Showing posts with label Draws. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Draws. Show all posts

March 3, 2015

Tennessee v. Kennedy & Tennessee v. Wells – Blood Draws and the Fourth Amendment

Two Tennessee cases were recently decided concerning the constitutionality of mandatory blood draws of those accused of driving under the influence (DUI). This legal issue is highlighted in Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals cases, State v. Kennedy

[1] and State v. Wells.[2] Both cases discuss at length the constitutionality of the Implied Consent statute, Tennessee Code Annotated (T.C.A) § 55-10-406(f)(2) in relation to Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable searches and seizures.
Generally, T.C.A. § 55-10-406(a) provides that “[a]ny person who drives a motor vehicle in this state (Tennessee) is deemed to have given consent to a test or tests” contingent upon the “law enforcement officer having reasonable grounds to believe the person was driving under the influence [(DUI or DWI)] of alcohol, drugs, any other intoxicant or any combination of alcohol, drugs, or other intoxicants.”[3] This Driving Under the Influence (DUI), also know as Driving While Impaired (DWI), statute fails to specifically mention a requirement for a search warrant before such a forced blood draw occurs.
The subsection discussed by the Court, T.C.A. § 55-10-406(f)(2), requires Tennessee law enforcement officers in some circumstances to “cause the driver to be tested for the purpose of determining the alcohol or drug content of the driver’s blood.”[4] Regardless of the driver’s consent, law enforcement officers may forcibly draw blood with probable cause to believe that the driver has committed vehicular homicide while intoxicated,[5] aggravated vehicular homicide,[6] or a multiple offense DUI violation.[7]
The Fourth Amendment guarantees:
“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated
, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”[8]
The “exclusionary rule,”[9] enforces the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement by presuming warrantless seizures are unreasonable and the seized evidence may be suppressed at trial.[10] Warrant requirements may only be waived through exigent circumstances or recognized exceptions.[11] Generally recognized exceptions include “search[es] incident to arrest, plain view, stop and frisk, hot pursuit, search under exigent circumstances, and…consent to search.”[12] The Supreme Court has held that “exigent circumstances” should be determined by the “totality of the circumstances.”[13]
James Otis, a young colonial era attorney, was an initial proponent of the Fourth Amendment’s warranty requirement.[14] Mr. Otis defended colonists against British authorities using “writs of assistance” to conduct searches—even without suspicion.[15] Despite an unfavorable outcome at trial, Founding Father John Adams endearingly labeled “the dispute as the spark of the American Revolution: ‘Then and there was the child ‘Independence’ born.’”[16] Since the Fourth Amendment’s implementation in 1789, it has served as the most prolific source of constitutional litigation in American history.[17]
In 1868, the Fourteenth Amendment applied the Bill of Rights, which originally only applied to the federal government, to the individual states.[18] In part, it mandated that “[n]o State shall . . . deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law . . . .”.[19] Due Process rights have two interpretations: procedural and substantive due process rights.[20] Procedural due process guarantees a fair legal process when the government or state burdens an individual’s protected interest in “life, liberty, or property;” whereas substantive due process guarantees that the government will not encroach citizens’ fundamental rights.[21]
In State v. Kennedy
,[22] Fairview City Police Department officers followed the defendant home after recognizing his driver’s license as revoked.[23] The officer testified he detected an odor of an alcoholic beverage and found defendant’s “eyes to be watery.”[24] The defendant was subsequently transported to the local police station where he refused both Standardized Field Sobriety Tests (SFSTs) and a blood alcohol content (BLAC) test.[25] Thus, he was taken to the Williamson County Medical Center for a phlebotomist to conduct a mandatory blood draw. No warrant was obtained prior to this procedure because efforts to obtain one would have made “the streets of Fairview less safe.”[26] During trial, the court granted the defendant’s motion to suppress the blood draw’s results and ruled that since T.C.A. § 55-10-406(f)(2) “created a per se exception to the warrant requirement, it violated the state and federal constitutions.”[27]
On interlocutory appeal, the State sought to reverse the blood draw’s suppression and argued that T.C.A. § 55-10-406(f)(2) “does not create an unconstitutional per se exception to the federal warrant requirement and that, in any event, exigent circumstances justified the taking of the defendant’s blood.”[28] Here, however, the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals determined that the State’s argument of “less safe” streets did not constitute exigent circumstances to justify a warrantless seizure of defendant’s blood.[29] The court also ruled that T.C.A. § 55-10-406(f)(2) is “open to the interpretation that a warrant is required before a mandatory blood draw when a suspect refuses to consent to the draw.”[30] Thus, the court upheld the statute as constitutional.[31]
Similarly, in State v. Wells
,[32] the defendant was charged with DUI, among other offenses, after wrecking his vehicle into a building.[33] Upon his apprehension in a nearby gas station, the defendant refused law enforcement’s request for a blood test.[34] Despite this refusal, and absent a warrant, law enforcement officers proceeded to transport the defendant to a nearby hospital for a mandatory blood test.[35] During trial, the defendant moved to suppress the evidence, alleging a violation of his Fourth Amendment rights—the trial court agreed and granted the motion.[36] Also, the trial court ruled that T.C.A. § 55-10-406(f)(2) was unconstitutional based on its per se exception to a warrant requirement.[37] Upon appeal, the State argued that exigent circumstances justified the blood draw without a warrant; however, the Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee affirmed that sufficient exigent circumstances did not exist but reversed the lower court’s ruling that the statute was unconstitutional.[38]
The court considered whether the implied consent law under T.C.A. § 55-10-406(a) provides an exception to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement.[39] Favoring the defendant, the court held “[t]he state cannot, through legislation, strip an accused of constitutional rights” and that drawing the defendant’s blood without a warrant was contrary to Fourth Amendment privacy guarantees.[40] Similar to State v. Kennedy
, the court found that without the accused’s consent or a warrant, and absent exigent circumstances, as was the case here, the state could not conduct a blood draw.[41] However, the court upheld the statute as constitutional since it “did not mandate a blood draw in violation of the Fourth Amendment” and its “silence did not dispense with the warrant requirement.”[42]
Looking forward, the general rule to be gleaned from the aforementioned cases is that without the accused’s consent or a search warrant, and absent exigent circumstances or a generally accepted warrant exception, the state cannot conduct a forced blood draw.

About the Author: Steven Oberman has been licensed in Tennessee since 1980, and successfully defended over 2,000 DUI defendants.  Among the many honors bestowed upon him, Steve served as Dean of the National College for DUI Defense, Inc. and currently serves as chair of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers DUI Committee.  Steve was the first lawyer in Tennessee to be certified as a DUI Defense Specialist by the Tennessee Commission on Continuing Legal Education and Specialization and the NCDD.
He is the author of DUI: The Crimes & Consequences in Tennessee, updated annually since 1991 (Thomson-West), and co-author with Lawrence Taylor of the national treatise, Drunk Driving Defense, 7th edition (Wolters Kluwer/Aspen).  Steve has served as an adjunct professor at the University of Tennessee Law School since 1993 and has received a number of prestigious awards for his faculty contributions.  He is a popular international speaker, having spoken at legal seminars in 26 states, the District of Columbia and three foreign countries.
You may contact Steve through his website at www.tndui.com or by telephone at (865) 249-7200.
The author would also like to recognize and thank Matt Wayne, a second year law student at the University of Tennessee College of Law, for his research and editing contributions of this article.
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February 4, 2015

U.S. Supreme Court Won’t Revisit Warrantless Blood Draws for DUIs

supreme-court-building-120628

The Supreme Court has turned down a request from prosecutors in Colorado to reconsider the use of warrantless blood draws as evidence in drunk driving cases.

The prosecutors’ request stemmed from the case of Jack Schaufele. While Schaufele lay unconscious in a Colorado hospital following a car crash, a police officer had the medical staff take a blood sample to check his BAC. The results showed Schaufele was almost three times the legal limit. However, a judge excluded the results of the test at trial because the officer had not obtained, or even tried to obtain, a search warrant.

The judge’s decision was later affirmed by the Colorado Supreme Court, which cited the 2013 U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Missouri v. McNeely. In that case the court upheld the suppression of a DUI suspect’s blood draw that was taken without a warrant. The majority of justices dismissed arguments that the body’s rapid metabolism of alcohol inherently creates exigent circumstances that allow for a blanket exception to the 4th Amendment and requirements to obtain a warrant for blood tests.

The court’s 2013 ruling has impacted DUI laws across the country. Last fall, the Idaho Supreme Court ruled that the state’s implied consent statue wasn’t enough to justify warrantless blood draws. Likewise, the Texas Supreme Court struck down that state’s “no refusal” law, which permitted law enforcement to collect blood from suspected drunk drivers who refused to be tested.

Thirteen other states supported Colorado’s request for the Supreme Court to take the case, arguing that the requirement for a warrant cripples efforts to prosecute and punish drunk drivers. Has your jurisdiction enacted different procedures in order to fast track the approval of search warrants in DUI arrests?

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December 28, 2014

Can Police in California take Forced DUI Blood Draws?

You are driving home from drinks with friends when you are stopped by the police. After you fail field sobriety tests, the officer asks you to agree to a breath test to measure your blood alcohol concentration (BAC). You decline.

California Field Sobriety Test

You are placed under arrest and taken to a nearby hospital. The officer asks you to agree to a blood test, telling you that in California, refusal to submit to a chemical blood or breath test can result in the automatic loss of your driver’s license for a minimum of one (1) year.

You again say no.

Can the officer order a lab technician to take your blood without your consent? Can the police literally strap you down and forcefully take a blood draw?

Not without a warrant, the United States Supreme Court held in Missouri v. McNeely, unless there are specific exigencies that make obtaining a warrant impractical.

Otherwise, taking the blood of someone suspected of a DUI, without a warrant, may constitute a violation of that person’s Fourth Amendment right to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures.

The warrant requirement is subject to exceptions, the court noted. One well-recognized exception is when the exigencies of the situation make the needs of law enforcement so compelling that a warrantless search is objectively reasonable under the Fourth Amendment.

But just because motorists have a diminished expectation of privacy in their cars, the court said, that does not diminish their privacy interest in preventing a government agent from piercing their skin. In routine DUI cases, police may need to seek a warrant.

In the case before the court, the defendant had been stopped by a Missouri police officer for speeding and crossing the center line. The officer noticed several signs that the defendant was intoxicated, including bloodshot eyes, slurred speech, and the smell of alcohol on his breath.

The defendant declined to take a breath test to measure his BAC. He was arrested and taken to a hospital for blood testing, which he also refused.

The officer did not attempt to get a warrant, but directed a lab technician to take his blood anyway. The test showed that defendant’s BAC was well above the legal limit and the defendant was charged with driving while intoxicated in violation of Missouri statute 577.010.

The percentage of alcohol in an individual’s blood typically decreases by approximately 0.015 percent to 0.02 percent per hour once the alcohol has been fully absorbed, testimony in the case established.

The state of Missouri argued that because BAC dissipates so quickly, there are inherently “exigent circumstances” whenever an officer has probable cause to believe that a person has been driving under the influence.

But the justices disagreed, saying that the mere fact that BAC dissipates quickly does not, in and of itself, constitute exigent circumstances that justify an exception to the warrant requirement for nonconsensual blood testing in drunk-driving investigations.

In some situations, the justices acknowledged, exigent circumstances may exist because obtaining a warrant may be impractical.

But in other situations, the warrant process will not significantly increase the delay before the blood test is conducted. As an example, the justices cited a situation in which an officer could take steps to secure a warrant while the suspect is being transported to a medical facility by another officer.

In such a case, they said, there would be no plausible justification for an exception to the warrant requirement.

In short, the court concluded, while the natural dissipation of alcohol in the blood may support a finding of exigency in a specific case, it does not do so categorically. Whether a warrantless blood test of a drunk-driving suspect is reasonable must be determined case by case based on the totality of the circumstances.

The case is Missouri v. McNeely, 569 U. S. ____ (2013).

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July 12, 2012

Recent DUI for Amanda Bynes Draws Comparisons to Lindsay Lohan

By guest-writer

A recent DUI arrest for young actor Amanda Bynes has some celebrity watchdogs wondering if the former child star is following in the footsteps of Lindsay Lohan, another child star who struggled when she struck adulthood.

According to a recent report from the Huffington Post, Bynes was arrested for drunk driving on April 6 after she allegedly sideswiped a police car.

For curious readers, sideswiping a police car is perhaps the worst driving maneuver to make, especially if you’ve had a bit too much to drink.

After the incident, sources who had seen Bynes before her arrest claimed that the 26-year-old starlet had been drinking at a hotel before getting behind the wheel, but that she “seemed fine to drive” and “never seemed drunk.”

Bynes’ level of drunkenness, though, will be a matter for a court to decide, as a judge will likely look to her sobriety tests and blood or breath tests, if she took any after the accident.

Thanks to Bynes’ recent arrest, media outlets have been drawing comparisons between the star of “What I Like About You” and Lindsay Lohan, who has long dominated the front covers of gossip magazines due to her increasingly erratic behavior and notable encounters with police.

However, someone close to Bynes told RadarOnline that the comparison is “ridiculous” because “Amanda has never been arrested for drug possession or stealing anything.”

The source claimed that the DUI arrest was an isolated incident, and that there is little possibility that Bynes is “headed down the same road” as Lohan.

Interestingly, despite their similar age and geographic location, Bynes doesn’t know Lohan, and she claims that the media’s comparisons of the two reveal a certain amount of sexism in the way that women are treated in Hollywood.

According to the source close to Bynes, men in Hollywood who get arrested for drunk driving “don’t face the same scrutiny that women do.” This imbalance is reportedly what upsets Bynes more than any comparisons to other actors.

Nevertheless, other friends of the young actor are concerned about what they perceive as her increasingly strange behavior, and are worried that she could be headed in the wrong direction.

In recent months, Bynes has issued a series of bizarre tweets, including tweets that included racy photos of herself and ones in which she claimed to prefer “chocolate men.”

Bynes reportedly announced her retirement from acting at the tender age of 24 after starring in Nickelodeon’s hit show, “All That,” where she began working in 1996.


View the original article here

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May 4, 2012

State Supreme Court: No Forced Blood Draws

I’ve written in the past about the increasingly common practice of cops to pin DUI suspects down and forcefully withdraw blood from them.  In some cases the needle is wielded by medical staff — and in others by the cops themselves.  See Taking Blood by Force, Forced Blood Draws by Cops in Back Seat, Forced Blood Draws by Cops Spreading and Forced Blood Draws by Cops: Constitutional?
How far will the courts permit these kinds of police state tactics?  One state supreme court has just drawn the line:

Illinois Court Blocks Forced Draw From Motorist

Chicago, IL.  April 16 – An increasing number of states allow police to use any level of force needed to take blood from a motorist accused of driving under the influence of alcohol (DUI). In Ohio and Texas this procedure is explicitly authorized by statute. In Washington, the state Supreme Court decided to sanction the practice on its own authority. Last Tuesday, the Illinois Court of Appeals was unwilling to take that extreme step.
A three-judge panel upheld a trial court’s determination to suppress the evidence created when police held Jacqueline Farris down and forcibly drew her blood. On May 12, 2009 at around 10:30pm, Officer Kevin Orms arrived at the scene of an accident in the village of Bradley and found Farris behind the wheel of one of the vehicles involved. She smelled of alcohol. Orms had her taken to the hospital where he asked for consent to draw her blood. Farris refused. Officer Orms then ordered a nurse to take the blood by force. Three personnel were required to hold Farris down because she resisted.
Lab results showed the blood alcohol content (BAC) of the Farris sample was estimated at 0.285, but a lower court threw out the evidence as inadmissible. Under state law, forcible blood extraction is only authorized when a driver causes death or the personal injury of another driver, passenger or pedestrian.
Prosecutors argued that the officer had probable cause to suspect Farris of being drunk, and there was not time to obtain a warrant before the alcohol would dissipate. In agreeing with the lower court, the appellate majority cited a 2005 state Supreme Court precedent that allowed testing without consent in cases of death or injury but did not touch on cases where no injuries occurred.
"In Jones our supreme court was quite clear that there is no practical need for physical force in obtaining bodily fluid samples since the Vehicle Code eliminates any advantage a DUI arrestee might hope to gain from refusing chemical testing," Judge William E. Holdridge wrote for the majority. "As the Jones court noted, the defendant’s refusal to comply with the request for a sample, in and of itself, is sufficient to justify a statutory summary suspension of the defendant’s driver’s license, the purpose of which is to protect the public from intoxicated motorists."  People v. Farris
.

This court prohibited forced blood draws in a medical setting.  Other courts, however, have actually approved the forceful extraction of blood by the cop himself — even when done in the back seat of a patrol car.  See, for example, Would You Want a Cop Taking Blood From You?
This entry was posted on Monday, April 16th, 2012 at 4:56 pm and is filed under Duiblog. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
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February 11, 2011

Travis County Hospitals and Sheriff's Department have finally figured out that Forced Blood Draws are a bad idea. When will Chief Acevedo figure it out?

Home > Blood Test > Travis County Hospitals and Sheriff's Department have finally figured out that Forced Blood Draws are a bad idea. When will Chief Acevedo figure it out?Posted on January 11, 2009 by Ken Gibson The Austin American Statesman reported in today's paper that Austin's Hospitals and the Travis County Sheriff's Department have informed the Austin Police Department (APD) that they will no longer collect blood for APD.Travis County's central booking facility had been the place where APD took their suspected DWI folks for the forced blood draw.  APD would rely on the Sheriff's nurses to do the forced blood draw.  (If the person refused, they would literally strap them in a chair so that the person couldn't move their arms, and then stick them with the needle)  The Sheriff's Department nurses stopped taking blood samples on January 1.  The Sheriff's Department has finally realized that the nurses main function should be to treat inmates, not collect evidence.  Further, they are deeply concerned about having to give nurse's overtime pay to appear in court after having been the one that draws the blood.Since the Sheriff's Office stopped doing the blood draws, APD started taking suspects to the hospital for the blood draws.  (I can't verifiy this, but I heard that the hospital was charging APD $400.00 per blood draw.)  The Hospital representatives have now told APD they don't want them to bring suspects to jail for blood draws.  The Hospital staff are worried about lawsuits, and are concerned because these types of blood draws are not being done for medical reasons.  Further, the Hospitals are worried about who will pay for the nurse's time when they are called to court to testify about the procedure they used to draw the blood.  Chief Acevedo thinks he has figured out a way around these problems.  APD contracted with a private phlebotomist to draw the blood of folks on Halloween weekend and New Years Eve.  APD agreed to pay the phlebotomist for three eight hour shifts during these weekends.  What APD didn't contract for was pay for this phlebotomist when she is drug into court to testify about the blood draws.  I predict there will be a lot of screaming from the phlebotomist when she finally figures out that the money she received per hour will now be reduced by the number hours she has to sit in court.In the Statesman article, an "expert in blood draws" states that "the state laws are clear that nurses and hospitals are protected from such suits.  What the "expert" appears to be referencing is Section 724.017 of the Texas Transportation Code.  The relevant section, section (b), states:
The person who takes the blood specimen under this chapter, or the hospital where the blood specimen is taken, is not liable for damages arising from the request or order of the peace officer to take the blood specimen as provided by this chapter if the blood specimen was taken according to recognized medical procedures.
However, this "expert" left out the final sentence to section (b):
This subsection does not relieve a person from liability for negligence in the taking of a blood specimen. 
Now, what the "expert" seems to be forgetting is that it will ultimately be up to a fact finder (Judge or Jury) to determine if negligence took place.Also, I bet no one informed the phlebotomists that they could be held liable for the blood draws either.  APD is treading on thin ice on this issue, and the sad part is, they either don't even realize it, or they just don't care.
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The acronyms DUI, DWI, OMVI and OVI all refer to the same thing: operating a vehicle under the influence of alcohol or drugs. The most commonly used terms are DUI, an acronym for Driving Under the Influence, and DWI, an acronym for Driving While Impaired.
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