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Ohio
senator to propose state law banning secret compartments in vehicles
March 5, 2012
Ohio Sen.
Jim Hughes, R- Columbus, plans to propose a state law in the next few
weeks
that will make it a fourth-degree felony to own a vehicle that has
secret
compartments, Ohio Gov. John Kasich said Friday, according to the
Columbus
Dispatch.
The
legislation is designed to deter interstate drug smuggling, the
Columbus
Dispatch reported. Owners of cars with hidden compartments added after
the
vehicles were purchased, even if they weren’t filled with drugs, would
face up
to 18 months in jail and a $5,000 fine if convicted.
No other
states prohibit secret compartments in cars, the Columbus Dispatch
reported.
Major drug
traffickers moving narcotics from coast to coast often pass through
Ohio, the
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer reported. In 2011, the state Highway Patrol
found
$69.5 million worth of illegal drugs during traffic stops.
“Many of
the drugs are coming in from Mexico. Some of the high-end, high-expense
pills,
like ecstasy, are coming in from Canada,” patrol Col. John T. Born told
the
Plain Dealer. “Ohio is an absolute critical distribution point, both
for our
highway systems because of their location east and west and our major
metropolitan
areas.”
In a
commencement address to the 151st graduating class of the State Highway
Patrol
on Friday, Gov. John Kasich said he supported the legislation, the
Daily
Jeffersonian reported.
Since
Kasich took office last year, drug-related arrests have increased,
according to
the Daily Jeffersonian. Ohio state troopers arrested 6,000 people on
drug-related charges in 2011, a 9 percent rise from the previous year,
and they
are ahead of that pace for 2012.
“What this
is is another tool to help law enforcement stop the flow of drugs
coming in
here,” Hughes said, according to the Plain Dealer. “This bill will save
lives
as well as impact lives.”
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