The Len Bias law allows prosecutors to file a reckless homicide charge against anyone who sells or distributes a schedule I or II drug to a person who later dies. Len Bias was a former Maryland basketball star who died of a cocaine overdose in 1986.
Debra Hensch said the drug that killed her 35-year-old son a year ago was Suboxone, a schedule III drug. As a result, the man who delivered it can't be charged with reckless homicide.
The state's controlled substances board determines what drugs fall under what categories with the help of findings released by the federal government.

