R
Robrites
This ER doctor is about to launch the first marijuana breathalyzer, and it could completely upend how we do drug testing
Instead, the 52-year-old father of four had been cycling with a friend in the leafy hills of Oakland, California when the pair were passed by a speeding car. Plumes of skunk-scented smoke trailed the vehicle from the driver's side window.
The friend — a professional race car driver — told Lynn he'd never dream of driving under the influence of marijuana. And in that moment, Lynn decided there had to be a way to stop others from doing so.
So in 2014, Mike and his wife Jenny created Hound Labs, a startup headquartered in downtown Oakland. Their first product would be the world's first device capable of detecting recent cannabis use on a person's breath. It's set to roll out this fall, when it will undergo pilot testing with an undisclosed division of law enforcement and with a nonprofit trade union that represents more than 35,000 construction workers in Northern California.
Read on for lots more
- California startup Hound Labs is getting ready to roll out the world's first marijuana and alcohol breathalyzer.
- The device will be tested in pilot programs with law enforcement and a labor union, and will work similarly to an alcohol breathalyzer.
- Based in Oakland, Hound Labs has raised $34 million in funding and has notable investors like Dick Wolf, the creator of hit TV series 'Law & Order.'
- While there's currently no well-defined legal way to determine if someone is too high to drive, regulators have outlined some possibilities. Today, police rely on subjective measures like field sobriety tests.
Instead, the 52-year-old father of four had been cycling with a friend in the leafy hills of Oakland, California when the pair were passed by a speeding car. Plumes of skunk-scented smoke trailed the vehicle from the driver's side window.
The friend — a professional race car driver — told Lynn he'd never dream of driving under the influence of marijuana. And in that moment, Lynn decided there had to be a way to stop others from doing so.
So in 2014, Mike and his wife Jenny created Hound Labs, a startup headquartered in downtown Oakland. Their first product would be the world's first device capable of detecting recent cannabis use on a person's breath. It's set to roll out this fall, when it will undergo pilot testing with an undisclosed division of law enforcement and with a nonprofit trade union that represents more than 35,000 construction workers in Northern California.
Read on for lots more