The morning after Salvatore Marchese left his mother's house for a session of outpatient treatment for his heroin addiction, he was found slumped behind the wheel of her car, dead of an overdose. He apparently hadn't been alone: His wallet was missing and the car's passenger seat was left in a reclined position. But whoever was with him when he was using drugs was long gone by the time the police arrived.
When Patty DiRenzo learned what happened to her son, she wondered: "How could somebody leave somebody to die?"
One reason is, someone calling for help could have been arrested under most state's laws. But:
Eight states have passed laws since 2007 that give people limited immunity on drug possession charges if they seek medical help for an overdose. A similar proposal is being considered in the District of Columbia but faces uncertain prospects because of opposition from police and prosecutors.
"It's really common sense — just to make it easier for people to call 911 by addressing what people have said is sort of their single-greatest fear in delaying or not calling 911 at all," said Meghan Ralston, harm reduction coordinator of the Drug Policy Alliance, a New York-based nonprofit that works to change current drug policies.
The measures have encountered resistance from some police officials and law-and-order legislators, who say the proposals are tantamount to get-out-of-jail-free cards, condone drug use, and could prevent police from investigating illicit drug dealing or juvenile drug use….
Initial findings from University of Washington researchers found that 88 percent of opiate users surveyed in the state, which passed an immunity law in 2010, would now be more likely to call 911 in an overdose…
Rhode Island, Illinois, Florida, Colorado and New York have passed laws in the past two years, joining Connecticut, Washington and New Mexico. The bills differ in some respects, but generally shield from prosecution a person who is in possession of a small quantity of drugs and who seeks medical aid after an overdose.
The U.S. Attorney's office is frightened of these laws, natch, and for reasons as absurd and indefensible as laws against drug use itself:
Testifying at a D.C. Council hearing, Patricia Riley, a lawyer with the U.S. Attorney's office, said there was nothing in the bill to prevent someone facing arrest from swallowing a pocketful of drugs and reporting an overdose — and in turn avoiding prosecution. She said she envisioned cases in which a person who surreptitiously administered drugs to a stranger or acquaintance, causing an overdose, might go free or that someone overdosing on PCP might not be held accountable for "atrocious crimes" committed before the person sought medical attention.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com
posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary
period.
Subscribe
here to preserve your ability to comment. Your
Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the
digital
edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do
not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments
do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and
ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
The measures have encountered resistance from some police officials and law-and-order legislators, who say the proposals are tantamount to get-out-of-jail-free cards, condone drug use, and could prevent police from investigating illicit drug dealing or juvenile drug use....
In fact, I would charge any 911 operator who dispatched an ambulance before a police unit to any such call. And any prosectutor who would do otherwise is soft. on. crime.
Exactly. You can try to talk someone out of it, but if you break down his door, grab him and cuff him, you've just made his shitty existence even worse.
I know a guy who got a sweetheart plea deal in Dallas in the late '90s for driving a guy to the ER after an OD. But IIRC, it was mostly because the OD'ers parents went to the DA and asked for a break.
might go free or that someone overdosing on PCP might not be held accountable for "atrocious crimes" committed before the person sought medical attention.
Under ObamaCare, wouldn't this just be seen as something that increases the overall cost of medical care? Isn't one goal to keep people OUT of ERs, since it's expensive?
Does DOJ only hire moral midgets to work on drug cases? Or is it that the moral midgets gravitate towards them?
Yes.
Testifying at a D.C. Council hearing, Patricia Riley,
Following her testimony, I think that would make a fine line of questioning.
The measures have encountered resistance from some police officials and law-and-order legislators, who say the proposals are tantamount to get-out-of-jail-free cards, condone drug use, and could prevent police from investigating illicit drug dealing or juvenile drug use....
In fact, I would charge any 911 operator who dispatched an ambulance before a police unit to any such call. And any prosectutor who would do otherwise is soft. on. crime.
I'd prosecute the prosecutor that refused to prosecute the 911 operator who dispatched the ambulance!
I've been one-upped!
I've been one-upped
Sounds like hippy for "I've been taking face-eating DRUGS!" Get in the cell asshole.
It will take a lot more than verbal commands to get me to comply, copper. So just skip them.
"How could somebody leave somebody to die?"
Listen, when someone is really determined to kill himself I say fuck it, let him have what he wants.
Exactly. You can try to talk someone out of it, but if you break down his door, grab him and cuff him, you've just made his shitty existence even worse.
I know a guy who got a sweetheart plea deal in Dallas in the late '90s for driving a guy to the ER after an OD. But IIRC, it was mostly because the OD'ers parents went to the DA and asked for a break.
And again with the PCP bullshit.
This seems to be an awkward shoehorning of a good point with a bad example.
Yeah, the wallet theft kinda makes you think he wouldn't have called 911 anyways.
Yeah, in the original Good Samaritan story, the Good Samaritan was the guy who DIDN'T take the victim's wallet.
Yeah, I had to laugh at this:
Well, another more likely reason is that drug addicts are (generally) shitbirds who steal.
Under ObamaCare, wouldn't this just be seen as something that increases the overall cost of medical care? Isn't one goal to keep people OUT of ERs, since it's expensive?