Pubdate: Sun, 22 Apr 2007
Source: Kansas City Star (MO)
Copyright: 2007 The Kansas City Star
Contact:  http://www.kcstar.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/221
Author: Benita Y. Williams

DRUG CASE TESTS FELONY-MURDER LAW

Deaths From Drug Use -- Efforts To Hold Dealers Responsible Are On The Rise

A Kansas man faces first-degree murder charges in the fatal overdose 
of another man in a Hays motel.

"This is a product liabilities act for illegal drugs. If you have 
product liability for legal items, why not for illegal items?" Daniel 
Bent, a former U.S. attorney in Hawaii who drafted a drug-dealer 
liability act No one is accusing David Knapp of intentionally killing 
Frank Brown.

But Knapp faces first-degree murder charges because prosecutors think 
he supplied a fatal dose of the painkiller fentanyl to Brown, who 
overdosed on the drug and was found dead on Halloween in a Hays, 
Kan., motel room.

Although the case is unusual, Kansas law allows prosecutors to pursue 
murder charges against someone when that person commits a felony and 
someone else dies, even if the offender did not mean to harm anyone.

"It's not a victimless crime. ... Somebody's getting it (the drug). 
Somebody's supplying it and they know it's illegal and sometimes it 
has unforeseen circumstances," said Ellis County Attorney Tom Drees, 
the prosecutor in Knapp's case.

Many states, including Missouri, have felony-murder laws that are 
commonly applied to botched robberies, rapes and kidnappings.

Drees said that filing a charge of first-degree murder, which 
otherwise requires intent and premeditation, in a drug overdose case 
may be unusual because "in most drug transactions, it's difficult to 
trace who supplied what to whom."

The case, while unusual, also points to increased efforts nationwide 
to punish drug suppliers for overdose deaths.

Knapp's attorney, Paul Oller, said his client denies the allegations 
against him. Oller questions applying the felony-murder law to the case.

"We certainly dispute what they say they can prove," Oller said. "But 
even if they can, at what point in time does distribution become use 
and at what point in time do people (who use drugs) become 
responsible for their misdeeds?"

Brown, 46, of Gorham, Kan., was found dead in a room at Budget Host 
Villa motel. The murder charge was filed last month against Knapp, 
also 46. The Hays resident is also charged with drug distribution, 
possessing cocaine and threatening a witness not to report Brown's 
death. His preliminary hearing is May 2.

Kansas' felony-murder law includes a list of other so-called 
inherently dangerous felonies that can bump a case up to first-degree 
murder if someone dies.

The difference could mean a sentence of a few months or years behind 
bars to 25 years to life in prison.

Wyandotte County District Attorney Jerome Gorman, who had not 
reviewed the Knapp case, said he had used the felony-murder law to 
enhance charges in drug cases involving slayings over drug sales and 
one involving a fatal explosion at a methamphetamine lab.

Gorman said he was unsure whether the law could be applied to cases 
not involving selling or making drugs.

"I think that the way the statute is written, just because you hand 
someone drugs and they die, it doesn't apply," he said. "But if 
you're a manufacturer or distributor or seller of some sort, that's 
where it kicks in."

Drees would not comment on the details of the Knapp case and would 
not say whether Knapp was accused of selling fentanyl to Brown or 
providing it some other way. Court records do not make that clear.

Oller said he knew of nothing to support the allegation that a drug 
sale was involved.

"It involves four people in a motel room and who provided what to who 
is certainly a question," he said.

Oller called the application of the felony-murder law to Knapp's case 
"quite novel."

"When I read that statute, I envision the guy with 47 pounds of 
cocaine in his trunk who gets into a high-speed chase (with police) 
and someone dies," Oller said. "Otherwise you could theoretically 
hold anyone responsible, the guy who gives another guy two grams of 
cocaine and two weeks later the second guy snorts it and dies."

Drees and others say more needs to be done to hold drug suppliers 
responsible for the deaths of the users.

A prosecutor in New Castle, Pa., has said he might file homicide 
charges in the death of Erica Million, a 16-year-old who earlier this 
month apparently took the painkiller oxycodone and died.

District Attorney John Bongivengo has said that if lab tests confirm 
that Million overdosed on oxycodone, he will file third-degree murder 
charges against the boy who allegedly sold Million the pills at school.

Legislators in 14 states have passed variations of a drug-dealer 
liability act, which is designed to allow the families of drug users 
and drug-addicted babies, and the institutions that treat them, to 
file civil lawsuits against drug dealers.

Some of the laws even include a provision that allows for a lawsuit 
against any drug dealer, even if that person did not sell drugs to 
the user, if that person was dealing the drug during the period of 
time the user was harmed. Kansas and Missouri do not have such laws.

Authorities say they have seen an increase in deaths from the abuse 
of potent prescription drugs such as fentanyl.

Fentanyl is an analgesic that is stronger than heroin, said Erik 
Mitchell, a forensic pathologist in Topeka who performed the autopsy on Brown.

Fentanyl comes in a patch that is applied to the skin to control pain.

Mitchell said it is not uncommon for drug users to cut open the 
patch, squeeze out the gel inside and sniff it, smoke it or burn it 
on a piece of foil and inhale the fumes.

"On the street it's referred to as foilers," Drees said. "We're 
finding more and more aluminum foil with burn marks on one side and 
residue on the other."

Mitchell said drug abusers often do not realize how much medicine is 
inside the patch and that heating fentanyl speeds its delivery, 
making it more potent.

Daniel Bent, a former U.S. attorney in Hawaii who drafted the model 
drug-dealer liability act, argues that it is fair to hold suppliers 
of illegal drugs responsible for the harm caused by what they distribute.

"This is a product liabilities act for illegal drugs," Bent said. "If 
you have product liability for legal items, why not for illegal items?"