Methamphetamine Is Found in Howe's System - Los Angeles Times
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Methamphetamine Is Found in Howe’s System

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From Times Staff and Wire Reports

Former Dodgers pitcher Steve Howe, whose history of drug and alcohol abuse hampered his baseball career, had methamphetamine in his system when he died in a single-vehicle crash on April 28 east of Palm Springs, according to a coroner’s report.

Howe, 48, died of blunt force trauma when his pickup truck rolled over on the westbound side of Interstate 10. Toxicology tests established the presence of methamphetamine, though the coroner’s report did not specify the amount in Howe’s system.

The California Highway Patrol, which investigated the crash, will continue the inquiry.

Howe was not wearing a seat belt when his truck, traveling about 70 mph in the left lane, drifted into the median and rolled.

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He was partly ejected from the truck, according to the CHP report, and pronounced dead at the scene. Howe was traveling to his home in Valencia.

“As to whether [methamphetamine] was a contributing factor is unknown,” Riverside County Sheriff spokesman Sgt. Earl Quinata said. “They’ll look into the crash, considering the new revelation, looking for causal effect. They’ll know more at the end of the investigation.”

Methamphetamine, made in illegal laboratories or prescribed by physicians, is a highly addictive stimulant chemically related to amphetamine.

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Howe played for four teams in a career that began as 1980 National League rookie of the year for the Dodgers and wound through seven suspensions for violating baseball’s substance-abuse regulations. He helped the Dodgers win the 1981 World Series, was an All-Star in 1982 and finished his career with 25 appearances for the New York Yankees in 1996.

-- Tim Brown

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