and internally and externally validated.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

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A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Putting Innocent People in Jail

I came across this article and it made me sick to my stomach.  It made me mad and when you read it I'm sure you'll be mad too.  A “forensics” lab in San Diego was found to be producing faulty test results that lead to innocent people being convicted of being under the influence of narcotics:

Local criminal cases may have been tainted by false drug tests:

The criminal drug cases against as many as 1,000 people may have been tainted by false-positive narcotics tests from a Los Angeles-area lab, and defense lawyers in San Diego County have been told by prosecutors that their clients may be jailed due to faulty tests, it was reported Saturday.

Imagine an innocent person, someone you love, is arrested and is falsely convicted of a DUI or a drug related offense because of sloppy lab work.  They are thrown into prison losing their freedom over a crime they did not commit.  They lose their job, have to spend enormous amounts of money on legal and court fees.  They lose their dignity and self-respect.  They lose everything because someone in the crime lab was careless and didn't follow the right procedures.

I have defended thousands of DUI and Drug cases in Pennsylvania and I can tell you from first hand experience that this happens a lot more than you think.  I have blogged previously about how the Wellspan Hospital System in Central Pennsylvania has discontinued doing DUI blood tests for the government.

The main problems are the same.  The laboratory staff is overloaded with work and cuts corners and doesn't follow scientifically recognized procedures.  This leads to tainted results and false DUI convictions.

This is another reason why the Innocence Project  is so important.  There are many many people who are in jail for crimes they did not commit all because of faulty and sloppy forensics.  It's a tragedy of epic proportions that could happen to any of us.  This is one of the reasons I urge you to find an attorney who is a forensics expert to represent your criminal or DUI case.  If you are in Central Pennsylvania, please call me at The McShane Firm at 1-866-MCSHANE.  I am a recognized forensics litigator and have the knowledge to challenge the government and call them to account for their junk forensics.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

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Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
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A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

What's more important Sports or Courts?

Olympic doping lab world's most sophisticated

A dope-testing lab considered the most sophisticated in the world is up and running for the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver.

I read this article the other day and it got me thinking: What's more important making sure a cheater doesn't win a race or making sure an innocent person is not convicted of a serious crime like DUI?

I have blogged before about the shoddy nature of our nation's forensics labs:

Winter Olympics and DUI TestinThere are more sophisticated ways of testing that aren't being used, procedures that are not being followed, and there are better ways to monitor DUI and drug testing.  Over the course of the countless DUI trials I have fought, I have seen the whole gambit of tainted blood and urine tests which end up producing results that if accepted would have convicted many of these innocent people.  Fortunately, as a premier forensics and DUI expert I was able to catch these flaws.  However, everyday people are convicted because of these mistakes.

Take a look at this article. The world's most sophisticated testing lab has been set up for the Winter Olympics but not to ensure justice in our courts.  Think about it.  Canada is spending an enormous amount of resources to ensure cheaters don't win medals but our lawmakers turn a blind eye to the fact that our forensics system is broken and many innocent people have gone to jail because of it.  WHY?

Preserving the purity and sanctity of sports is important but ensuring "justice for all" is the fabric of our society.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

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Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Why saying the sample was run on a gas chromatograph is nearly meaningless

Saying the sampling was done on a Gas Chromatograph is like saying that you won a car.  Both description are useful in that they help differentiate. 

  • In the case of all vehicles, it is useful to distinguish cars from trucks or motorcycles.
  • Whereas in the case of chemical testing, it is useful to distinguish gas chromatography from enzymatic assay testing or breath testing.  

But neither initial descriptions give any idea of specifics.

  • In the case of cars, there are different makes, models  and years.
  • Whereas, in gas chromatography there are many different options.

This is why when you are a citizen among us who has been accused of a DUI and the magic number (i.e., the alleged BAC result) is derived from a purported Gas Chromatography result, you need to find a DUI lawyer who knows a lot about the scientific process and what precisely and in detail the configuration and the method of Gas Chromatography used.  You shouldn't settle for simply someone who has heard of it, but you deserve someone who is a near expert in Gas Chromatography.  So, ask some questions of your potential DUI lawyer.  See what level of familiarity and detail he/she may have.  If their description amounts to a simple answer like its "a car" in our analogy, then maybe you need to look elsewhere.

I had wrote very generally on Gas Chromatography before and the specific training that I had received through the American Chemical Society and Axiom Labs at:

Gas Chromatography and why is it is so important to Pennsylvania DUI arrests

I had further posted on Crimping a Headspace Vial in Gas Chromatography: How not putting the "lid on the jar" can lead to disaster in a DUI case and A large problem in Gas Chromatography: No uniform standard for GC run position or composition

Now let's take it to another level and start to look at the variations in configuration to turn the description of "a car" into something much more meaningful.  This post will focus on the various non-programmable hardware-related or configuration-related issues.  The specifics of the configuration.  A future post will focus on the programmable or process/protocol-related issues.

In terms of configuration the variables in modern gas chromatography for ETOH or drugs of abuse determination include:

Carrier gas:  In America typically helium is used as the inert gas used to "push" the analytes through the system; although hydrogen is the second most popular method.  [Blogger's note:  More will be written on this distinction and specifically on the need for blanks between unknown samples]

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer carrier gas  Harrisburg DUI Lawyer GC with hydrogen generator

(pictured above left:  a Gas Chromatograph with helium tank as the carrier gas; and above right:  a Gas Chromatograph with hydrogen generator-the blue box to the right)

Internal standard:  It is a substance added to achieve an "artificial peak" in chromatography when measuring an unknown and in analytical chemistry, it is a chemical substance that is added in a constant amount to samples, the blank and calibration standards in a chemical analysis. The ratio of the unknown analyte signal to the internal standard signal as a function of the analyte concentration of the standards and hence can achieve a known result.  Generally, in alcohol testing it is n-propanol, but for drugs of abuse in particular other internal standards can be used.  [Blogger's note:  In the future more will be written on the importance of this distinction and especially in terms of the salting out effect]

Injection type:  Direct injection versus headspace methodology versus autosampler  [Blogger's note:  In the future more will be written on the importance of this distinction]

 Harrisburg DUI Lawyer injector port for GC gas chromatography  Harrisburg DUI Lawyer with headspace autosampler

(pictured above to the left is an injection port where one may do a direct injection; and above right is an headspace autosampler) [to see an autosampler in action please go to: A large problem in Gas Chromatography: No uniform standard for GC run position or composition]

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer manual headspace sampler  Harrisburg DUI Lawyer GC headspace installed

(pictured above left is a manual headspace sampler; and pictured above right is an installed headspace autosampler on a gas chromatograph)

Column:  Not all columns are the same.  There are two basic types:  capillary versus packed.  Generally in modern gas chromatography for ETOH and drug of abuse testing, capillary columns are used.  However, there is no universal column (e.g., Restek BAC 1, Restek BAC 2, Agilent DB-ALC 1, Agilent DB-ALC 2, Rxi™-5ms, DB-5)  What type of capillary column is installed majorly affects specific performance.

 Harrisburg DUI Lawyer packed column GC2 Harrisburg DUI Lawyer packed column GC

(pictured above left:  uninstalled packed column; and pictured above right:  installed packed column inside of gas chromatograph)

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer uninstalled capillary column  Harrisburg DUI Lawyer with capillary column

(pictured above left:  uninstalled capillary column; and pictured above right:  installed capillary column inside of gas chromatograph)

Number of columns:  The gas chromatograph can be set up so as to accept a single column or two which is referred to as dual columns.  With dual column configuration duplicate testing is possible.

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer dual column inside

(pictured above:  a dual column configuration)

Detector:  Without a detector, a gas chromatograph is just a screening device as it can only denote separation between analytes of interest and not the quantification of those analytes.  The addition of a detector makes the qualitative measure achieved by the gas chromatograph itself (i.e., the separation characteristic) into a combination of qualitative measurement with the quantitative measurement (as achieved separately by the detector).  In gas chromatography there are so many possible detectors that are used, but primarily for ETOH and drugs of abuse testing of unknowns, flame ionization detectors (usually used in ETOH determinations) and/or mass spectrometry (usually used in drugs of abuse) is used.  With mass spectrometry different detectors are available such as Triple Quadrupole configuration.  [Blogger's note:  Much more will be written on this later]

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer GC-MS with autosampler  Harrisburg DUI Lawyer GC-MS opened

(pictured above left:  a gas chromatograph with a flame ionization detector using an autosampler; and pictured above right:  on the left an open mass spectrometer and on the right an open gas chromatograph)

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer FID flame ionization detector    Harrisburg DUI lawyer exploded view of flame ionization detector

(pictured above left:  an installed FID or Flame Ionization Detector; pictured above right:  an exploded view of flame ionization detector)

Multiple injectors and multiple detectors: There is no end to the configurations that one can develop.  There are GC-FID, GC-MS-MS.  One can have a GC with multiple injector ports too.

 Harrisburg DUI Lawyer 2 FID 2 columns and dual injector ports  Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Dual FIDs

(pictured above left:  2 FIDs 2 columns and dual injector ports; and pictured above right:  close up of dual Flame Ionization Detectors)

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer GC-MS-MS    Harrisburg DUI Lawyer dual injectors

(pictured above left:  a GC-MS-MS; pictured above right:  dual injector ports)

An overall perspective

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer inside of GC-FID oven (pictured above:  Can your DUI attorney identify the basics?  What do the different color arrows represent? If you are a good defense attorney go ahead and post the answer and get credit)

 

In order to determine whether or not a test is accurate, precise, traceable, reliable, repeatable, trustworthy and true, we must look at these differences.  In order to determine whether or not your DUI attorney knows what he or she is doing, then they must know all of this at a very minimum.

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

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A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

A large problem in Gas Chromatography: No uniform standard for GC run position or composition

I try to learn everything that I can about analytical testing.  Not being a scientist and only being a lawyer, I am an outsider to this fascinating world.  I find that as I learn more, more questions present themselves.  As an outsider last year l learned something that really kind of surprised me. 

When Gas Chromatography is used and especially when an auto-sampler for Headspace Gas Chromatography (HSGC) is used, there is no universal standard operating procedure as to what headspace vial goes into what position and what minimum standards comprise a auto-sampler Headspace Gas Chromatography run.

(above video an auto-sampler)

But why does this matter?

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer knows headspace gas chromatography

As a nationally known DUI attorney and having received forensic expert training, I get weekly calls from colleagues from Georgia, Tennessee, New Hampshire, California, Arizona and elsewhere about Gas Chromatography.  I love it. I thank my colleagues for the trust in consulting with me.  It is amazing to me to see the variation.  The variation is not only from state to state, but also from labs within a state and yes, even from technicians within one lab.  Wow!

So if there is no uniformity, then there can be no consistency.  There are large issues that can emerge with this approach.  I have personally seen the following:

  1. An entire run without a single blank (Pennsylvania)
  2. An entire run without positive controls (New Hampshire)
  3. An entire run without a separation matrix that would prove separation between methanol, ethanol, isopropanol or butanol at the very least (Georgia, Tennessee)
  4.  No calibrators within the run (Texas)
  5. A "historical calibration curve" used as a calibration curve where the columns were actually replaced between the columns that produced the "historical calibration curve" and the columns that were used to test this unknown (Pennsylvania)
  6. A lack of blanks run between unknowns to prove lack of carry-over effect (everywhere) [Blogger’s note: a more comprehensive post on this will follow]

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

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Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

 

Metrology in DUI prosecution

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer referenceMetrology is the body of science surrounding measurement or how we know for certain or for as near as certain as scientifically possible that some measurement is in fact that quantitative measure.

It is the very essence of measurement.  Because if we do not know that some measurement is accurate, precise and true, then we know nothing.  We have no frame of reference.  No basis for comparison.

This concept with analytical devices is achieved when known standards are used.  Stated differently, an instrument's bias, precision, and accuracy can be measured by calibration to a traceable standard..

What this really all involves is the concept of traceability.

But where do these standards come from?

In DUI prosecution, the concept of traceability is involved in any form of calibration, internal standards, positive controls, negative controls or reference solutions used in achieving a Blood Alcohol Content result.

There are two (2) basic ways that the concept of traceability can be legitimately achieved:

  1. NIST standards
  2. USP grade raw materials

NIST is an acronym that stands for the National Institute of Standards and Technology which is part of United States Department of Commerce.  They certify weights and measures.  Many state's have a like agency.

 

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer USP-NFUSP is an acronym that stands for United States Pharmacopeia which is a non-government entity that makes commercially available standards.  USP sets standards for the quality, purity, strength, and consistency of these products. They issue certificates to insure that a purchased product is in fact what it purports to be.  Certified Reference Materials (CRMs) represent the next generation of exceptional quality USP Reference Standards. CRMs have undergone additional metrologically based testing and statistical analysis to meet both USP's stringent criteria and guidelines established by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).

Why is this important?

In analytical testing whether it is breath, blood or urine we have an unknown which is the amount of EOTH or drugs of abuse in the substrate (breath, blood and urine of the accused DUI suspect), we can only know how much it is if it is compared against a known amount from a standard.  It is this comparison between the known and the unknown that gives us the amount of the unknown to report.

So if calibrators, internal standards, positive controls, negative controls or reference solutions are not NIST traceable or comprised of USP grade raw materials, then there is no way to know, in a scientifically responsible way, what the unknown really is.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Why forensic science testing for DUI BAC determination is the silly sister of analytical science: Good Laboratory Practices

I have written before, perhaps rhetorically:  Why if someone is allowed full due process of law are we also not entitled to due process of science?

It seems backward.  Law at the expense of science or science at the expense of law, doesn't it?

One would think rationally that we would be entitled to full scientific safeguards and best practices, but in the forensic environment generally and in the DUI testing for BAC analysis, it is sorely lacking.

It seems that as a society we are more concerned with the prospect of having a new pharmaceutical wrongly introduced into the market than we are in getting a conviction wrong.

As a proof of the above, just look at any pharmaceutical lab and the rigorous documentation and process application validity that goes into developing and testing a pharmaceutical before it is allowed into production and distribution.  In that industry it is called "Good Laboratory Practices" (GLP).  This is to be contrasted to the near opposite of that which is forensic testing.

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Good Laboratory Pracitces GLP

In the clinical and research arena, the phrase Good Laboratory Practice or GLP generally refers to a system of management controls for laboratories and research organizations to ensure the consistency and reliability of results as outlined in the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Principles of GLP and national regulations.

Good Laboratory Practice (GLP) embodies a set of principles that provides a framework within which laboratory studies are planned, performed, monitored, recorded, reported and archived.

There is no equivalent to this in forensic science generally and specifically in DUI forensic testing for BAC determinations.  Sadly there are no national or international standards.  Each state and sometimes each jurisdiction within a state is allowed to setup and use in whatever manner they see fit, for their DUI testing for BAC analysis.  Crazy, huh?

 

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

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When is a straight line a curve: Calibration curve

One of the unsung or rather unknown important aspects in any reported BAC result is the calibration curve.  It is not a curve but must be a line.  It is known as analytical linearity.

it is part of the three limits:

  1. Limit of Detection  (I blogged on this at Underage Drinking and DUI in Pennsylvania: LOD and LOQ Defense)
  2. Limit of Quantification  (I blogged on this at Underage Drinking and DUI in Pennsylvania: LOD and LOQ Defense)
  3. Limit of Linearity  (I blogged on this at Highest reported BAC .708: I call Shenanigans)

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Calibration Curve

The three limits and their placement on the x,y axis is crucial in all forms of reported Blood Alcohol Content (BAC) results whether it is breath alcohol testing for Blood Alcohol Content (BrAC) or in Blood analysis based Blood Alcohol Content testing. 

Before we can consider a reported and alleged result as being remotely precise, accurate, repeatable, reliable, verified, traceable and true, the calibration curve and its linearity is something that must be demonstrated.  Without demonstrating linearity on the calibration curve, we can know nothing.

The calibration curve is established by comparing different concentrations of the analyte of interest using known reference standards along increasing levels of concentration.  Then the data is graphed on a simple x, y axis for comparison.

The key measure in a calibration curve is called the Correlation Coefficient.

What constitutes a good calibration curve?

First let's start at the end.  What we are looking for is what is called the magic "three nines" or that the Correlation Coefficient along the curve is .999 or better.  The correlation coefficient only indicates variance from the averages.  It is not the best indicator of curve quality but in the less than certain world (unfortunately) of Government BAC determination, it is the standard.  The Pearson correlation coefficient indicates the strength of a linear relationship between two variables, but its value generally does not completely characterize their relationship.

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer correlation coefficient

(Pictured above is a set of four scatter-plots with the exact same correlation of 0.816, but the data is radically different)

When is there a problem?  What should we look for?

  1. Generally, data points should be evenly distributed around the curve. If most of the points fall to one side of the line or are not evenly divided by the line, there may be a problem with the curve.
  2. Is there at least three or more values along the curve from NIST traceable or USP grade raw materials?  Anything less than three is not forensically acceptable.  The forensically acceptable method of using reference solution or calibrators consisting of NIST or USP grade raw materials verified by an independent lab from the manufacturer using a GC-FID is a minimum.
  3. The referencce solutions or calibrators must be at low levels at or around the LOQ and LOD, a mid-point and at a very high point (one beyond the highest expected result). Scientifically, to have meaning, the reference solutions should be evenly distributed along the curve.  Standards should not exceed five (5) fold changes in concentration at most.
  4. "Forced zeroing" where the analyst forces the intercept to reach zero in the x,y intercept instead of where the data demands.

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer poor Calibration curve

(pictured on the left: a "good" calibration curve with many points of data, evenly spread, not purposefully re-zeroed artificially to the zero point on the x,y axis, characterized by data points on both side of line and with a correlation coefficient of three nines)

(pictured on the right:  a "poor" or "bad" calibration curve with all data points on one side of the line, and one extreme, extreme outlayer on the other side of the line

So what if we see high Correlation Coefficients or non-linear results on the calibration curve?

Calibration curves which are not linear may imply problems in the analytical process such as saturation or degradation.  On other words, the result is not trustworthy.  Random divergence in a curve can result from numerous factors including extraction/digestion, poor technique, or dirty or
malfunctioning instrumentation among others. Again, the result is not trustworthy.

The comparison between the known as established by the calibration curve and the unknown of the sample is what we are doing to come to the magic BAC number.

As we are constantly measuring the unknown amount of ETOH or drugs in the blood, a poor or inaccurate calibration curve means for disaster for the citizen accused and for truth.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

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Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

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By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

What Pac-Man and Inflated and Incorrect Blood Alcohol Content results have in common

See......there is this animatronic character that we all know called Pac-Man.  Pac-Man has everything to do with inaccurate BAC results.

Honestly, when was the last time you even thought about playing this great game.  Well, here is your chance.


Free Online Flash Games

Since its release in May 22, 1980, the little pixel gobbling creature was a hit.  It became an omnipresent icon of the 80's.  It became a social phenomenon that sold a millions upon millions of dollars of merchandise and also inspired, among other things, an animated television series and a top-ten hit single.  Pac-Man, according to the Davie-Brown Index, has the highest brand awareness of any video game character among American consumers, recognized by 94 percent of all people.

Just in case you are in the six percent, let me take four sentences to illustrate the basics of the game, then I will relate it back to DUI.

The player controls Pac-Man through a maze, eating pac-dots. When all dots are eaten, Pac-Man is taken to the next stage. Four ghosts (Blinky, Pinky, Inky and Clyde) roam the maze, trying to catch Pac-Man. If a ghost touches Pac-Man, a life is lost.  Near the corners of the maze are four larger, flashing dots known as power pellets that provide Pac-Man with the temporary ability to eat the ghosts.


On the other hand, is something called candida albicans.

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Candida_albicans

 (This is a photomicrograph of "Pac-Man" or Candida Albicans)

Candida Albicans is a type of yeast.  It is one of the most bountiful organisms on the planet earth.  It can be practically found on any surface on the planet.  This would include your skin and most surfaces.  If the question is "where can Candida Albicans be found?" in a word without much exaggeration the answer would be "everywhere" or "anywhere".

Why does this matter?

Exogenous alcohol production in the blood tube.  In other words, under certain conditions, ETOH can be actually produced in the tube AFTER collection.  That's right.  You are accused of a DUI, they draw your blood and through no fault of your own (but through the fault of the collector), your Blood Alcohol Content (BAC) can be higher than it was in your blood when it was circulating through your veins.  It is so bad that it can even produce ETOH when none existed organically (naturally) in your bloodstream in your body at all

What is worse?  Even the most perfectly calibrated and flawless analytical device (either a GC-FID or GC-FID/MS/MS and even especially a device based upon colormetric analysis such as hospital blood testing) cannot tell the difference between the endogenous alcohol amount (i.e., the amount of alcohol that is there and is your fault because you actually drank it) and exogenous alcohol amounts (i.e., the amount of alcohol that is there that is not your fault because it was created in the tube after it was collected from you).  WOOOOOOOO!

Got your attention now?

How does this happen, you might ask.

It is really quite simple.  There are a great number of scenarios that can lead to exogenous alcohol production.  But first a microbiology lesson.

Blood contains glucose.

In order to have exogenous alcohol production that will either result in a false positive or an inappropriate and unfair additive effect one must have:

  1. The organisms (Candida Albicans) themselves must be present in the tube (which is remarkably easy as most phlebotomists that I have cross-examined incorrectly or insufficiently cleanse the venipunture site, or the tubes themselves are out of expiration meaning that the vacuum of the tube which is designed to keep good things in and the bad stuff-Candida Albicans-out); and
  2. Appropriate substrate is present; and
  3. Appropriate temperature exists; [and optionally]
  4. [insufficient amount or lack of anti-fermenting agent in the tube itself or it is improperly mixed]

The basic transformation can be simplified as follows:  Candida Albicans when the blood is not refrigerated takes the glucose in the blood, consumes it and excretes EOTH.

Now we go back to Pac-Man (see there was a reason why I put it in this post)....

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Exogenous Alcohol production

(Pictured above-Candida Albicans "eats" glucose in the blood and "poops" out ETOH)

So think of it this way....

  • Pac-Man is Candida Albicans
  • The ghosts are glucose
  • The flashing dots in the corner that energizes Pac-Man is the lack of refrigeration

Just like in the game itself, it is only when Pac-Man eats the flashing dots, that Pac-man can eat the ghosts.  However, instead of it killing the ghosts in our version of Pac-Man, it creates ETOH.  So, Candida Albicans "eats" glucose in the blood and "poops" out ETOH.

All of this can all be ruled out by a simple test called the Ion Scan, but the government doesn't bother.  Why bother to be sure?

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

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Sources of Error in Forming Conclusions in a DUI context

In Pennsylvania DUI cases and in Pennsylvania DUI prosecutions, there is always the possibility of error by anyone from police officers to technical supervisors to toxicologists to forensic scientists to breath test operators to blood test operators to eyewitnesses to judges and even Juries.  It is important for all of us to try to identify these potential sources of error and examine them with the stated goal to try to minimize or eliminate these possible sources of error. 

The below schematic is a useful way of identifying these possible sources of error. 

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer sources of ERROR

Before we start to entertain the possibility of convicting anyone, should we not identify these sources of error to try to minimize or eliminate them before we form the conclusion of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt?

 

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

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Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Why is Due Process of Law different than the Due Process of Science: Blood Alcohol Content is only an Estimate

Every citizen accused of a crime is entitled to the Due Process of Law, but why aren't accused citizens entitled to the Due Process of Science?

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer bill of rights torn up

Every Blood Alcohol Content that is reported in Court across the entire nation is just an estimate of the true value.

A bold statement no doubt, but worthy of not only repeating again, but also explaining. 

Every Blood Alcohol Content that is reported in Court across the entire nation is just an estimate of the true value.

First, let's take a look at some definitions:

True value:  The actual population value that would be obtained with perfect measuring instruments and without committing any error of any type, both in collecting the primary data and in carrying out mathematical operations.

In our example of Blood Alcohol Testing for Blood Alcohol Content, this would mean testing every drop of blood collected.  In our example of Breath Alcohol Testing for Blood Alcohol Content, this would mean testing every molecule of breath sample collected.

This is not done.  Even on the most sophisticated devices used to arrive at Blood Alcohol Content, the entire captured sample is not tested.

Why is this important?

It comes down to analytical methodology or "how do we measure something?"

In essence it comes down to the difference between replicate measurement versus duplicate measurement.

Not only are the two very frequently transposed for one another, but also because scientists themselves have not settled upon the precise working definition of these two terms in the practical world. I choose to use the term as defined by the world of analytical chemistry as that is most often the field that we are seeking to apply the definitions to. If you bear with me, you will see how illusive the terms really are in practical implementation and hence the ambiguity, I would argue.

The technical definitions of “Duplicate measurement” versus “Replicate measurement” as defined by our friends in the analytical chemistry field.

Duplicate measurements: Two measurements made concurrently and in the same location, or side-by-side. Used to evaluate the precision of the measurement method.

Replicate measurements: are multiple measurements made upon the same sample. Replicate measurements allow statistical treatment of data – this allows, for example, the spread of data and relative standard deviations to be calculated. Replicate measurements also allow some sources of error (especially indeterminate) to be identified.

Why does this matter to a person accused of a DUI?

The best analytical testing method to come as close as possible to reporting the true value would allow for both: (1) duplicate measurement based testing to avoid random sampling error (defined below) as only an aliquot is ever really measured by a analytical device; and, (2)  replicate measurement based testing to allow for meaningful measurement of the uncertainty of the result (i.e., computation of the standard deviation assuming a Gaussian distribution-defined below)

Neither the analytical devices nor any protocol used nationally to derive the closest to an accused's true Blood Alcohol Content employs features of both.

  • None of the breath test machines that I am aware of on the market are true replicate analysis (yes, I even include Minnesota Intoxilyzer 5000).

The best example of a replicate measurement device is a split column dual analysis GC, but even it is not a true duplicate analysis, is it?

As an open question to all I ask:  "In blood testing, is it truly duplicate analysis if it is taken from the same tube?"

Would not the best method be something like this:

  • 2 specimens of blood in two separate tubes (Tube A and Tube B)
  • then each tube (Tube A and Tube B) divided into two separate specimens (Tube A--->specimen 1 and specimen 2) and (Tube B--->specimen 3 and 4)
  • then take the specimen cups and make them into two duplicate measurements (Specimen 1--->Test 1 and Test 2) and (Specimen 2--->Test 3 and Test 4) and (Specimen 3--->Test 5 and Test 6) and (Specimen 4--->Test 7 and Test 8)
  • Test all 8
  • Apply chemometrics to arrive at meaningful uncertainty budgets

Would not this be more robust?


I mean you could really apply some meaningful chemometrics to this, right?

Who doesn't want a robust and true analytical measurement of anything?

I suppose if we were to really look, I guess the answer is the government does not want it.  Well, I suggest that is what their actions betray.

What is the Government's excuse?  LIMITED RESOURCES.


As a rhetorical philosophical question I ask do we as a society want to use the practical excuse of “limited resources” (which is really a silly one that I do not think exists) to stand in the way of science and truth?

Without the meaningful application of chemometrics and the quantification of uncertainty with each and every presentation of a number in the Courtroom, are we not doing the opposite of science which is guessing by falsely presenting as an empirical absolute a true value that is ?


____
Footnotes:

Random sampling error: in the world of statistics and analytical chemistry it is the is the error caused by observing a sample instead of the whole population. Generally as one prepares a fraction of the whole to be analyzed, there is possible error due to sample-to-sample variation. These variations in the possible sample values of a statistic can theoretically be expressed as sampling errors, although in practice the exact sampling error is typically unknown. Sampling error also refers more broadly to this phenomenon of random sampling variation. The likely size of the sampling error can generally be controlled by taking a large enough random sample from the population. If the observations are collected from a random sample, statistical theory provides probabilistic estimates of the likely size of the sampling error for a particular statistic or estimator. These are often expressed in terms of its standard error.

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer discussed random sample error                   Harrisburg DUI Lawyer discusses random sample error

Gaussian distribution:  The normal distribution is pattern for the distribution of a set of data which follows a bell shaped curve. This distribution is sometimes called the Gaussian distribution in honor of Carl Friedrich Gauss, a famous mathematician.  The bell shaped curve has several properties:

  • The curve concentrated in the center and decreases on either side. This means that the data has less of a tendency to produce unusually extreme values, compared to some other distributions.
  • The bell shaped curve is symmetric. This tells you that he probability of deviations from the mean are comparable in either direction.

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer bell curve 


Chemometrics is the science of extracting information from chemical systems by data-driven means. It is a highly interfacial discipline, using methods frequently employed in core data-analytic disciplines such as multivariate statistics, applied mathematics, and computer-science, but to investigate and address problems in chemistry, biochemistry and chemical engineering.

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer discusses chemometrics

 

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

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Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
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By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
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DUI or a Stroke, Some Cops Can't Tell the Difference

Several weeks ago, I blogged on the Drug Recognition Expert (DRE) protocol and specifically the Finger-to-Nose Test and the Romberg Balance Test and I half jokingly wrote the following:

In that post I concluded that

Like many tests used at roadside [or in the DRE protocol], the designed and intended use of a legitimate and useful clinical screening test has been literally bastardized and hijacked by police to now be used as a supposed indicator for possible alcohol or drug impaired driving.

Well, it is sad but true, neurological events can be misinterpreted by under-educated police officers as being impairment leading them to falsely arrest people for DUI.  Stroke and neurological episodes can look like impairment or being drunk. 

Consider this sad story:

Man wrongly handcuffed for DUI suspicion while having stroke
By Bryon Saxton (Standard-Examiner Davis Bureau)

LAYTON -- An Ogden man suspected of driving while intoxicated, handcuffed and put in the back of a patrol car while in the process of suffering a stroke, wants the Davis County Sheriff's Office to better train deputy paramedics to recognize stroke symptoms.

"I think they just need to know better, how to treat people when they have a medical condition," said 46-year-old Mark Wager. "The first thing they think is that they are intoxicated."

Wager, a Hill Air Force Base employee who filed a written complaint to the Davis County Commission, said he is not seeking monetary damages from the county or to have the deputy involved disciplined. But he wants the department to provide training for its paramedics to recognize the difference between an intoxicated driver and a stroke victim.

On Feb. 6 while on the 700 South on-ramp near Clearfield, Wager said, he pulled to the side of the road, sensing something was wrong.

"I stepped outside the vehicle and collapsed," he said.

Wager said two people stopped to help him back into his vehicle, with a deputy paramedic arriving a short time later. The paramedic asked him what was wrong and told him to get out of his vehicle to take a sobriety test.

"They tried to make me walk, but I couldn't walk," Wager said.

Wager said one of five officers who later came to the scene did ask if he was experiencing a stroke, but because Wager wasn't certain what he was experiencing, he refused medical treatment.

"They told me I was under arrest for a DUI," Wager said.

That resulted in the officers cuffing his hands behind his back, placing him on a medical stretcher, wheeling him over to a patrol car and placing him in the rear seat of the car.

Blood draw

Before taking him to the jail, deputies stopped at Davis Hospital and Medical Center in Layton, Wager said, to have his blood drawn to see what was in his system.

"The officers bugged the doctor, asking that (Wager) be released to them. But the hospital refused to do that," he said.

Wager was flown by helicopter to University of Utah Medical Center, where he spent several weeks receiving treatment for a stroke that has left him with a "useless" left arm.

Wager said it took this long to bring his story to light because he spent time recovering and deliberating whether to pursue legal action against the county.

Different story

The incident report filed by Deputy Paramedic David Passmore with the sheriff's office tells a different story.

Passmore stated he asked Wager at least two times whether he had any medical problems, to which Wager replied he had fibromyalgia.

"I asked him if he was feeling the same as he usually does with his illness. He replied that in general he was, but that he was having numbness and tingling in his legs. He also stated that he gets this way sometimes with the fibromyalgia," the report states.

To gauge his mental status, Passmore said he asked Wager several questions which he was able to answer. He then asked him if he wanted to be transported to the hospital for further assessment, to which Wager replied he did not and signed the refusal form for transport in the ambulance that had arrived.

"Based on his refusal for transport and his inability to stand alone, I placed him in custody for suspicion of DUI. I placed him in loose fitting handcuffs and asked him if they were too tight, he replied that they were not, and I double locked them," Passmore said.

Wager was taken to the hospital for medical clearance prior to being taken to jail, Passmore said. But hospital staff determined Wager was experiencing a cerebral vascular incident, resulting in his being released to hospital staff.

Training changes

State Emergency Medical Services officials say there is an emphasis in training pre-hospital providers, such as deputy paramedics, in advanced life support, to place more focus on patients suffering from a stroke. They hope to have the training in place next year.

The state certifies and recertifies every four years about 11,000 pre-hospital providers, including paramedics, and in the last six months it has put more focus on changing the requirements for certification to increase its hours of training, said Paul Patrick, director of the Bureau of Emergency Medical Services.

"A stroke can mask intoxication," Patrick said. "The symptoms can look alike."

In 30 years of being a deputy paramedic, Lt. Brad Wilcox, also the Davis County Sheriff's Office public information officer, said he has rarely come across a driver experiencing a stroke.

"It is so extremely rare when it does happen," Wilcox said. "I could count with two or three fingers the cases that I have seen."

Wager said he finds himself in a difficult position because of the incident.

"If they wouldn't have taken me in, who knows what would have happened?" he said.

But had the paramedic told him he may be suffering a stroke, Wager said, he wouldn't have refused medical treatment that night.

Amazing, but true.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

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Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Highest reported BAC .708: I call Shenanigans

Earlier today, I blogged on both the issues of Limit of Detection (LOD) and Limit of Quantification (LOQ) error in the context of Pennsylvania underage drinking and/or Pennsylvania underage drinking and driving charges.  So, it only makes sense to look at the other extreme....

In the December 28, 2009 Rapid City Journal, an newspaper article reported that a woman from South Dakota was allegedly driving with a BAC of .708.

 

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer says show me the data

 

As everyone is blogging about this report as a singular event, it needs to be analyzed-empirically.

Facts first:

I am fortunate in the sense that I have great colleagues and true friends in every state of the United States who like us here defend the citizen accused of a DUI.  Through corresponding with one of my colleagues, Brad A. Schreiber of Pierre, SD, (who in my estimation is the best in his state at DUI defense), I was able to remove some of the speculation and have been able to distill it down so that it can be meaningfully analyzed.

  • South Dakota uses blood sampling for ETOH analysis for Blood Alcohol Content;
  • In terms of collection, the protocol calls for a single tube to be collected as opposed to the forensically and analytical chemistry standard method of collecting two separate tubes from the same venipunture site;
  • As such, the simple act of subsequent analysis by the lab of the single tube, as it is a totally destructive act, makes it impossible for future true independent testing by the accused or anyone to independently verify the results;
  • The tube that the government provides for BAC collection has a forensically insufficient amount of sodium flouride (the tube's anti-glycotic agent) which is designed to inhibit exogenous alcohol production;
  • The analytical device is setup as a dual detector Gas Chromatograph where the two detectors are a Flame Ionization Detector (FID) and a Mass Spectrometer  (MS);
  • The specific setup of the MS is unknown;
  • A headspace injection technique is used and is not a direct injection;
  • It is not a split (dual) column analytical device configuration;
  • The type of column used is unknown meaning whether it is a capillary or packed column;
  • The specific type of column used meaning if it is a BAC-1, a BAC-2 or DB-5 is also unknown;
  • In terms of the method of analysis, a single injection is made testing the sample only one time using the above analytical device setup;

Although there are some unknowns above, we can start to examine the propriety of the reported result, to be critical, to be skeptical, to be in one word:  scientific. 

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer is skeptical about BAC

 

In other more simple words: "Look for Shenanigans"

The analysis needs to be examined from a sheer probability theory point of view, the pharmacology point of view and finally from an analytical chemistry point of view.

First the Probability theory point of view... (and first some background)

Probability theory is the branch of mathematics concerned with analysis of random phenomena.  So in his case, as it is random that this would occur in the world, the mathematician would want to try to quantify, if possible, the likelihood of this occurrence.

Someone likened the odds of this .708 reported BAC as being accurate, precise, actual and true to be like "hitting the lottery" in statistics.  But is it?

In basic theory, the attempted quantification in probability theory can be thought of like trying to quantify the possibility of the result of heads versus tails when flipping a coin...

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer explains probabilty theory

However, unlike the binary concept of either heads or tails, the lottery is different.

From the pharmacology point of view, the reported lethal dose level for EOTH consumption for 50 percent of the population (LD50) is reported to be around .40 BAC.  So, this alleged result is nearly twice the LD50 rate.  That is statistically remarkable.  Well over 50% of the population would be dead (probably in the orders of magnitude of 90+%).

What we should refer to in he examination of this lottery analogy is the issue of random match probability error otherwise illustrated as the “Birthday problem”.


In probability theory, the birthday problem, or birthday paradox pertains to the probability that in a set of randomly chosen people some pair of them will have the same birthday (matching criteria=when only month and day is examined—not including year, hour or second). In a group of at least 23 randomly chosen people, there is more than 50% probability that some pair of them will have the same birthday. Such a result (for just 23 people, considering that there are 365 possible birthdays) is counter-intuitive to many.
 

For 57 or more people, the probability is more than 99%, and it reaches 100% when the number of people reaches 366 (by the pigeonhole principle, ignoring leap years). The mathematics behind this problem led to a well-known cryptographic attack called the birthday attack.
 

Let's make it more concrete....

 

In DNA analysis, the problem comes when one tries to do base pairing and what your criteria is for a “match”. What is your method of analysis: STR versus LCN (which is really scary)? How many base pairs versus all possible base pairs? Most forensic labs are laughably low.

Think of the Birthday problem. If you change the “matching criteria” from the birthday (when only month and year is examined—not including year, hour or second) and you switch it to a more meaningful metric such as month, day, year, hour and second, then the chances of finding a match in a room substantially and radically changes.


Dr. Jason Gilder is perhaps the most published person when it comes to this in the area of applied metrology and DNA forensics (thanks to Ted Vosk for introducing him to me and Dr. Greg Hampikian for first exposing me to this issue).

But in the world of variable change (i.e, the real world), the answer is not as concrete and must be examined from the singularity of the possible event in that instant moment in time. This is where it is very right when there are nearly unlimited variables, the observation holds very true that despite the odds, people hit the lottery all the time and is an apt analogy.

It is the population density of the studied university that controls and the definition of the matching criterion.

Finally from the Analytical Science point of view...


If we are going to examine this event with virtually no meaningful data (no chromatogram, no total ion chromatogram, no demonstration of separation between like chemical isomers, no calibration curve, etc.) and conclude for the sake of the argument that it is a valid outside extreme outlayer (a true artifact or the player hit the lottery) and hence a freakish event, sometimes Occam’s Razor controls.

It is likely exogenous alcohol production due to pre-collection error or post-collection but pre-analytical error.  Canidida albican.  (I will blog on this later)

So what?

Here is the point from the analytical chemistry point of view….
Assuming this single test using a protocol and the analytical method and device setup described above and it was not diluted, then corrected for dilution (as would be more acceptable to do)….

  1. At that high of a result, I don’t know of any GC-FID protocol that has a calibrator that goes that high, do you? My state doesn’t. Perkin Elmer and Agilent Standard Operating Procedures for BAC-1 and BAC-2 capillary columns doesn’t.
  2. As such, as linearity cannot be demonstrated to conclude that it was in fact that high of a result, it cannot be responsibly scientifically stated or concluded that it was a .708 BAC. THe only acceptable and scientifically responsible report is just that the result obtained exceeds the highest known calibrator value.
  3. With that high of a result without there being a blank between it and the next tests, then I would pity the poor fool who was next in the carousel of ETOH samples that are run through the GC as the possibility of carry-over effect must be present.

 So, with all of the above, I call Shenanigans on the .708.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Underage Drinking and DUI in Pennsylvania: LOD and LOQ Defense

In a previous post, we discussed the seriousness of underage drinking and underage DUI in Pennsylvania.  There are many ways a qualified Pennsylvania DUI Lawyer can challenge these cases.  From a Pennsylvania DUI lawyers point of view, we are concerned at looking at the Government's case to see whether or not they can prove their case beyond a reasonable doubt.  One of the weaknesses in the Government's case is typically the science.

There are issues with  accuracy and variability of the breath test sampling.

One of the major concerns that is present in any underage drinking in Pennsylvania or underage drinking and driving in Pennsylvania has to do with what is called the limit of detection.

As a reminder the illegal level for underage drinking in Pennsylvania is of course, 0.00 BAC or underage drinking and driving in Pennsylvania is 0.02 BAC.  These levels are in fact so low, that you can produce a positive result by eating a single slice of bread.

When you are dealing with such low threshold numbers, you can run into a very common type of error in analytical measures whether it be breath or blood which is referred to as "limit of detection" error.

Hyper-technically, the Limit of Detection (LOD) or Detection Limit (DL), is the lowest amount of analyte in a sample that can be detected, but not necessarily quantitated as an exact value. The LOD may be expressed as:
LOD = 3.3 * SD / S
where:
SD = the standard deviation of the response
S = the slope of the calibration curve

Let's make it simple.

LOD is the lowest quantity of a substance that can be distinguished from the absence of that substance (a blank value) within a stated confidence limit (generally 1%).
I bet that is still not simple enough, let's try this illustration....

Most measuring devices (otherwise known as analytical instruments) produce a signal even when a blank is analyzed.  What this means is that the measuring result of zero really is not zero.  Hence, each device has a margin of error that must be accounted for especially when dealing with very low BAC levels (in the case of an underage DUI a .02 can put you at the High Rate penalty tier.

To make it concrete, let's think about this example.  Remember LOD is the lowest value that can be distinguished from zero and LOQ is the limit at which we can reasonably tell the difference between two different values (zero and non-zero). :     

Underage DUI in Pennsylvania is a major problemUnderage Drinking in PA

  • Suppose you are at loud rock concert with your friend with lots of noise from the amplifiers and the band singing and carrying on. If the person next to you, your friend, speaks softly, you will probably not hear your friend. Their voice is less than the LOD. It means nothing to you or you don't even know about it.
  • If your friend speaks a bit louder, you may hear your friend, but it is not possible to be certain of what your friend is saying and there is still a good chance you may not hear your friend. Your friend's voice is >LOD but <LOQ.
  • If your friend speaks even louder, then you can understand your friend and take action on what your friend is saying and there is little chance you will not hear your friend. Your friend's voice is then >LOD and >LOQ.
  • Likewise, your friend's voice may stay at the same loudness, but the noise from concert may be reduced allowing your friend's voice to become >LOD. Detection limits are dependent on both the signal intensity (voice) and the noise (concert).
  • But where it becomes dangerous and alarming is when you are at the concert and you hear the drummer who is part of the band and hence the noise and mistake it for your friend because both are really close to one another creating confusion of one for the other.

At a 0.00 or a 0.02 very low level, the last scenario of the bullet points above becomes a very real problem.

Just because we can tell something from noise does not mean that we can necessarily know how much of the material is actually there. The Limit of Quantification (LOQ) is the limit at which we can reasonably tell the difference between two different values (zero and non-zero). The LOQ is drastically different between different measuring devices (e.g., breath versus blood) or between different types of the same type of measuring device (e.g., not all breath test devices are the same Intoxilyzer 5000 versus BAC DataMaster) and even between different types of the same model of testing device (e.g., Intoxilyzer 5000 EN serial number 68-0012345 versus Intoxilyzer 5000 EN serial number 68-0012346).

As we can see, having the right attorney who knows these sources of error can make all of the difference in an underage drinking in Pennsylvania or underage drinking and driving in Pennsylvania. If you or someone you know is facing underage drinking or DUI charges in Pennsylvania, you should call The McShane Firm immediately.  We maintain a 24 hour hot-line so you can talk to someone who can answer your questions at any time.  The number is 1-866-MCSHANE.

 

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

The Finger-to-Nose Test is misused in DUID or DRE evaluations

Last week, I explained the clinically designed purpose of the Romberg Balance Test and how in a meaningful way it has never even been facially validated for its intended or purported purpose as a method of recording drug-related impairment in DUID cases, but rather is used as a neurological screening test to rule-out in only a preliminary way brain damage.

In that post I concluded that

Like many tests used at roadside [or in the DRE protocol], the designed and intended use of a legitimate and useful clinical screening test has been literally bastardized and hijacked by police to now be used as a supposed indicator for possible alcohol or drug impaired driving.

With this post, I would like to examine another step in the Drug Recognition Expert (DRE) protocol, the Finger-to-Nose test in the same way to see if the same conclusion is arrived.

We start with a little etomolgy...

Unlike the Romberg Balance test, there is no identified creator of the Finger-to-Nose test.  Perhaps it will never be known and will relate back to the age old childhood developmental task of process identification.

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer explains Finger-to-Nose-Test

However, what is well known is the scores of clinical research published in peer-reviewed treatises that have successfully and validly linked the clinical use of the Finger-to-Nose test to be used as a neurological differential diagnosis tool.

What is a differential diagnosis tool?

The medical term of art "differential diagnosis tool" means that a systematic method is used to identify unknowns. 

The term differential derives from the word difference: careful differential diagnosis involves first making a list of possible diagnoses, then attempting to remove diagnoses from the list until at most one diagnosis remains. In some cases, there will remain no diagnosis; this suggests the physician has made an error, or that the true diagnosis is unknown to medicine. Removing diagnoses from the list is done by making observations and using tests that should have different results, depending on which diagnosis is correct. 

In other more crude words, it is the process of elimination.

Moreover, and perhaps more importantly, the clinical use of the Standardized Finger-to-Nose test (SFTN) differs substantially from the police officer administered one.

For the police officer administered one, the subject is commanded to stand with his/her arms out horizontally parallel to the ground and in a fashion consistent with making a "T" when one were to look directly ahead at the test subject.  He/she will be commanded to keep his or her feet together.  Then, remarkably with his/her eyes closed, he/she will then be ordered to take one hand at a time listening to the officer's command, and place it straight out in front of the subject's body, then bending the arm directed at the elbow forward, move to touch the tip of the finger to the tip of the nose.  Then back to the ready "T" position to repeat.   [Editor's note:  Please refer to the comments section of this post to see the complete comment and reply between myself and Thomas Page for a full discussion into the correct and incorrect test administration- a thank you to Mr. Page for helping me make a complete and wholly accurate post.]

Some of the problem with the DRE variation of the Finger-to-Nose test is in the explanation.  One of the instructions is for the test subject is to use only the tip of his/her index finger to touch the nose.  Most people, even sober people, misinterpret this instruction and use the pad of the finger as a substitute.

Here is the clinically valid administration of the Finger-to-Nose test.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

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Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
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A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

What the heck is the Romberg test? Does it mean that I have brain damage or I'm impaired?

As a Harrisburg DUI Lawyer who lectures nationally I get asked a lot of questions.  Recently I have been focusing a lot of my instruction, my research and my practice on Driving Under the Influence of Drugs (DUID) cases both in terms of analytical chemistry and the fallacies in the roadside testing regime known as the Drug Recognition Expert (DRE) protocol.

Among my recent posts have been:

  1. The Problem with Drug Recognition Expert and Why it is Designed for Failure which discusses the design flaws of the DRE protocol and the confirmation bias and contextual bias; and
  2. DUI Innocence Project: 93% Wrong-False Use of Roadside Tests Can Lead to False Arrest which examines the Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus Test or HGN test which is so very integral to the Drug Recognition Expert protocol.

Today I keep the focus, but I look towards the Romberg Balance Test which is another component of the Drug Recognition Expert Protocol.

 

We start with a little etomolgy...

The test was named after the German neurologist Moritz Heinrich Romberg (1795-1873), who also gave his name to Parry-Romberg syndrome and Howship-Romberg sign.

 

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer and Moritz Heinrich Romberg

(This charming fellow is Moritz Heinrich Romberg)

Romberg's test originally was a neurological test that is used to assess the dorsal columns of the spinal cord, which are essential for joint position sense (proprioception) and vibration sense.

A positive Romberg test suggests that ataxia is sensory in nature, i.e. depending on loss of proprioception.  Proprioception is the sense of the relative position of neighbouring parts of the body.  A negative Romberg test suggests that ataxia is cerebellar in nature, i.e. depending on localized cerebellar dysfunction instead.

Like many tests used at roadside, the designed and intended use of a legitimate and useful clinical screening test has been literally bastardized and hijacked by police to now be used as a supposed indicator for possible alcohol or drug impaired driving. When used to test impaired driving, the test is performed with the subject estimating seconds (30) seconds in the subject's head with the subject's head tilted back and eyes closed.  the officer looks for non-standardized clues such as swaying.  This is used to gauge the subject's internal clock and is supposed to be an indicator of stimulant or depressant usage as measured by a fast internal clock (meaning the subject got to thirty seconds in their head in under 25 seconds) and a slow internal clock (meaning the subject got to thirty seconds in their head in under 25 seconds) respectively.

However, the Romberg test has never been validated scientifically for this intended its use in roadside testing for impairment.  This much the National Highway Safety Administration recognizes in its own literature.  There is no peer-reviewed research that exists on this usage of the Romberg Balance Test for impaired driving determinations.

The purpose of Romberg’s test in the clinical world is radically different.


 (Video of a proper clinical administration of the Romberg Test)

 

According to Katz and Harris, 2008 "Lumbar Spinal Stenosis", New England J of Medicine, 358: 818-325.

Romberg's test is not a test of cerebellar function, as it is commonly misconstrued. Patients with cerebellar ataxia will, generally, be unable to balance even with the eyes open; therefore, the test cannot proceed beyond the first step and no patient with cerebellar ataxia can correctly be described as Romberg's positive. Rather, Romberg's test is a test of the proprioception receptors and pathways function. A positive Romberg's test has been shown to be 90% sensitive for spinal stenosis.

Say what?

OK translated for the rest of us.

Cerebellar ataxia dysfunction-The term cerebellar ataxia is employed to indicate ataxia (ataxia means gross lack of coordination of muscle movements) due to dysfunction of the cerebellum.

Two basic causes (simplified for our purposes):

  1. Endogenous meaning caused within the system (i.e., there is something physiologically wrong with the person). This causes a variety of elementary neurological deficits, such as antagonist hypotonia, asynergy, dysmetria, dyschronometria, and dysdiadochokinesia. How and where these abnormalities manifest depend on which cerebellar structures are lesioned, and whether the lesion is bilateral or unilateral.
  2. Exogenous meaning outside of the system caused. Exogenous substances that cause ataxia mainly do so because they have a depressant effect on central nervous system function. The most common example is ethanol, which is capable of causing reversible cerebellar and vestibular ataxia. Other examples include various prescription drugs (e.g. most antiepileptic drugs have cerebellar ataxia as a possible adverse effect), marijuana ingestion and various other recreational drugs (e.g. ketamine, PCP or dextromethorphan, all of which are NMDA receptor antagonists that produce a dissociative state at high doses).

There is a lot more to it, but bottom line basically, Romberg’s specific test was not designed to test cerebellar function whether it be endogenous or exogenous, but rather as a screening test for the proprioception receptors and pathways functioning.  It is used in part to rule in or rule out neurological damage that is localized in the cerebellum.  There has been no substantial and rigorous testing of the Romberg test for the purpose of roadside DUID testing.

Bottom line:

Way to go, Officer when I failed the Romberg test all you proved was that I may have neurological damage, not that I am impaired.

Source material:

Khasnis A, Gokula RM (April 1, 2003). "Romberg's test". Journal of Postgraduate Medicine 49 (2): 169–72. PMID 12867698. http://www.jpgmonline.com/article.asp?issn=0022-3859;year=2003;volume=49;issue=2;spage=169;epage=72;aulast=Khasnis.

Bridge, Carl J. (1972). Alcoholism and Driving. Charles C Thomas. ISBN 0-398-02243-7.

Lee CT (September 1998). "Sharpening the Sharpened Romberg". SPUMS Journal 28 (3): 125–32. PMID 11542272. http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/5943.
 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer comments on Inaccurate Blood Alcohol Content and Bad BAC Results

"It could NEVER happen."

"Blood Alcohol Content results can never be wrong."

"No Government lab or private lab used in Pennsylvania has ever been wrong."

"Impossible."

"We double and triple checks things before we report them."

"These machines self check and report all errors."

These are the some of the silly things that Government bench scientists actually say under oath.

John C. Ensslin of The Gazette in his article on December 11, 2009 "Flawed blood alcohol tests by police lab jeopardize DUI cases" is proof that these tests are not perfect.  There is error.  It can be pervasive and systemic.  The scary part, it has definitely happened before here in Pennsylvania DUI cases and will likely happen again.  Although I caught the story when it broke, I was holding off posting about it as I wanted to know more details as to the source fo the problem  Shamefully, the State has sought to suppress the source of the problem and play "hide the ball".

 Harrisburg DUI Lawyer lab contamination

Ensslin reports:

Prosecutors have begun contacting lawyers for 82 defendants whose drunken driving charges were based in part upon incorrect blood alcohol tests by the Colorado Springs police crime lab.

In each of the cases, test results reported by the forensic chemist unit of the Metro Crime Lab were higher that the actual results, police officials disclosed Friday.

Fourth Judicial District prosecutors were unable to identify specific cases where charges had been dismissed or reduced so far.

......

So far, tests by the manufacturer have determined that the incorrect results were not the result of an equipment failure, police said.

..........

As a result of the discovery, the crime lab is re-analyzing about 1,000 blood alcohol test results taken since January 2009.

.........

“That number [of 82] could grow,” Whitlock said. “We’re continuing to do follow-up.”

Whitlock said the on-going investigation is trying to determine if they were the result of a human error or a procedural error.

Harrisburg DUI lawyer lab cartoon

 

A colleague and a friend of mine, Ron Moore of California once remarked:

So you are looking for a new era of scientific integrity after the NAS report? Won't happen. There is no such thing as scientific integrity, only human integrity practiced in the area of science. And human integrity always has been what human integrity always will be: subject to failure.

I could not agree more.  This is why Blood Alcohol Testing results for DUI must be independently verified, transparent, traceable, reliable, accurate, precise and true.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

DUI Innocence Project: 93% Wrong-False Use of Roadside Tests Can Lead to False Arrest

We have all heard of the "Innocence Project" which is a national joint legal and scientific project to identify and where appropriate re-examine cases where guilt has been found and after being examined with "fresh eyes" and with the use of DNA to either confirm or exonerate those actually convicted of a crime. To date, over two hundred (200) people who have been convicted after a full-blown Jury trial have been factually and totally exonerated through the use of DNA. I think everyone thinks this is a good idea.

                                           

Or do we?

There is little doubt that a certain segment of our society believes that someone who is simply accused of a DUI should be found guilty automatically. No trial. No Due Process. No Constitution. No Bill of Rights.

When people ask me what I do, I respond that I think that our office's work is sort of like the DUI Innocence Project where we use science and facts to examine the Government's case against the accused without pre-conceived notions and without pre-fixed conclusions in mind. If the accused is factually and scientifically guilty, then he or she is. If he accused is not, we contest the case using the truth as a defense: we use forensic science, metrology and experts much like the DNA based "Innocence Project' does to exonerate the falsely accused.

Consider this scenario...

Traffic Stop. Officer approaches. Officer says, "Have you been drinking?" [You say either yes or no.-It really doesn't matter as the next event is unavoidable]. Officer says, "Step out of the car. We're going to do some tests."

Now this is where it gets scary. The Officer is going to try to administer the battery of roadside tests known as Standardized Field Sobriety Tests (SFSTs) as developed and published by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). The stated purpose behind these tests is to use a standardized method that has been supposedly scientifically validated to correspond to behavior by using divided attention psychomotor function tests to arrive at an objective opinion that the test taker is possibly above a .10 or a .08 BAC level.

At the conclusion of these tests, the police officer is about to make a decision as to whether or not to arrest you. In this decision you have no control or influence. In this decision, the Officer is making perhaps the single most important decision that another person will ever make for you. In this decision, the Officer holds not only your liberty in his or her hands, but also your license, your job, your self-esteem, and just about everything. The consequences are huge.

But what if the Officer, doesn't know what he or she is doing?

What if the Officer is under-educated or improperly trained?

What if the Officer cut corners?

What if the Officer just simply doesn't care?

Well, that is what one expert has looked into...

Lance Platt is a renowned NHTSA/IACP SFST Instructor who has testified as an expert in the proper instruction, administration and interpretation of the Standardized Field Sobriety Tests, in many, many state and federal courts. In the DWI Journal: Law & Science Journal, he published an article that examined the differences between the manner in which officer was trained to perform the Standardized Field Sobriety Tests and the manner in which the Officer actually administer them.

In other words, the difference between the book and the real world.

For example, the Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus test (the eye tracking test which is one of the 3 supposedly validated tests), Mr. Platt wrote that there are sixteen (16) distinct elements that make up the test. Mr Platt chose to examine at random three hundred and sixty (360) video recorded administrations nationwide to determine whether or not the test was given correctly by the Officers at roadside.

He found only twenty-four (24) were performed correctly per the NHTSA Manual. Those 24 represent only 7% of the tests administered, meaning that officers administered the test incorrectly 93% of the time.

Now this is 93% figure only speaks as to the incorrect administration of the test. It is very likely that when those twenty-four (24) tests that were administered correctly are further examined to see if the interpretation of the tests were correct, we will get closer to zero.

This is only for the HGN test which is only one out of the three tests given at roadside in most cases.

This is why a DUI Innocence Project is so important.  This is why we do what we do.

 

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

 

Crimping a Headspace Vial in Gas Chromatography: How not putting the "lid on the jar" can lead to disaster in a DUI case

As mentioned in an earlier post, there are many potential sources for error when it comes to Blood Alcohol Testing for DUI.  This is very important in blood-based DUI cases where the Blood Alcohol Content (BAC) is reported because many of the prosecutors I have faced erroneously believe that these blood test results are infallible in DUI cases in Pennsylvania .  They believe if there is an alleged blood test showing a BAC level above the legal limit, that is enough to prove a DUI was committed.  They do not want to look at the number to see if it is true.  Fortunately, in the United States, we do not have a trial by paper or by computer or by a magic number, we have a trial by jury.  By law, the Jury must examine the reported number.  The government and the government only must prove the number beyond a reasonable doubt starting from the position that it is not as that is consistent with the Presumption of Innocence.  There is but one presumption in a DUI case and that is not the presumption that the reported BAC is true, but rather that the accused is presumed to be innocent of the charge.   The BAC level attained from these blood tests must be verified, true, accurate, precise, traceable and relevant to the case to be considered as evidence of a DUI.

So in that prosecutors think that blood tests yield perfect results in all occasions, in this post I will prove that something so seemly insignificant such as putting a lid on a jar early on in the methods used by laboratories for DUI blood tests based upon the “gold standard” of Blood Alcohol testing which is Headspace Gas Chromatography, can be fraught with potential sources of error that can visit disastrous incorrect results.

In particular, there are several potential sources of error when it comes to Gas Chromatography.  Among the potential sources of error that comes into play during sample preparation:  Crimping or putting the lid on the jar.

To crimp is the physical act of attaching both the septum (the membrane that the needle passes through) and the cap (the metal ring) to the headspace vial as demonstrated below.  The devise used to do so is called a crimp (kind of like a walnut cracker).

As headspace gas chromatography (as opposed to direct injection) is based upon Henry’s law.  Henry’s Law states that at a constant temperature, the amount of a given gas dissolved in a given type and volume of liquid is directly proportional to the partial pressure of that gas in equilibrium with that liquid.  Or stated differently, an equivalent way of stating the law is that the solubility of a gas in a liquid at a particular temperature is proportional to the pressure of that gas above the liquid.  Headspace gas chromatography requires a closed system (i.e. no pressure leaking from the gaseous phase).  As a result if the crimping of the headspace vial (which is typically a manual process) is not complete, then it is not a closed system.  Hence, without assurances that the crimping is properly done, there is a large possible source of error as Henry’s Law is violated.  It is indeed the entire principle upon which Headspace Gas Chromatography is based.

On the below left is the (manual) crimper.  On the right is pictured a de-capping pliers.Crimper Used In DUI Blood Tests


There are some automated ones like the below:

Crimper used for DUI Blood TestingCrimper used for DUI blood testsCrimper used for DUI blood tests

        
Vial used for DUI blood testsTo the left is the vial.  Not all vials look alike-some are used once and discarded; others are re-used.  It depends upon the lab.  This is yet another potential source of error if not properly cleansed.  There should be a validated Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) for that too as well as an SOP for drying and even cleaning the drying rack.

 

 

 

 

 

Pictured is a cap (the silver) and the septum (the brown orange part)Components used for DUI blood tests


Not all septa are the same….

Some are made of Teflon or Silicon/Teflon, others made of Butyl/Teflon and some are even rubber (which is very poor)
Components used for DUI blood tests


Above is a septum




N.B., not all vials are crimped.  Some are screw on tops, like the below.

Components used for DUI blood tests
There are even crimp snap tops too.  Pictured below:

Components used for DUI blood tests



And combi-kits like the below:

Components used for DUI blood tests

Completed Vial used for DUI blood tests


The above is the completed, crimped headspace vial.

As we can plainly see, something as simple as putting a cap on a jar can invite so much error into the process.  This is why blood testing needs to be documented so that an independent examiner can go back and make sure the BAC as reported is verified, true, accurate, precise, traceable and relevant to the case.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

 

The Problem with Drug Recognition Expert and Why it is Designed for Failure

When people think of DUI, they often think of Drunk Driving meaning drinking too much alcohol.  There is, of course, another form of DUI that is referred to as DUID or Driving Under the Influence of Drugs, both legal prescription drugs and illegal drugs.  As such, it now becomes very important for DUI Lawyers to become well versed in DUID and in not only analytical chemistry, but also in Drug Recognition Expert (DRE) protocol.

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer wins DUID cases

 DRE is a twelve step National Highway Traffic and Safety Administration (NHTSA) standardized national curriculum that has been designed, but have yet to be vigorously tested, to supposedly detect impaired drivers at roadside. The base principles of DRE are the Standardized Field Sobriety Tests which interestingly enough were not designed to record or quantify impairment yet form the crux of detecting impairment in the DRE context. The twelve (12) published steps of DRE are as follows:
 

1. Breath Alcohol Test
The arresting officer reviews the subject’s breath alcohol concentration (BrAC) test results and determines if the subject’s apparent impairment is consistent with the subject’s BrAC. If so, the officer will not normally call a DRE. If the impairment is not explained by the BrAC, the officer requests a DRE evaluation.


2. Interview of the Arresting Officer
The DRE begins the investigation by reviewing the BrAC test results and discussing the circumstances of the arrest with the arresting officer. The DRE asks about the subject’s behavior, appearance, and driving. The DRE also asks if the subject made any statements regarding drug use and if the arresting officer(s) found any other relevant evidence consistent with drug use.
 

3. Preliminary Examination and First Pulse
The DRE conducts a preliminary examination, in large part, to ascertain whether the subject may be suffering from an injury or other condition unrelated to drugs. Accordingly, the DRE asks the subject a series of standard questions relating to the subject’s health and recent ingestion of food, alcohol and drugs, including prescribed medications. The DRE observes the subject’s attitude, coordination, speech, breath and face. The DRE also determines if the subject’s pupils are of equal size and if the subject’s eyes can follow a moving stimulus and track equally. The DRE also looks for horizontal gaze nystagmus (HGN) and takes the subject’s pulse for the first of three times. The DRE takes each subject’s pulse three times to account for nervousness, check for consistency and determine if the subject is getting worse or better. If the DRE believes that the subject may be suffering from a significant medical condition, the DRE will seek medical assistance immediately. If the DRE believes that the subject’s condition is drug-related, the evaluation continues.

4. Eye Examination
The DRE examines the subject for HGN, Vertical Gaze Nystagmus (VGN) and for a lack of ocular convergence. A subject lacks convergence if his eyes are unable to converge toward the bridge of his nose when a stimulus is moved inward. Depressants, inhalants, and dissociative anesthetics, the so-called "DID drugs", may cause HGN. In addition, the DID drugs may cause VGN when taken in higher doses for that individual. The DID drugs, as well as cannabis (marijuana), may also cause a lack of convergence.
 

5. Divided Attention Psychophysical Tests
The DRE administers four psychophysical tests: the Romberg Balance, the Walk and Turn, the One Leg Stand, and the Finger to Nose tests. The DRE can accurately determine if a subject’s psychomotor and/or divided attention skills are impaired by administering these tests.
 

6. Vital Signs and Second Pulse
The DRE takes the subject’s blood pressure, temperature and pulse. Some drug categories may elevate the vital signs. Others may lower them. Vital signs provide valuable evidence of the presence and influence of a variety of drugs.
 

7. Dark Room Examinations
The DRE estimates the subject’s pupil sizes under three different lighting conditions with a measuring device called a pupilometer. The device will assist the DRE in determining whether the subject’s pupils are dilated, constricted, or normal. Some drugs increase pupil size (dilate), while others may decrease (constrict) pupil size. The DRE also checks for the eyes’ reaction to light. Certain drugs may slow the eyes’ reaction to light. Finally, the DRE examines the subject’s nasal and oral cavities for signs of drug ingestion.
 

8. Examination for Muscle Tone
The DRE examines the subject’s skeletal muscle tone. Certain categories of drugs may cause the muscles to become rigid. Other categories may cause the muscles to become very loose and flaccid.
 

9. Check for Injection Sites and Third Pulse
The DRE examines the subject for injection sites, which may indicate recent use of certain types of drugs. The DRE also takes the subject’s pulse for the third and final time.
 

10. Subject’s Statements and Other Observations
The DRE typically reads Miranda, if not done so previously, and asks the subject a series of questions regarding the subject’s drug use.


11. Analysis and Opinions of the Evaluator
Based on the totality of the evaluation, the DRE forms an opinion as to whether or not the subject is impaired. If the DRE determines that the subject is impaired, the DRE will indicate what category or categories of drugs may have contributed to the subject’s impairment. The DRE bases these conclusions on his training and experience and the DRE Drug Symptomatology Matrix. While DREs use the drug matrix, they also rely heavily on their general training and experience.
 

12. Toxicological Examination
After completing the evaluation, the DRE normally requests a urine, blood and/or saliva sample from the subject for a toxicology lab analysis.

One of the problems with DRE evaluation is in the process itself. The process itself is immediately and perhaps irreparably removed from the realm of the supposedly objective and empirical into the subjective and interpretive with step number two (2): Interview of the Officer.

From an officer’s point of view, Step two (2) or “Interview with Officer” is fraught with potential peril. From a scientist’s point of view, Step two (2) or “Interview with Officer” removes the exercise from empiricism into subjectivity. This second step carries within its implementation, even subconsciously, a very real risk to shortcut thinking. Step two (2) or “Interview with Officer” should be eliminated or at the very least removed to after the DRE examiner makes a determination, which is really an quasi-educated guess, as to the class of impairing substance, if there is indeed any at all.

It is small wonder that someone comes to the conclusion of a Central Nervous System (CNS) stimulant when the arresting officer tells the examiner IN THE BEGINNING of the DRE evaluation that he has seized bags of cocaine, use paraphernalia and the evaluator is made privy to an admission of use of cocaine. So much of the DRE evaluation is truly subjective or subject to interpretation whether it is fudging or coloring.

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer wins DUI cases

 Why not move “Interview of the Officer” to step eleven (11), if one wanted to eliminate contextual bias? Should all of this not be based upon primarily the quasi-objective clues of the physical and psychomotor symptomology INDEPENDENT of the context?

To be clear, contextual bias is really confirmation bias which is the tendency to search for or interpret information in a way that confirms one's preconceptions; this is related to the concept of cognitive dissonance.

In the body of knowledge referred to as cognitive forensic psychology, there is a well-researched and well-documented phenomenon known collectively as the "cold" biases. These “cold biases” come about due to ignoring relevant information (e.g. Neglect of probability), perhaps involve a decision or judgment being affected by irrelevant information (for example the “Framing effect” where the same problem receives different responses depending on how it is described) or giving excessive weight to an unimportant but salient feature of the problem (e.g., Anchoring).

Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky in 1972 introduced in a formalized manner a conceptual framework, the modern notion of cognitive bias. What initially began as their anecdotal observation of people's inability to reason intuitively with the greater orders of magnitude (innumeracy) has developed into the accepted field of science. They designed a series of experiments that have been successfully replicated over the decades to record ways in which humans make decisions, evaluate judgments and form conclusions that differ from rational choice theory. Ultimately, the settled academic weight of the research concluded that human decision-making and conclusion formation could be explained in heuristics or a series of rules which are simple for the brain to compute, but introduce systematic errors as they may not be based upon reason and empirical data.

The “Framing Effect” is of particular note for DUI practitioners especially in a DUID context. Technically explained, the “Framing Effect” is when one seeks to explain an event, the understanding often depends on the frame referred to or the context. To clarify by way of example, the following is offered. If a friend rapidly closes and opens an eye, we will respond very differently depending on whether we attribute this to a purely "physical" frame (s/he blinked) or to a social frame (s/he winked). Though the former might result from a speck of dust (resulting in an involuntary and not particularly meaningful reaction), the latter would imply a voluntary and meaningful action (to convey infatuation, for example). Observers will read events seen as purely physical or within a frame of "nature" differently than those seen as occurring with social frames. But we do not look at an event and then "apply" a frame to it. Rather, individuals constantly project into the world around them the interpretive frames, even involuntarily or subconsciously, that allow them to make sense of it; we only shift frames (or realize that we have habitually applied a frame) when incongruity calls for a frame-shift. In other words, we only become aware of the frames that we always already use when something forces us to replace one frame with another.

As long as Step two (2) or “Interview with Officer” remains in the position that it is among the twelve (12), then DRE protocol will always be subject to criticism and perhaps proper exclusion from presentation in the Courtroom.
 

At The McShane Firm we have all gone through highly specialized DUI training and are able to effectively argue these issues in court.  We are ready to challenge DRE cases.

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

On the origin of Species-Why do we use Gray Tubes for Forensic Blood Analysis for BAC

A colleague of mine from Colorado asked a very good question:  Why on Earth do we use Gray tube tops for forensic blood analysis to determine Blood Alcohol Content for ETOH (drinking alcohol)?

 

The answer is evolution or really "re-purposing".

 

It got me to thinking...

Pennsylvania DUI Attorney Blood Alcohol Content

 

On the 24th day of November 1859, Charles Darwin published his seminal book entitled "On the Origin of Species".  It was where the well-accepted theory of biological evolution was first published.  A little known fact is that the full title as it was originally published was: On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life.

I suggest that for Blood Alcohol testing for ETOH, the same pretty much happened.  Here is why.

Pennsylvania DUI Attorney Gray Tube Top

In order to understand why it is such a great and important question and to put the question into its proper perspective, you first have to know three (3) things:

(1) There is a growing trend across the United States is to move away from Evidentiary Breath Testing to determine Breath Alcohol Content (BrAC) using infrared spectrometry (i.e., breathalyzers) and towards true forensic blood alcohol testing using a Gas Chromatograph with usually a Flame Ionization Detector (to be distinguished from the forensically unacceptable practice of non-whole blood or Hospital Blood testing to determine Blood Alcohol Content); and,

(2) When we do true Blood Alcohol Content testing by drawing a person’s blood, the blood goes into a specimen tube; and,

(3) There is more than one type of blood specimen tube (e.g., not all gray tube tops have the same thing in them)

As there are more than one type of tube, the great question why did we settle on the gray one?

 Pennsylvania DUI Attorney Order of Blood Draw.jpg

But first some history….

What we have to remember is that chemical testing for ETOH content in both breath and blood and even urine is a relatively new and novel as far as the general field of science goes. New York in 1910 was the first jurisdiction in the United States of America to adopt laws against drunk driving, with California and others following.  Early laws simply made illegal driving while intoxicated.  It only required proof of a state of intoxication with no specific definition of what level of drunkenness qualified.  The first per se law (where only the BAC was necessary to prove the offense) was established Norway in 1936.    The first generally-accepted legal limit for blood alcohol concentration (BAC) was 0.15.  Then by linking it to federal highway funding, the national limit was moved down to 0.10 and most recently to 0.08.

The study of alcohol as an academic exercise, however, can be traced to the late 1700s when J.J. Plenc proposed the chemical identification of poisons

In 1937, Indiana University's Prof. Rolla N. Harger conducted the first-ever "short course" on chemical tests for intoxication. Shortly thereafter in 1938, Dr. Harger also introduced the Drunkometer, the first stable instrument for testing breath alcohol.

Professor Robert F. Borkenstein of Indiana University, in 1954, invented the Breathalyzer, the first practical instrument for testing breath alcohol. Whereas the The Drunkometer required re-calibration when it was moved from place to place, the Breathalyzer was more portable.

But I digress…. 

This blog is supposed to be about true Blood-based Blood Alcohol Content testing.  Actually forensic blood testing for a Blood Alcohol Content is even “newer” than Breathalyzer technology. Especially considering Harold McNair did not really popularize Gas Chromatography in the United States until around 1967.

The technique of headspace-gas chromatography (HS-GC) was originally invented by Professor G. Machata of the University of Vienna in Austria. The proper instrumentation for the practical realization of the technique was developed by Perkin-Elmer’s German affiliate, using a unique pressure-balanced, time-based sampling of the headspace of the thermostatted sample vials. The first instrument, the Model F-40 was introduced in the fall of 1967; it was then followed by the Model F-42 in 1975 and the Model F-45 in 1978.


So, it is very, very new. It was some time much after that the forensic blood testing for ETOH content to determine Blood Alcohol Content really began.

This is the long way back around to the original question:  Why gray tubes?

Therein the history of it all was the problem. We had an unpopular technique that has incrementally come on line so to speak. This presented a big problem.


That is because BD Vaccutainer and other blood tube specimen manufacturers did not develop tubes simply and specifically designed for ETOH determination.

Originally the NaF and K2C2O4 (sodium fluoride and potassium oxalate) tubes were developed for blood samples to test on the aspects of blood sugar tolerance, red blood cell electrophoresis, Alkali-Resistant HB Determination, and sugar dissolution. Due to the addition of the anti- glycolytic agent or inhibitor, these additives in the tube could maintain the blood specimen’s original characters for some time, and the metabolism of the RBC relative ceased.  Glucose values in unpreserved blood samples decrease quickly after collection as glucose is metabolized by the blood cells. The additives contained in BD Vaccutainer Sodium Fluoride/Potassium Oxalate tubes may stop enzymatic activity at the glycolytic pathway if present in sufficient amounts, if properly inverted and properly refrigerated, transported and stored.

So if it is originally designed for these types of studies, how did it become used for ETOH determinations?  Like much of the science in DUI, the glucose tube has been bastardized and re-purposed for ETOH testing through the years

It is not perfect and due to the ad hoc nature of this development and re-purposing there are a lot of unintended consequences that can develop that can call into question the accuracy, the precision, the reliability, the repeatability, the traceability and the truth of the reported Blood Alcohol Content result.

Eventually, I will post on these common forms of error.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com
You can follow me on Twitter , Facebook or Linkedin.

Pennsylvania DUI Attorney has the video that will forever prove that SFSTs are not valid

As a Pennsylvania DUI Attorney, I get asked a lot of questions when I meet people socially.  I was just at the Harrisburg International Airport where my flight was delayed and I struck up a conversation with another modern day refugee who was now stranded with me as we cycled through what seemed like endless 15 minute delays. 

So, the topic got around to roadside testing and the Standardized Field Sobriety Tests (SFSTs).  I actually asked him first what he thought of them and how useful he thought they were as a measuring tool.  Without any pause, he said they were great in his opinion.  "If you cannot walk a line, then you're drunk", he said.

Then I started ot ask him some questions about what he thought referring to what I have blogged on before about the SFSTs ("Are those tests at roadside anything more than glorified stupid human tricks?") and ("Are the Field Sobriety Tests Scientifically Proven?")

Then I went back to his assertion and when he said "If you cannot walk a line, then you're drunk".  I asked him if he still thought that.  I showed him this Youtube video to drive home my point.

 

 

 

 

(This video proves that the "failure" of the SFSTs does not mean guilty of a Pennsylvania DUI)

Bottom line:  Just because you "fail" the roadside Standardized Field Sobriety Tests in Pennsylvania doesn't mean you are guilty of a Pennsylvania DUI.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com
You can follow me on Twitter , Facebook or Linkedin.

Gas Chromatography and why is it is so important to Pennsylvania DUI arrests

First off what is Chromatography?

Chromatography is strictly and simply speaking "separation science".  It is the study of how an analyst can take a complex matrix (compound) and separate it out into its component parts.

It is a relatively "new" form of analytical chemistry in that the first true use of modern chromatography is usually attributed to Russian botanist Mikhail Semyonovich Tsvet, who used columns of calcium carbonate for separating plant pigments during the first decade of the 20th century during his research of chlorophyll.

In is very basic nature, and grossly oversimplified, it involves passing a complex non-separated mixture presented to the machine in a "mobile phase" expelled through a stationary phase. The stationary phase separates the analyte to be measured from other molecules of a different type present in the mixture based on differential partitioning between the mobile and stationary phases (affinity). This results in differential retention time on the stationary phase and thus making the separation.

Say what?

 

Imagine you live at a house that has a driveway.  At the bottom of this driveway you put a pile of different types of balls resting at the bottom of this inclined, paved driveway.  This pile includes all different types and kinds of balls with different surface areas and textures such as ball bearings, marbles, ping pong balls, golf balls, wiffle balls, handballs, tennis balls, hockey pucks, baseballs, soccer balls, volley balls, basketballs, footballs, and bowling balls. You want to find the bowling ball so you can go bowling later in the afternoon, but you are blindfolded for some reason (stick with me here, it is just an analogy),   You are not allowed to touch the group, but you have a tool to help separate them out.  A leaf blower.  So, you know that based upon its make up namely its weight the bowling ball will take a very powerful leafblower as opposed to say the wiffle ball.  So, you attempt to move this motley collection of balls up the driveway with a normal leafblower. Some of the pile will quickly move to the top of the driveway immediately, some balls will migrate at varying speeds, and some balls may take an eternity to reach the end of the driveway just like our bowling ball.

The difference in the time that each type of ball takes to travel to the top depends upon the characteristics of each ball such as the surface area, the weight and so on. Obviously, the lighter balls travel more quickly.  The heavier ones might take forever. Also, some balls may take longer due to their shape, like the hockey puck or the football. The different balls interact with each other as the air from the leaf blower acts on the pile. This interaction may hinder or accelerate the ball's travel as the balls strike each other. The surface characteristics of the ball may be important, as in the examples of the tennis ball and golf ball.

What you are doing here is technically speaking separation science.  You are separating out a complex mixture into its component parts.

What is Gas Chromatography?

Gas chromatography (GC) is a specific form of Chromatography.  It is a separation technique in which the mobile phase is a gas.

Gas chromatography (GC) is based on a partition equilibrium of analyte between a solid stationary phase (often a liquid silicone-based material) and a mobile gas (most often Helium). The stationary phase is adhered to the inside of a small-diameter glass tube (a capillary column) or a solid matrix inside a larger metal tube (a packed column).  The GC itself is a qualitative analytical method whereby if it alone is used, it can only tell that the characteristic is present by the retention time as compared against a known  At best, using only a GC, you can tell that the suspect analyte is consistent with the characteristics of the known.  It does not necessarily mean that it is the analyte until you use a detector of some level of analytical sensitivity,

How is it used in Pennsylvania DUI prosecution?

It is a whole blood analysis technique (in fact, it is the only direct form of whole blood analysis) used to separate out the analyte of interest (often times either alcohol or drugs of abuse).  But what it really does is scare to death most DUI attorneys.  It is hardcore science that most even experienced attorneys are scared to hear about. 

Why is it so important in Pennsylvania DUI prosecution?

It drives a stake in the heart of many an experienced DUI attorney.  In fact, most attorneys when those hear those dreaded words plead the case out.

I'm not one to be scared about GC results in Pennsylvania DUI arrests.

So, realizing that hospital blood testing was on its way out of use, I gathered up a bunch of my colleagues and we went to Chicago to take an American Chemical Society course entitled:  "Gas Chromatography: Fundamentals, Troubleshooting, and Method Development".  It was a week long hands-on laboratory course conducted through the American Chemical Society and instructed by Dr. Lee N. Polite, MBA, PhD of Axion Labs.

PA DUI Attorney Justin McShane at Gas Chromatography training              Pennsylvania DUI Attorney Justin McShane knows Gas Chromatography

(Pictured:  Pennsylvania DUI Attorney Justin McShane with the attorneys who participated in the Course on the left and on the right with all of the attendees)

According to the Course Description:

This course is designed for beginners and intermediate-level practitioners who want practical laboratory experience in gas chromatography (GC). The lectures—supplemented by problem sets, slides, and video presentations—provide the fundamentals needed to understand the technique and instrumentation involved in this powerful analytical tool. At the end of the class, you will have mastered the fundamentals of GC, participated in six hands-on laboratory sessions, performed reference and literature searches, and learned specialized techniques based on your specific interests.

PA DUI Attorney Justin McShane learns how to make a direct injection on a GC  PA DUI Attorney Justin McShane makes a direct injection into a GC  PA DUI Attorney Justin McShane runs the GC machine

(Pictured:  Pennsylvania DUI Attorney Justin McShane prepares a direction injection and a run on the GC)

 

Boy was that an understatement!  It was a great course.  Here is why...

Agenda
  • Day 1: GC Overview -- introduction to GC; GC instrumentation overview; practical GC theory: packed & Capillary; Laboratory: GC Familiarization.

  • Day 2: Injection Techniques & Quantitative Analysis -- overview of sample introduction techniques; capillary inlet systems: split, splitless, on-column, large volume injectors; qualitative and quantitative analysis; Laboratories: comparing injection techniques, troubleshooting injector problems, internal vs. external standard techniques.

  • Day 3: Columns -- packed column overview; capillary column technology; temperature programming; laboratories: column dimension and phase selection, Laboratory: fast GC.

  • Day 4: Detectors -- overview of available detectors; details of FID & TCD; GC/MS; Laboratories: GC detector operation, troubleshooting FID and TCD.

  • Day 5: Method Development & Temperature Programming -- temperature programming; fundamentals of method development; laboratory: develop a method for a completely unknown mixture.

I took a lot away from it.

PA DUI Attorney Justin McShane replaces a capillary column on a GC

(Pictured:  Pennsylvania DUI Attorney Justin McShane installs a capillary column)

But why bother?

We must remember that the Defendant has no burden to prove any facts in this proceeding at all. Instead, the burden of proof remains at all times with the Commonwealth and the evidence presented must always prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt or the Defendant maintains the presumption of innocence and the result must be not guilty.

The blood result as reported by the Government must be PROVEN as reliable, accurate, precise, repeatable, traceable, verified and true. It is a matter of fact that the Jury must resolve and it be proven to all of them and they must be satisfied of this fact beyond a reasonable doubt.  Otherwise, the Defendant maintains the presumption of innocence and the result must be not guilty.

In order for a Blood Alcohol Concentration as measured by blood to be reliable, accurate, precise, repeatable, traceable, verified and true and to form the basis for a conviction, there must be a full examination of all of the evidence.

A very good Pennsylvania DUI attorney during the trial will be able to point out that in determining the reliability or veracity of the reported BAC it is essential to have all of the information concerning the pre-collection storage of the kit, the blood collection itself, the transportation and storage of the specimen, the type of analysis, the method of the analysis, and the accuracy, calibration and reliability of the analyzing instrument. Further, it is well-known that in order to have a truly valid and reliable result, the specimen must be handled in a specific way, including:

  1. The pre-collection storage of the specimen kit must be maintained within tolerance and per the manufacturer,
  2. The blood collection itself must be performed in a specified manner,
  3. The handling of the specimen post-collection must be performed in a specified manner,
  4. The transportation and storage of the specimen post-collection must be performed in a specified manner,
  5. The preparation of the specimen before the analysis must be done in a specified manner,
  6. The instrument used to analyze the specimen must be set up in a specific way.
  7. The instrument used must be maintained in a specific way,
  8. The analyst must know what he she is doing and must be tested in terms of his/her proficiency.
  9. The instrument used to analyze the specimen must be calibrated and checked for accuracy and precision,
  10. The pre-analysis preparation of the sample itself must be performed in a specified manner
  11. The analysis itself must be performed in a specified manner, and
  12. The reporting of the specimen as tested must be performed in a specified manner.

These and many other issues are essential for the proper determination of the reliability, accuracy, precision, repeatability, traceability, verification and the truth of the blood alcohol results.

 Thank you to Dr. Lee N. Polite, MBA, PhD.

PA DUI Attorney Justin McShane with Dr. Polite at the ACS Short Course in Gas Chromatography

(Pictured:  PA DUI Attorney Justin McShane with Dr. Polite at the ACS Short Course in Gas Chromatography)

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com
You can follow me on Twitter , Facebook or Linkedin.

WellSpan is to be commended, but why people who have been convicted for decades of a DUI should be upset

On Wednesday and Thursday of this past week, Rick Fulton of the Gettysburg Times, wrote reported that WellSpan hospital system in Central Pennsylvania will no longer support or offer to provide blood testing for Court use of Blood Alcohol Content testing (BAC). The BAC testing, of course, is so important in a DUI prosecution and is one of the fundamental pieces of, and oftentimes the only, evidence against a citizen among us who has been accused of a DUI Rick Fulton wrote a great article.  You can access it in full here “Hospital explains ban on DUI tests”.
 

It presents two main issues as to why the Hospital system will no longer offer or support BAC testing. I am proud to say that our firm, The McShane Firm, LLC has been successfully litigating both aspects in Pennsylvania. In fact, to our knowledge no other attorney or firm has advanced these types of defenses in Central Pennsylvania and likely not in the entire Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
 

In his article reporter Rick Fulton wrote:

 

William Lavery, manager, WellSpan Office of Health Public Relations & Communication at Gettysburg Hospital, confirmed Wednesday that the testing service was being discontinued at the hospital, but that the facility will continue to draw the blood.

[William] Lavery, manager, WellSpan Office of Health Public Relations & Communication at Gettysburg Hospital] stated there were two fundamental reasons for the discontinuation of the service, the first concerning accreditation of the hospital’s laboratory and the second relating to increased demands on the laboratory.

Regarding accreditation, he said, “In our case, the hospital laboratory is unable to meet a new testing regulation introduced by the College of American Pathologists. They generate standards and they are our primary accreditation agency.”

“If we were to lose accreditation by not adhering to their regulations, we’d really jeopardize the lab’s primary role of providing health care to our patients,” Lavery said.

In addition, the legal system, particularly DUI defense attorneys, are demanding more and more from laboratories that conduct BAC testing.

This is causing an increasing drain on the hospital’s resources.

“It’s (legal demands) becoming an increasing impact on our lab resources...trying to meet the legal requirements that these cases (generate),” he said.

“More and more,” Lavery stated, DUI defense attorneys subject the hospital lab’s to strenuous (expectations), which include responding to subpoenas that go beyond the hospital’s ability to respond to them.

“Attorneys are mandating that a clinical (hospital) lab be able to demonstrate forensic abilities, to respond to documents, provide staff competency documentation...those are things a forensic lab is more equipped to handle,” he stated.

The load and responsibility has caused an “increased demand on our resources...A clinical (hospital) lab may not be able to operate (the same level of service) as a forensic lab,” Lavery stated, pointing out that what is being asked of the hospital’s clinical laboratory are things that a forensic lab deals with routinely.

The majority of the hospitals in the area (south central Pa.), he noted, have already ceased DUI testing, according to the communications manager. “A lot of area hospitals made that decision a couple of years ago.”


I have blogged about this first issue in “Piece of Paper Says Your Guilty”.  It outlines the recent United States Supreme Court decision of Melendez-Diaz and its import.

 

The Real Problem
Now I want to complete the thought of the article and blog about the absolute consensus of the scientific community that hospital blood testing is not forensically acceptable. I will try to explain why as briefly as I can. For over five (5) years, I have personally been leading the fight in Pennsylvania in this area of medicolegal litigation pushing the science or really the lack of forensic reliability of hospital blood BAC testing.

First some background....

In the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, there are various degrees of prohibited BAC levels, called per se levels. They are 0.08, 0.10 and 0.16 with enhanced penalties depending upon what your blood level is. These per se levels are measured as grams percent AND MUST BE expressions of whole blood. A conviction on a per se offense cannot be based upon plasma or serum. The expression of the BAC must be to whole blood and whole blood only.

So, we begin at the beginning, shouldn’t we?


Are hospital blood tests truly whole blood tests?

As shocking as it is to most people, the real answer is NO.

There is but one analytical device that performs a whole blood analysis, it is called a gas chromatograph. It has a detector to allow for quantification which is usually a Flame Ionization Detector. Using a mass spectrometer is the best way of conclusively confirming the analysis, but it is not often used.

So what are they doing?
The hospital based blood test performed at the hospital is scientifically referred to as a plasma enzymatic indirect test based on spectrophotometry (colormetic response) of treated de-proteinzed vortexed, centrifuged aspirated supernate of the original whole blood specimen.

Wow what the heck does that mean? Don't worry keep reading and I promise it will all make sense to you.

We will shorten all of this up and simply refer to it as “hospital blood” or “hospital blood testing”.

Ok. So let’s take it step by step.
 

PROBLEM 1:

An "enzymatic indirect test" means that we are not testing how much ETOH (drinking alcohol or Ethyl Alcohol) is in the whole blood. Instead what we are testing is an indirect measure. We use a known enzyme (NAD+) amount and hope that it will react to ETOH and create a quantifiable result as the two interact resulting in Acetaldehyde+NADH+H+
 

So chemically, it looks like this….
 

Ethyl Alcohol+ NAD+ ----> Acetaldehyde+NADH+H+
 

Instead it is measuring the reaction difference to an enzyme at a specific wavelength. Hospital analysis is by enzyme assay. An enzyme is added to the totally prepared sample. That enzyme (NAD) reacts in the presence of alcohol (and other things) and forms another enzyme (NADH). The amount of NADH is then measured (as relative to the NAD remaining) to determine the amount of alcohol in the sample.


Still don’t follow
? Don't worry, I follow through on all of my promises keep reading.  I will make it clear.

Ok it’s really simple if we relate it to something we know---the good old bathroom scale.

I want you to suppose that you want to know how much your 6 year old daughter weighs. There are basically two (2) ways: a direct way and an indirect way.


What would make the most sense and is the most accurate is to take out your bathroom scale and put your daughter on it and voila, we have the weight. This would be like using a Gas Chromatograph. It is a direct measure of the weight of your daughter.
 

Now, let’s think about another way to try to get at her weight. I suppose you could step on the scale and see how much you weigh (a known), get off the scale and then have your 6 year old daughter hop on your back piggyback style and then both you and her on your back step on the scale having seen what your combined weight is. You both get off. You would then take your combined weight and subtract it from your known weight that you got on the first measurement and voila, you might have her weight.

What happens next? Your spouse who watched the whole escapade looks at you with a puzzled look and says you are silly and she doesn’t understand why you did it this indirect way when the direct way would be easier and more accurate. This is exactly like hospital blood.
 

Makes sense now, right? Good.


In conclusion, indirect measurements are never forensically or scientifically acceptable when there is a direct method available. That is the first reason why hospital blood is forensically and scientifically unacceptable.
 

PROBLEM 2:

Issue number two is the type of analytical measuring device used. It is based on spectrophotometry (a colormetic response). Spectrometry is grossly over simplified as this. Spectrophotometry involves the use of a spectrophotometer. A spectrophotometer is a photometer (a device for measuring light intensity) that can measure intensity as a function of the color (or more specifically the wavelength) of light. Important features of spectrophotometers are spectral bandwidth and linear range of absorption measurement.  It is rooted in Beer's Law.

In short, the sequence of events in a spectrophotometer is as follows:

  1. The light source shines into a monochromator.
  2. A particular output wavelength is selected and beamed at the sample.
  3. The sample absorbs light.

We use an energy source such as a light, and a detector (specifically a photo detector) on the other end of sample chamber. Then we run the sample, or analyte, in-between the energy source and the photo detector. If the analyte is not present, it is smooth sailing as the energy emitted by the energy source should not be impacted (i.e., no loss of signal energy-it remains at the same strength). If there is analyte present, then it will interfere with the energy emitted by the energy source. The photo detector detects less energy. A comparison is made between what we would expect versus what we got as measured by the photodetector.

Colormetric means that there is a color response (lighter or darker in this case) that depends upon the concentration of the analyte.
 

Wow? What does that mean?


Here are good pictures that show what I was conveying.

Think of taking a laser pointer and trying to shine it through a glass of clear water versus a glass of Kool Aid.  The laser pointer will mostly go through the clear water with little loss of signal, but the Kool Aid experiment will result in much less signal going through.  It's that simple.

PROBLEM 3:

The third issue concerns the limitation of the technology itself. As mentioned above, the machine is based upon spctrophotometry and is a colormetric response. As such we need something that is basically pure and clear.  Otherwise, if it is dark and dirty, then the response is not utterly remarkable. In other words, you cannot tell. What is dirty and darker than blood?

Blood is a viscoelastic complex matrix full of a lot of stuff. Hence, plasma is used. Whole blood is defined as blood from which none of the elements have been removed. Plasma is defined as the fluid portion of the blood in which particular components are suspended.  The components that are suspended consist of red corpuscles, white corpuscles and platelets. Whole blood and plasma look very different as one can see below.


So to clean it up, and transform it into plasma, they have to do the following. They have to strip the protein from it. This is done by adding a de-proteinizing agent such as Trichloroacetic Acid (TCA). TCA will bond with the protein and after centrifuging, it will become solid and a noticeable pellet will form at the bottom.

The blood is further transformed through the centrifuging process. Just like anything that is centrifuged, the heavy parts go to the bottom and the lighter parts are separated to the top. This is called the supernate (the top stuff) and the precipitate (the bottom stuff) division. With blood, heavy parts such as the blood’s red blood cells and the pellet from the TCA reaction are at the bottom. The plasma and the alcohol (if there is any) are at the top because they are lighter.  
 

Next the top part is removed by pipetting. This is called aspirating the supernate. [as an aside, one hospital lab surprisingly doesn’t use pipettes to get an accurate amount, but rather simply pours the supernate into a testing cup]. The aspirated supernate then makes its way into the analytical device.

Now if you are paying attention, you might be asking yourself "Hey? What happens to all of the rest of the specimen?"  The answer is that it gets thrown out. It is never analyzed.


PROBLEM 4:
This is the perfect lead into the fourth issue as to why hospital blood is forensically unacceptable. It has to do with the legal requirements to sustain a conviction. As mentioned above, in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, there are various degrees of prohibited BAC levels, called per se levels. They are 0.08, 0.10 and 0.16 with enhanced penalties depending upon what your blood level is. These per se levels are measured as grams percent AND MUST BE expressions of whole blood. A conviction on a per se offense cannot be based upon plasma or serum. The expression of the BAC must be to whole blood and whole blood only.

So what do they try to do?

 

So in typical lawyer fashion, we try to force the round peg into the square whole and force a “conversion” factor that is supposed to adjust or convert the raw number for that big legal problem.

Sounds good in theory if you don’t mind the indirectness, but here is the dirty little secret. The scientific community cannot agree on what this all important number should be.


First, there is absolutely no consensus in the scientific community as to the proper conversion factor. There is no number. Therefore, as there is no scientific agreement, then no number should be used by the Courts. It is a basic Daubert/Frye matter. The government as the proponent of the evidence has the burden to prove it is reliable and based on sound science. The very fact that there are studies that conclude that there is overstatement of plasma to whole blood as low as 1.10 overstatement to as high was 1.59 make it so. That is a 69% swing. Come on!


The conversion factor depends on hematocrit (packed cell volume) entirely (well almost entirely, but for the sake of brevity it is the most important part). Serum or plasma (almost-one article had a statistical artifact) always over estimates BAC. Plasma actually much more so.

PROBLEM 5:

The fifth issue has to do with the specificity. In order for a measuring device to be acceptable it has to measure only what it intends to measure specifically to the exclusion of everything else.

What does that mean?

If you went to Home Depot and bought a tape measure, but when you got it out of the box, it clearly was mislabeled in that it looks like a ruler, but you unspool it and it turns out to have no markings on it, and it turns out to have a thermometer in the middle of the spool.  Boy that is a problem, isn't it?  They are both measuring devices:  one for distance, the other for temperature.  But the crappy tape measure that is really a thermometer is not a specific measuring device as to distance at all.

So here is a fundamental flaw as to hospital blood.  It also is NOT specific to ETOH to the exclusion of all other matters. So, it is not direct and not specific.

Wow!


One of the well know problems is the use of IV administered ringers lactate. Some of our clients were at the hospital due to injury. If so, we would want to look for ringers lactate or any sort of ringers solution application being used OR if there had been any sort of significant trauma as that will release lactate as well.


A little history...Ringer's saline solution was invented by Sydney Ringer, a British physiologist. The solution was further modified by Alexis Hartmann for the purpose of treating acidosis in children. Hartmann modified the solution by adding lactate, which mitigates changes in pH by acting as a buffer for acid. Thus the solution became known as 'Lactated Ringer's Solution' and later, 'Hartmann's solution' Lactated Ringer's Solution is often used for fluid resuscitation after blood loss due to trauma, surgery, or a burn injury. Previously, it was used to induce urine output in patients with renal failure.  Lactated Ringer's Solution is used because the byproducts of lactate metabolism in the liver counteract acidosis, which is a chemical imbalance that occurs with acute fluid loss or renal failure.


The intravenous dose of Lactated Ringer's Solution is usually calculated by estimated fluid loss and presumed fluid deficit. For fluid resuscitation the usual rate of administration is 20 to 30 ml/kg body weight/hour. Lactated Ringer's Solution is not suitable for maintenance therapy because the sodium content (130 mEq/L) is considered too high, particularly for children, whereas the potassium content (4 mEq/L) is too low, in view of electrolyte daily requirement.
 

Why is this so important?

You have to understand that in a trauma situation, they don’t care about the legal ETOH. They care about keeping someone alive and not allowing them to go into shock. So, oftentimes they will put IV’s into each arm and infuse (i.e., squeeze the IV bag really hard and rapidly) to get into the veins as soon as possible. If they take the legal ETOH sample on the same arm, then they have really really large issues. It is an electrolyte replenishment therapy (i.e., fluid resuscitation).  It invites havoc into the BAC determination and process.


The effect of ringers on a hospital blood test has to do with the manner of hospital analysis not the fact that the hospital test is a plasma test. As explained above, hospital analysis is by enzyme assay. An enzyme is added to the plasma sample when it is within the machine. That enzyme (NAD) reacts in the presence of alcohol and forms another enzyme (NADH). The amount of NADH is then measured (relative to the NAD remaining) to really indirectly determine the amount of alcohol in the sample.

So, the problem lies in the contents of the ringers lactate. The lactate reacts with LDH to form pyvurate. During this process additional NAD is converted to NADH, giving a false high alcohol result. In fact, it can give a positive alcohol reading where no alcohol is present. It is just frankly impossible to tell the true endogenous ETOH result.

The machine is totally blind to what is due to Ringer's Lactate and what is due to a person drinking.Stated differently, the machine cannot tell the difference between ETOH created by this process and ETOH actually consumed by the person.  All it sees is more NADH.  Hence, it is not specific.


They can test for lactate levels but they never do.

Ringers lactate is not the only source of lactate, trauma (soft tissue or bone) also releases lactate.  Lactic acid build up on a well-trained athlete can also interfere. Finally, shockingly in and of itself, TCA itself creates lactate! Remember TCA that was added to the sample itself as we described above.

PROBLEM 6:

The final issue has to do with the general scientific and legal communities' view of hospital blood testing. Most of Europe, Asia and Australia abandoned hospital blood testing as a legitimate method of analysis for forensic purposes and bans them entirely from the Courtroom.  This was done many, many years ago.

THERE ARE MORE REASONS

These and many more well-known problems have been well documented in the scientific community for decades.

There are actually a lot more than six (6) reasons why hospital blood is never forensically acceptable including, but not limited to:  (a) the lack of meaningful detailed chain of custody for the tested specimen and all of the accompanying component materials making up the system of the test, (b) the lack of suitable criteria for preventive maintenance, (c) lack of or insufficient schedule of calibration both internal and external, (d) the lack of full documentation of or even the non-use of a third party vendor calibrators and blanks that are either traceable to NIST or USP grade materials, (e) the lack of true meaningful and independent blind proficiency testing of the technologist (the person who runs the sample), (f) the re-use of consumables such as the specimen prep cups and the TCA containers, and yes, even pipette tips without an acceptable Standard Operating Procedure that will insure cleanliness of the items reused, (g) the manufacturer of the machine’s own admonition that the machine is not intended to be used for forensic testing and so on and on and on.

Credit where credit is due….
I would be remiss if I did not commend WellSpan Hospital systems for acknowledging these important issues. I am told that this trend of recognizing the forensic unacceptability of hospital blood testing has continued with several other hospitals also similarly conceding the issue throughout Pennsylvania.  I thank WellSpan for acknowledging and pledging to discontinue the unacceptable forensic practice of hospital blood testing.


So, it begs a question, doesn’t it?

We have been allowing hospital blood testing go on for decades with thousands upon thousands of convictions as a result. Not just here in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, but elsewhere in the United States.

Is there anything to be done for those who have been falsely convicted based upon forensically unacceptable science?

We did this with lead bullet analysis, DNA exonerations and other now abandoned quasi-forensic sciences, what will be done?

Or sadly is this yet another example of how there are another set of Rules that apply to DUI cases?

I also need to give a big thank you to the National College for DUI Defense, Inc. where I was exposed to these issues for me to latter develop.  What a great group of scientist-lawyers who live the College's motto:  "Justice Through Knowledge".  Also an equally big thank you to various experts that have helped me through the years in developing my scientific and technical knowledge in this area.  In no particular order they are:  Dr. Joseph Citron, Dr. Thomas Brettell, Dr. Stephen Rose, Dr. Al Staubus, Dr. A. Wayne Jones, Wanda Marley and Janine Arvisu.


In closing, I offer this.  As it seems likely that hospital blood will cease in the MidState in short time.  If any attorney outside of Pennsylvania would like to mount well-developed Frye/Daubert challenges to hospital blood testing as we have done here, I am willing to help you free of charge.  Heck, I will even conduct the cross and directs of the experts if you let me. I will pay my own way to the hearing.  This is how important this issue is to me.  Just contact me.

 You can see my qualifications and experience at avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter or Facebook or Linkedin.

[A special thank you to Josh D. Lee, Esquire of Oklahoma for helping to edit this work]

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com
You can follow me on Twitter , Facebook or Linkedin.

Do the Breath Machines Always Flag Acetone and Diabetics?

It is a national problem to be sure.  It is an endemic and systemic problem.  It is a problem that is pervasive and well-known within the scientific community.  Yet, it is condoned.

In his latest blog post, Bob Keefer, a fellow member of the National College for DUI Defense, Inc and a true trailblazer in the state of  Virginia hits the proverbial nail on the head with his aptly titled "Virginia to Diabetics: We Don’t Care"

In part, he writes:

Research indicates that as many as one in seven drivers are diabetic. This figure includes drivers who may be affected but do not have an official diagnosis. Despite this fact, Virginia’s latest breath tester can’t tell the difference between diabetes and intoxication. Now, diabetics who drive in Virginia are being wrongly convicted of DWI. Worse, it appears that Virginia knew about this problem at the time it ordered the machine… and chose to cover it up.

When Virginia initially requested bids for a new evidentiary breath test device to determine blood alcohol content it correctly required the machine to distinguish among alcohols. This requirement was intended to prevent wrongful convictions. When the manufacturer Virginia wanted to hire admitted that its product could not meet this specification, officials quietly dropped the requirement but nonetheless trained operators, taught judges and represented to prosecutors that the machine performed as specified.

Drinking alcohol is called ethanol. Diabetics naturally produce another type of alcohol – isopropanol – in certain stages of the disease. [McShane's note, this si due to the well known scientific phenomenon of the biotransformation of acetone to isopropanol during ketoacidosis-see AW Jones]. Even though Virginia’s breath tester is only supposed to measure blood alcohol content of ethanol it registers isopropanol on the breath of diabetics. This reading results in false evidence which in turn results in wrongful DWI convictions.

An ancient expression about the measure of a society’s morality is how it treats the sick. Diabetics have enough challenges without the threat of wrongful DWI conviction. Join me in challenging Virginia to cease this shameful practice.

I have written before and will state again...

When will the insanity of breath testing and the fallacy of accuracy, reliability and most importantly the specificity of these machines truly come to light? What will it take?

To rely on infrared spectrometry at wavelengths that are not unique as to ETOH is a sham!

To rely on a machine that no one can be confident of the results because it is not open source and truly vetted technology is a sham!

To rely on antiquated science is a sham!

It is time to use modern technology in a scientifically responsible and acceptable way wherein uncertainty budgets and acknowledged shortcomings are presented to juries and not hidden.

I will continue to answer the trumpet call of Bob Keefer and others to join in the fight to cease that shameful practice here for the benefit of all citizens accused of a Harrisburg DUI, a Carlisle DUI, a Lebanon DUI, a York DUI, a Chambersburg DUI, a Lancaster DUI, a Reading DUI and all Central Pennsylvania DUIs.

Do the Police ALWAYS tell the truth in DUI prosecutions?

Not every police officer lies.  Not every police officer colors the truth.  Not every police officer embellishes.  But there are enough.  If there is one that is too many. 

Let's face it police officers are human.  They are motivated like we all are.  To not lose, to win.  To do the job efficiently and some get lazy if not properly challenged.

 

 

Consider the two most recent controversies.

In his blog post titled "DUI Defense Attorney exposes outrageous memo telling San Diego California DUI prosecution blood draw witnesses how to testify!!" Rick Muller writes of a controversial memo that he uncovered wherein the police are actually coached in writing how to testify in blood cases.

He writes:

In a case San Diego California Drunk Driving Attorney Rick Mueller did, he obtained an amazing internal San Diego California DUI memorandum from a San Diego California DUI blood drawer.

These are the exposed instructions in that SDPD memorandum and potentially given by the San Diego California Police Department to their blood-drawing/laboratory technicians testifying in a San Diego California DUI trial:

"COURT TESTIMONY

You will be asked your name.

You do not have to remember drawing [blood from] the particular defendant. Just say you draw many patients each day you work and it is impossible to remember each one.

You may be asked how you draw the blood. It is the standard procedure you follow for ALL blood draws, EXCEPT that you use a NON-ALCOHOLIC antiseptic wipe (Benzalkolium) to cleanse the phlebotomy site. You ALWAYS follow the same procedure for every blood draw. The blood is drawn into grey top tubes provided by the San Diego Police Department. The tubes contain an anticoagulent (Potassium Oxylate) and a preservative (Sodium Fluoride). You check the tube for the presence of a loose, slightly pink powder before you use it. After you fill the tube with blood, you invert the tube 10 times to mix the blood with the anticoagulent/preservative. You will always mix any tube with an anticoagulent 10 times (you count the inversions). The important things to remember is that you always follow the same procedure, so even though you don't remember this particular individual, you know that you drew the person following our standard procedure.

The suspect is identified by the police officer and, when possible, you check the ID or ask the suspect their name. The police officer completes the label with the suspect's name, DOB, etc. You put your name, date, draw time, and place on the label and place the label on the grey top tube. You then place the grey top tube in the plastic chain-of-custody tube, put the cap on it, and seal it with the sealing tape provided by the SDPD. You then hand it to the officer and he takes charge of it.

"H:\My Documents\San Diego Police Dept\Forensic Staff\Court Testimony.doc"

These instructions on what to say in a San Diego California DUI trial are given to law enforcement witnesses testifying under oath in a San Diego California county court of law and at the San Diego California Department of Motor Vehicles.

San Diego California DUI blood or San Diego California DUI laboratory technicians are essentially told how to testify and what to say, not as to what they actually did -and not what they know - in an actual San Diego California DUI / drunk driving case.

This is simply outrageous.  The memo basically says ignore your oath to tell the truth, here is what you are to say regardless of what you actually remember or what you actually did.

 

But is this isolated to California?

No.  Consider this from  "1,200 DWI convictions in Texas to be set aside".

More than 1,200 driving while intoxicated convictions in Harris County are invalid after a contractor was convicted of faking inspections of alcohol breath testing devices, prosecutors said.

Deetrice Wallace, a Department of Public Safety contractor, told investigators that she had falsified inspections records for the South Houston and Clute police department intoxilyzers.

Buess said Wallace manipulated the machines instead of changing the reference sample every month, and pocketed $146,000.

From 2002 until she was arrested in October 2008, Wallace handled DPS instruments that were used to determine alcohol concentration in DWI cases for at least seven police departments, including League City, Friendswood, Webster, Seabrook, Galveston, Clute and South Houston.

Buess said Wallace signed off on about 4,000 test slips. Of those, some did not result in convictions and others were not in Harris County. Buess did not know how other counties would address the problem. The prosecutor was not optimistic about seeking 1,200 convictions again because the office will not have test results, and other evidence has been destroyed, including videotapes.

DPS officials invalidated all breath tests recorded by intoxilyzers under Wallace's supervision because they could not pinpoint the date when her unethical behavior began.

Once contacted, the attorney of record will contact the defendant and determine if they want to try the case again. If the defendant wants a new trial, the district attorney's office will agree to it.

The case will then start over in the court where the conviction was obtained.

Buess said some defendants who were convicted of two DWIs and a felony DWI may get a clean slate after the dust clears. She said one defendant who will be able to get a new trial was sentenced to 60 years in prison for a felony DWI.

"It's just a massive problem that is not going to go away," Buess said. "It's a huge mess."

 

Could this be happening with DUIs in Harrisburg, Carlisle, Lebanon, York, Mechanicsburg, Camp Hill, Hershey, Jonestown, Chambersburg or  in other places in Pennsylvania?

Is there anyone, besides me, who is bothered by the fact that every single police report recounts "an odor of alcohol, bloodshot, glassy eyes and slurred speech"?  It is all garbage.

There is only one way to expose it.  Continue to challenge the prosecution's case.  Demand there be verified and actual proof based on truth.

As long as there are human beings, there will be temptation to cut corners, to do things wrong, and even to outright falsify.  We will stand in opposition to this.  Will you?

What a Bunch of Poop: The CSI Effect

It seems that every day there is some sort of article in print that laments the poor position of prosecutors, their horrible burden and how unfair the CSI Effect is.  Well, what is the truth?  It seems that there is a CSI Effect, but not to acquit, but rather to convict.  A reverse CSI Effect.

What is the CSI Effect?

According to Wikipedia:

The CSI effect (sometimes referred to as the CSI syndrome) is a reference to the phenomenon of popular television shows such as the CSI franchise raising crime victims' and jury members', even criminals', real-world expectations of forensic science, especially crime scene investigation and DNA testing.  Much of these concerns stem from the "dramatic license" taken by the writers of forensic science television—glamorizing the field, overstating the accuracy of forensic techniques, and exaggerating the abilities of forensic science—and from the extension of pop images past the realm of entertainment programming and into that of news reporting and the general criminological dialogue.  The CSI effect is purported to skew public perceptions of real-world forensic science, as well as the behavior of criminal justice system actors; this is of particular concern in the courtroom setting, where many prosecutors feel pressured to deliver more forensic evidence.

Well, is there really a CSI Effect?

The answer seems to be no.


Professor Tom R. Tyler (Viewing CSI and the Threshold of Guilt:  Managing Truth and Justice in Reality and Fiction, Yale Law Journal, 2006) perceived an opposite CSI Effect. He claimed jurors who watch the shows have more of a tendency to convict. He suggested alternative explanations for the observed increase in jury acquittals including jury sympathy for defendants, unrealistic assessments of their cases by prosecutors, and jurors becoming less trusting of legal authorities. He argued that after accounting for these effects, CSI might aid the prosecution; rather than the defense. Tyler theorized that when the desire for a victim’s justice exceeds the desire for the defendant’s justice, jurors may engage in the type of justifications that would lead to a reverse CSI Effect – raising, rather than lowering, the perceived probative value of the evidence and increasing the likelihood of conviction.


Tyler's theory of the reverse CSI Effect was seemingly supported in a subsequent study by Media Law professor Kimberlianne Podlas.

Podlas' study (Impact of Television on Cross-Examination and Juror “Truth”) supported Tyler's findings, concluding that jurors' CSI awareness helps, not hurts, the prosecution. According to this study, frequent CSI viewers were no more influenced by CSI factors in rendering "not guilty" verdicts than were non-frequent viewers. Considering the small minority of CSI viewers who included CSI factors in their verdicts, jurors were not negatively influenced by such factors. Consequently, the study did not support any anti-prosecution CSI Effect.  The Podlas study also reached the conclusion that there is an opposite, pro-prosecution effect. In some instances, a lower proportion of CSI viewers rendered "not guilty" verdicts relying on CSI reasons. Further, the Podlas study theorized that CSI viewers might be more stringent in assessing evidence, more educated in concepts of proof, or better prepared for jury duty.

If there is a CSI Effect, what does it really mean?

What the traditional rendering of the CSI Effect (where supposedly unrealistic jurors want DNA in every case and without it there is an unfair or unjust acquittal) really means is that if it exists jurors want certainty.  Is this a bad thing---to want to be certain in a verdict? 

Typically speaking, it is possible and cost effective to use modern forensics to solve even property crimes. 

Think of this.  Nationwide, there are over 500 exonerees and growing.  These exonerees come from very serious cases such as murder, rape and cases involving long prison terms.  If exonerees exist in these types of cases, is the possibility for a false conviction and police error unique only to these serious cases?  Is the possibility for false conviction, higher or lower with the seriousness of the crime?  Why wouldn't the possibility for error also be the case with misdemeanors?

In conclusion, as a way to gain perspective of this conundrum, I ask a simple question:  Why is it bad to want certainty in our convictions? 

I ask you that if I gave you a blank check and told you that you could write it out for whatever amount you wanted but before you could cash it, you first had to undergo a conviction, a misdemeanor for DUI, and with it suffer a loss of your driver’s license for at least twelve (12) months if not more, have two (2) counts of DUI on your record and undergo a period of actual incarceration and a substantial amount of supervision with the appropriate probation and parole office, would that check be more or less than the fees that government should have to spend on getting it right in the first place?

CSI Effect or is it wanting to do the right thing?

Pat Barone has a good question: Will technology end DUI?

Attorney Pat Barone is a nationally recognized DUI attorney and professor.  I highly recommend reading his posts as he is a editor and author of the DWI Journal and posts some very well written technical and timely blog posts.  In his latest post entitled Will Technology End Drunk Driving? He raises some very important questions involving the evolution of technology and its implementation in society.

He writes:

As fast as technology has moved in the past 20 years it’s a wonder it’s even possible to drive drunk today. One would think that governments everywhere would have required car manufacturers to install something in cars that would disable them if the driver was drunk.

He identifies that the current wide spread technology of interlock devices which are built on fuel cell technology are totally inaccurate as they are not specific as to alcohol.

 

Then he next examines the developing technology of Raman Spectoscopy.

He points to the following:

For example, one such company is well on the road to implementing a fascinating new device that may perhaps represent the next generation of body alcohol measuring devices.

The name of the company is TruTouch Technologies, Inc., a company based out of Albuquerque, New Mexico is a spin-off of InLight Solutions, Inc. They have developed a non-invasive, purportedly simple to use machine which can determine an individual’s bodily alcohol concentration using Near Infrared (NIR) Spectroscopy.

The device, which they call “The TrueTouch 1100” is about the size of two shoe boxes placed end-to-end and looks a bit like a standard grocery store cash register. In order to measure BAC, the driver need only be directed to place his or her arm across a cradle located on the top of the device. Using NIR spectroscopy, the device measures BAC by shining a light into the driver’s arm then measuring the reflected light.

We will see.  All that I know is that over the course of human history for every technological advance that comes forward that prevents someone from trying to do something, there is likely someone working equally as hard, if not harder, to overcome that latest piece of technology.  There will likely be no end to drunk driving, no matter what we do.  Perhaps that is because we are framing this all wrong.  Maybe what we, as a society, should seek is a way to ensure fair detection and a fair prosecution of those who violate the law where there are no false positives and the error rate is as near zero as possible.  It is highly unlikely that any single device will lead to the end of DUI, but an end to false conviction for DUI can perhaps be an achievable goal.

Are those tests at roadside anything more than glorified stupid human tricks?

I know the title is a little provocative, but it is a question worth examining. 

Today, one of the nation's best DUI lawyers, Lawrence Taylor, posted on his blog, the DUI blog (which is a must read), a post entitled "A 'Fraudulent' Field Sobriety Test?"

Within his blog post, he writes about a peer-reviewed article from Science and Justice:

This summary critique [of the HGN test] demonstrates that it is scientifically meretricious and that the United States Department of Transportation indulged in deliberate fraud in order to mislead the law enforcement and legal communities into believing the test was scientifically meritorious and overvaluing its worth in the context of criminal evidence….

He further writes:

Deliberate fraud. Pretty strong language for a scientific journal. After reviewing the flawed and deceptive justifications for using nystagmus in DUI investigations, the researchers concluded that the test was essentially without scientific validity.

The scientific article reads:

The state’s argument for the field sobriety tests does not rest on proof of merit, but upon qui tacet consentit reasoning that those tests have been so widely accepted they must have been subjected to some kind of review prior to adoption in the many jurisdictions where they are used, that somewhere along the way someone would have spotted the flaws and shortcomings. Considering that the student manual was originally considered to be a confidential state document and was only obtained through an Open Records Act request, silence from the scientific community cannot be considered an endorsement of the program.

In other words, it is not science.  I could not agree more.  I have written on this before Are the Field Sobriety Tests Scientifically Proven?

The roadside tests are not unlike the old David Letterman Show acts of Stupid Pet Tricks.  The truth is that it does not matter how well you preform on them, you are going to be arrested.  If there is an odor of alcohol and you admit to drinking at all, if you fail the roadside tests, then you are going to be arrested.  If there is an odor of alcohol and you admit to drinking at all, if you PASS the roadside tests, then you are going to be arrested because the officer will say that you must be an alcoholic and/or tolerant.  So, it really does not matter.  The only logical conclusion is to just say no to the glorified stupid human tricks.

Are the Field Sobriety Tests Scientifically Proven?

I have represented the citizens of Pennsylvania in thousands of DUI cases.  One thing I have seen is that prosecutors put far too much emphasis of these roadside tests.

These tests are designed to put people in unusual body positions doing impractical acts.  People do not normally walk around literally walking heel-to-toe on a straight line counting out loud.  No one routinely lifts one leg off the ground for 30 seconds and is not allowed to use their arms to balance.

In fact, in the original research by the Southern California Research Institute and printed directly in both the Practitioner and the Instructor guides it specifically reads “Categories Of People Who Would Have Difficulty & Should Not Be Tested---People who are Older than 65.  People with Back, leg or middle ear problems.  Individuals wearing heels more than 2 inches high should be given the opportunity to remove their shoes. R10/95 VIII-21; R2/00 VIII-12; R1/02 VIII-11; R9/04 VIII-11; R2I06 VIII-11 and People overweight by 50 or more pounds R10/95 VII-5; R10/95 VIII-25; R2/00 VIII-14; R1/02 VIII-13; R9/04 VIII-11; R2/06 VIII-14

Having said that, it is what it is.  Prosecutors try to force the juries to drink the proverbial Kool-Aid and try to report it as empirical science.  They are inundated with “HGN (horizontal gaze nystagmus) cannot be faked” and “it is the most reliable and objective scientific test out of the 3”.  Both of which are utterly silly, unscientific conclusions.  Pure Propaganda.

The issue with these roadside tests is that they are NOT peer-reviewed, verified scientific methods yielding true empirical results.

If it is presented to the fact-finder (the juror) as science as the Government does, then the fact finder will believe it to be logical, empirical and not fungible.  If defense attorneys and the accused stand moot and allow it to be so presented and simply ask for it to be dismissed because it is “voo-do” or because of some hyper technical reason such as the stimulus was moved a half second too quickly, then the jury will likely not connect with that concept, but rather accept the Government’s proposed “science” as true.

Stated more simply, if you take the attitude of “forget that test” or in the alternative “it is science but only if it is administered and graded according to the detailed manner it was designed to be given without deviation to yield valid results”, then we either give the fact finder no reason to use logic to disregard it in the case of the former or an implicit validation of the foundation of the underlying junk science in the case of the latter.  Both of which are clear losers in my experience.

In my opinion, the better way to combat the Government’s junk science is with true verified and peer reviewed actual science from credentialed clinicians with advanced scientific degrees in the discipline that they are researching and reporting AND NOT the biased police “scientists” who do not have hard science degrees and credentials in the field that they are studying.  Furthermore, these police "scientists" do not adhere to scientific method or even basic statistics, but rather engage in their research in an intellectually and scientifically impermissible way in openly engaging in wide-scale contextual bias in their examination of any given issue.

If it is a choice between the first type of scientist described above (i.e., true verified and peer reviewed actual science from credentialed clinicians with advanced scientific degrees in the discipline that they are researching and reporting) versus the second type of scientist described above (the biased police “scientists” who do not have hard science degrees and credentials in the field that they are studying who further do not use the scientific method or even basic statistics, but rather engage in their research in an intellectually and scientifically impermissible way in openly engaging in wide-scale contextual bias in their examination of any given issue), then logic would dictate confidence in the conclusions of the first type of scientist over the second type, would it not?

In short, in my opinion, it is vitally important to show the fact finder empirically and scientifically why and HOW it is important to disregard the invalid pseudo-scientific conclusions that NHTSA and SCRI and the government are trying to draw.  Articles like the attached and the below referenced ones are good ammunition for that.  They are peer reviewed.  They are produced by true credentialed scientists who are operating well within the scope of their training, knowledge and experience.  They have been vetted prior to and after publication by the scientific community.

 

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Do the Roadside DUI Tests Actually Measure Impaired Driving?

Everyday, average citizens all across the beautiful Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, are arrested and charged with DUI.  One of the most important pieces of evidence collected by the police and used by the prosecution in these cases are the Standardized Field Sobriety Tests (SFSTs).  Any conscientious defense lawyer, who specializes in DUI cases, recognizes the importance of these tests and the bearing they have on the outcome of the case.  Unfortunately, these tests and the way the police administer them,  have many flaws which bring into question the validity of the tests themselves and the results they produce.  This is the question we would like to address in this post, do the roadside DUI tests actually measure impaired driving?

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Roadside DUI Test: Standardized Field Sobriety Tests Explained

Introduction to DUI Roadside Testing

There are a lot of common misconceptions in relation to the Standardized Field Sobriety Tests (SFSTs) which are supposed to be used by the police to determine who they are going to arrest for a DUI.  These tests are normally the first thing the officer uses to screen drivers and the results are normally used in court by the prosecution to try to prove you were drunk.

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Beat the Breath Test or the Breath Test Beat You?

As a highly regarded DUI attorney, I invariably get asked "Well, how do I beat the breath test machine?" I always respond, "Don't worry about beating the Breath test machine. Worry about it beating you."

What I mean by this is that the machine can over-report your true Blood Alcohol Content. In other words, the alcohol in your veins can be less (sometimes very significantly less) than what the "magic" machine reports. These inaccuracies happen much more often than you might suspect.

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Bad Breath: How You Can be Guilty Not of a DUI, but Guilty of Eating a Hoagie

A FALSE POSITIVE:

We can think of a lot of things in our every day lives that can provide for false positives such as:

  • pregnancy tests
  • quick screen mammograms
  • prostate marker screening tests for cancer
  • PAP smear
  • BREATH TEST MACHINES!

We are all probably familiar with the idea of a false positive. Technically, Merriam Webster's Medical Dictionary defines it as:

False Positive: Relating to or being an individual or a test result that is erroneously classified in a positive category (as of diagnosis) because of imperfect testing methods or procedures

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