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Idaho State Police releases FY 2025 Annual Toxicology Report

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(Idaho State Police Press Release, October 29, 2025)

MERIDIAN, Idaho — The Idaho State Police Forensic Services (ISPFS) released its Annual Toxicology Report for Fiscal Year 2025, offering a detailed analysis of alcohol, volatile substance, and drug testing trends across Idaho. The full report and its accompanying fact sheet are available online.

Key Highlights

The steady rise in case submissions, particularly in blood toxicology, reflects the growing complexity of impaired driving and related investigations. Drug involvement remains high, with nine out of ten adult DUI toxicology cases showing at least one drug present. Juvenile cases also remain a concern, with the majority of underage samples testing above the legal alcohol limit. These trends, paired with the prevalence of cannabinoids, methamphetamine or amphetamine, and fentanyl-related compounds, point to the need for a continued focus on impaired driving enforcement, education, and prevention efforts statewide.

The increased volume of casework and complexity of multi-drug testing places real pressure on Idaho’s forensic system, which plays a critical role in public safety and the criminal justice process. ISPFS continues to strategically assess how to meet the rapidly growing demand while maintaining the timeliness and integrity of forensic science. Planning includes working closely with public safety partners and state leaders to ensure resources keep pace with both case volume and complexity.

As Idaho’s statewide law enforcement agency, Idaho State Police (ISP) remains committed to using forensic science to support investigations, hold offenders accountable, and promote public safety.

“Based on the FY 2025 findings, ISP will continue working with partner agencies to increase training and awareness on multi-drug impairment, maintain support for blood-draw protocols in DUI investigations, and expand outreach and education for young drivers and their families,” Western Command Major Jens Pattis said. “The agency will also collaborate with legislators, traffic-safety stakeholders, and prosecutors to strengthen Idaho’s response to drug-impaired driving, including strategies to address poly-drug detection and case processing.”

How Idahoans Can Stay Safe

The full Fiscal Year 2025 Toxicology Report and Fact Sheet are available at:

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