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Drug and Alchohol Tests ILLEGAL for CYS to Force.
 PA. COURT RULING
 Drug, alcohol tests can’t be required 
 From wire reports
 Pennsylvania’s Children and Youth Services agencies have no legal 
authority  to require suspects to submit to drug and/or alcohol testing 
during investigations of child abuse reports, the state Supreme Court 
ruled Tuesday,  siding with a prosecutor who had come under the scrutiny
 of a county child welfare agency.
  The unanimous decision said the Child Protective Services Law does not
 “expressly or implicitly authorize collecting  samples of bodily 
fluids, without consent, for testing.”
  It was a win for Greene County District  Attorney David J. Russo, who 
disputed  the authority of the child welfare  agency from neighboring 
Fayette County to require the tests. The agency was brought in to 
investigate complaints  about Russo. He says no abuse has ever occurred 
to his children.
  The 
county began investigating Russo based on a confidential tip that he had
 been intoxicated in public with one of five children, as well as an 
inaccurate  claim he had been charged with spousal abuse. Russo was a lawyer in private practice  when the investigation began. A Republican, he was elected district attorney in November.
 Russo has said forcing drug tests on Greene County residents who were 
the subjects of child-abuse complaints had become a routine practice 
before he challenged its legality. He said Tuesday that practice has 
apparently ended.
  
Fayette County lost a lower-court decision in its quest to require Russo
 to submit to an observable urine test. Superior Court also rejected 
Fayette
 TESTS » PAGE 2
 Tests 
 FROM PAGE 1
 County’s attempt to force Russo and his wife to permit  investigators to inspect  conditions in their home.
  Fayette investigators interviewed all five of the Russo children while they were at school and were unable to confirm allegations  against him,
 the Superior  Court said in a previous ruling.
 Russo warned in a court filing that drug testing of parents without  
probable cause “will inevitably lead to the forcible  extraction of 
bodily fluids, the incarceration of parents for refusing to comply, or 
the exile of parents from their children.”



