ycliper

Популярное

Музыка Кино и Анимация Автомобили Животные Спорт Путешествия Игры Юмор

Интересные видео

2025 Сериалы Трейлеры Новости Как сделать Видеоуроки Diy своими руками

Топ запросов

смотреть а4 schoolboy runaway турецкий сериал смотреть мультфильмы эдисон
Скачать

I-Team: Police Delay Drug Arrests In Wake Of FOX 5 I-Team Investigation Into Field Test Kits

Автор: FOX 5 Atlanta

Загружено: 2018-10-31

Просмотров: 161230

Описание: By: Randy Travis

Aired: Oct 30 2018

LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. - It's just after midnight and a small canister inside a beat-up Jeep Cherokee has Lawrenceville police extra curious. They question the couple just pulled over for driving with no registration.

"Oh, it's mine. It's actually, uh sweetener in it," you hear the driver say on recorded police bodycam video.

"Sweetener?" the officer asks. "Like Splenda?"

"Yes."

"Interesting," responds the officer. Yes. Interesting. That's because their drug field test already determined the mystery white substance was amphetamines. Someone's headed to jail tonight on felony drug charges.

"I swear to God there's nothing in it!" the driver's wife complains as he's being handcuffed. "It is sweetener. We don't even do drugs! We don't do anything."

The two-dollar disposable kits are popular among police officers because they provide a quick way to analyze suspected drugs found at a traffic stop or inside someone's home.

But a FOX 5 I-Team investigation discovered law enforcement across the state making felony drug arrests based largely on the results of these tests, commonly called NIK tests, even though the box itself screams in capital letters: ALL TEST RESULTS MUST BE CONFIRMED BY AN APPROVED ANALYTICAL LABORATORY!

In just one year, the state crime lab reversed 145 positive field tests. That meant innocent Georgians spent days, even weeks behind bars before they could make bond, sometimes losing jobs or homes.

Now, in the wake of our investigation, law enforcement agencies across Georgia are taking steps to limit such a miscarriage of justice.

Some already had concerns. When we analyzed those 145 false positive cases, we discovered 13 examples where police decided to hold off making a drug arrest until they received crime lab confirmation.

Three delivery drivers convinced Duluth police what tested positive for cocaine was actually air freshener. They were right. No one was arrested.

DeKalb County police decided to wait before charging on a cocaine case. The suspects said what tested positive was "Goody's Headache medicine." They were right.

Gwinnett County School police did not arrest a student -- despite a positive meth result -- because they worried "the result was a false positive." Another right call.

The Rockdale County Sheriff's Office stopped relying on field tests after we profiled an innocent driver they wrongly jailed. A month later, Georgia Tech police stopped using NIK tests altogether because of the controversy.

In light of our investigation, the head of the Georgia Association of Chiefs of Police is urging his 1200 members to not rush drug arrests.

"I would use more caution," executive director Frank Rotundo told us. "I think there should be more evidence provided than that test kit and I think that we could do better than that."

Remember that Lawrenceville couple having a very bad night?

"I was upset because I knew there wasn't anything there," said Samantha Mallard, the other person in the Jeep Cherokee. "There was nothing. It was just sweetener." Yet her husband was already handcuffed in a squad car waiting to head to jail.

On the Lawrenceville police bodycam video, you can hear Samantha questioning the officer about the field test.

"So can stuff actually test positive..."

"You mean positive in a NIK kit but not positive?" the officer responds.

"Yes."

"Not that I've heard of."

But someone had heard about the controversy surrounding these tests. That would be the supervisor on the scene, Sgt. Jimmy Inlow. While Lee Cowart sat in the back of one patrol car staring at a felony drug charge, Sgt. Inlow drove his car to a nearby convenience store, walked inside and grabbed a packet of sweetener.

"I was either going to prove them right or wrong and I proved them right," Sgt. Inlow told us.

Yep... turns out they were right, too.

"I was just kind of shocked," Inlow admitted. When he poured the Splenda into the test kit, it gave a positive reading for amphetamines.

Lee Cowart would not spend weeks in jail unable to post bond. They let him go. Lawrenceville police decided to wait for the crime lab to determine whether someone here committed a felony. For cases like this, that's their policy now.

"I would not make the charge for someone and have that based solely on the NIK test," said police chief Tim Wallis.

"We would have been screwed big-time," Cowart stressed.

Instead, he lucked out, getting stopped just as word started to spread about the harm of these field test failures.

"You're sending people, innocent people to jail for no reason," complained Mallard. "And it's costing their homes, their jobs, their cars, their life. For a false positive."


FULL STORY: http://www.fox5atlanta.com/news/i-tea...

Не удается загрузить Youtube-плеер. Проверьте блокировку Youtube в вашей сети.
Повторяем попытку...
I-Team: Police Delay Drug Arrests In Wake Of FOX 5 I-Team Investigation Into Field Test Kits

Поделиться в:

Доступные форматы для скачивания:

Скачать видео

  • Информация по загрузке:

Скачать аудио

Похожие видео

I-Team: Field Drug Test False Positive: Arrest For Meth, Actually Cotton Candy

I-Team: Field Drug Test False Positive: Arrest For Meth, Actually Cotton Candy

NewsChannel 5 Investigates: Policing for Profit (2014) - Part 2

NewsChannel 5 Investigates: Policing for Profit (2014) - Part 2

I-Team: What Happens When Field Drug Test Kits Send Innocent People To Jail?

I-Team: What Happens When Field Drug Test Kits Send Innocent People To Jail?

Силовой захват российских танкеров? / Готовность к штурму

Силовой захват российских танкеров? / Готовность к штурму

I-Team: Riverdale City Manager Uses Police Evidence Bay To Store Personal Items

I-Team: Riverdale City Manager Uses Police Evidence Bay To Store Personal Items

I-Team: Police Around The World Review Drug Test Kit Policy In Wake Of FOX 5 I-Team Investigation

I-Team: Police Around The World Review Drug Test Kit Policy In Wake Of FOX 5 I-Team Investigation

I-Team: Environmental Officers Swimming In OT Cash From Pool Perk

I-Team: Environmental Officers Swimming In OT Cash From Pool Perk

Another field drug test mistake sends woman to jail -- for months

Another field drug test mistake sends woman to jail -- for months

Почему Польша купила тысячу корейских танков вместо Абрамсов и Леопардов?

Почему Польша купила тысячу корейских танков вместо Абрамсов и Леопардов?

Как полиция поймала самого умного убийцу Колорадо

Как полиция поймала самого умного убийцу Колорадо

Police Arrest Florida Man Over a Donut | WTFLORIDA

Police Arrest Florida Man Over a Donut | WTFLORIDA

I-Team: Policing for profit?

I-Team: Policing for profit?

I-Team: Cops Look For Smarter Drug Field Tests, Avoid Jailing Innocent People

I-Team: Cops Look For Smarter Drug Field Tests, Avoid Jailing Innocent People

‘I Smell Alcohol!’: Ohio Cop Arrested for Suspected DUI After Refusing Breathalyzer

‘I Smell Alcohol!’: Ohio Cop Arrested for Suspected DUI After Refusing Breathalyzer

3 Louisiana State Troopers suspended after WVUE Fox 8 News investigation

3 Louisiana State Troopers suspended after WVUE Fox 8 News investigation

Полицейские-новички проиграли всё дело!

Полицейские-новички проиграли всё дело!

Scientists say experiments show dangerous field drug test problems

Scientists say experiments show dangerous field drug test problems

Only On 2: LAPD Bodycam Video Appears To Contradict Officer Testimony, Investigation Discovers

Only On 2: LAPD Bodycam Video Appears To Contradict Officer Testimony, Investigation Discovers

I-Team: Police Officer Fired After Turning in Chief

I-Team: Police Officer Fired After Turning in Chief

‘Dude, I Blew Zero!’: College Athlete Sues Iowa Cops for DUI Arrest

‘Dude, I Blew Zero!’: College Athlete Sues Iowa Cops for DUI Arrest

© 2025 ycliper. Все права защищены.



  • Контакты
  • О нас
  • Политика конфиденциальности



Контакты для правообладателей: [email protected]