By: Brent Scott
If you are of the opinion that our government is already too invasive (think PRISM – the clandestine mass electronic surveillance data mining program launched by the NSA back in 2007), you may not want to read any further. Did you know that by merely obtaining a driver’s license you are also consenting to a blood test?
If you are of the opinion that our government is already too invasive (think PRISM – the clandestine mass electronic surveillance data mining program launched by the NSA back in 2007), you may not want to read any further. Did you know that by merely obtaining a driver’s license you are also consenting to a blood test?
Michigan’s implied consent law provides that a person operating a motor vehicle is
considered to imply his consent to have chemical tests of his blood, breath, or urine to
determine the amount of alcohol or a controlled substance if the person is suspected
of operating while intoxicated.
Now, courtesy of a recent SCOTUS decision, the pendulum may
be swinging in the other direction. In
a 5-4 decision, authored by Judge Sonya Sotomayor, the Supreme Court agreed with
Tyler McNeely’s defense counsel that an involuntary blood draw is a
"search" as that term is used in the Fourth Amendment.
A
technical reading of this decision is that a search warrant is generally now required
for a blood sample to be withdrawn from a suspected intoxicated driver’s body. However, as our SCOTUS likes to do, it opened
the door for an "exigent circumstances" exception in some drunk-driving
situations where a warrant would not be required.
Specifically,
in McNeely, the Defendant was stopped
for speeding. McNeely was asked
to submit to an alcohol
breath and blood test, both of which he refused. When the hospital
staff took a blood sample without the arrested driver’s consent, the result was
that McNeely's blood-alcohol levels were above the legal limit; he was charged
with driving while intoxicated.
McNeely’s
defense lawyer moved to suppress the test arguing the blood draw constituted a
search and the officer needed to obtain a warrant. After all, the
officer testified at the suppression hearing that he had time to obtain a
warrant, but simply chose not to.
So where does this leave us?
It appears that prosecutors are barred from arguing that implied consent
searches are “per se” valid and constitutional because a blood draw is a
"search".
Justice
Sotomayor’s decision states:
We hold that in drunk-driving investigations, the natural dissipation of alcohol in the bloodstream does not constitute an exigency in every case sufficient to justify conducting a blood test without a warrant…. "In those drunk-driving investigations where police officers can reasonably obtain a warrant before a blood sample can be drawn without significantly undermining the efficacy of the search, the Fourth Amendment mandates that they do so.
However, as the loony Lee Corso likes to say, “not so fast my friend.” The Court also reiterated that police are not required to get a warrant if there is some true exigency:
We do not doubt that some circumstances will make obtaining a warrant impractical such that the dissipation of alcohol from the bloodstream will support an exigency justifying a properly conducted warrantless blood test. That, however, is a reason to decide each case on its facts, as we did in Schmerber, not to accept the “considerable overgeneralization” that a per se rule would reflect…” and …"exigent circumstances justifying a warrantless blood sample may arise in the regular course of law enforcement due to delays from the warrant application process.
Well that certainly clears it up for
me…
From
a practical standpoint, it is tough to tell how the McNeely ruling will play out on the highways and byways of America. On one hand, metabolism does not automatically
create an exigency thus, a warrant is called for. On the other hand, since a warrant takes time
that creates a delay where alcohol will be metabolized and eliminated from the
suspect’s blood stream, minute by minute by minute.
While
time seems to be the key element in the evidence preservation equation, the High
Court did not elaborate on what the exigent circumstances might be to trigger
an application of the exception.
Perhaps
law enforcement will be able to streamline the warrant process in drunk driving
cases – I’m sure the district court judges will love being woken up at 2:00
a.m. to make probable cause determinations.
17 comments:
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I think that is interesting that in some cases, blood tests would need a warrant. I think that is crazy that it would come to it. I wonder if you could get that bypassed by a lawyer or something. It is crazy how our system of law can be with different cases. http://www.britishcolumbialaw.ca/what_we_do.html
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I think blood should require a warrant because that is something that is very personal and it is a part of you. Then again if you are intoxicated, it may be right to forfeit that right altogether. I don't think I will ever be driving while intoxicated so I don't really have much to worry about. http://www.hesserealestatelawriverside.com
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