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    Home DUI/ DWI Laws Find DUI Lawyers Blog Attorneys Only Contact Us

    LY to P rotect your driving privileges!!

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    The DUI attorneys and DWIlawyers listed on this siteinclude nationally publishedauthors on DUI laws and DWIlaws. These Drunk DrivingDefense Attorneys haveappeared in over 75 localtelevision stations and 229newspapers nationwide.

    Understanding DUIScientific Evidence

    This product provides aninsider's perspective onthe evolving technologiesand proceduresassociated with theevidence associated withdriving under theinfluence (DUI) charges.Leading defenseattorneys guide thereader through the keystages and stepsinvolved in successfully

    40 WAYS TO BEAT A DUI

    THIRTY DUI CASES FROM OTHER JURISDICTIONS THAT

    WILL HELP Y OU WIN GEORGIA DUI CASES

    LAW OFFICE OF

    ALLEN M. TRAPP, JR., P.C.

    Telephone: (770) 830-8560

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    Street Address:

    114B Corporate Drive

    Carrollton, Ga. 30117

    Website: www.topgun-lawyer.com

    E-mail: [email protected]

    ii. ISSUE: REASONABLE, ARTICULABLE SUSPI CION FOR THE DUI STOP

    1. Rowe v. State, 363 Md. 424, 769 A. 2d 879 (2001).

    2. Frasier v. Driver and Motor Vehicle Services Branch (DMV), 271 Ore. App.

    215 (2001).

    3. United States v. Gregory, 79 F. 3d 973 (10th Cir. 1996).

    4. Crooks v. State, 710 So. 2d 1041 (Fla. App. 1998).

    5. State v. Caron, 534 A. 2d 978 (Maine 1987).

    6. United States v. Chanthasouxat, 342 F. 3d 1271 (11th Cir. 2003).

    7. State v. Puckett, No. E2002-01959-CCA-R3-CD (Tenn. Crim. App. decided July

    9,2003).

    We all know that weaving within a lane, although not an offense, can justify a

    stop. Smith v. State, 236 Ga. App. 548 (1999). However, as in Smith the Court

    of Appeals has consistently characterized the kind of driving that warrants a brief

    investigative detention as "erratic." E.g., Davis v. State, 236 Ga. App. 32 (1999);

    Arsenault v. State, 257 Ga. App. 456 (2002). Somewhat more elusive is a

    definition of weaving in the Georgia case law, but "...a continuous failure on the

    part of the driver to maintain a direct line of travel within his lane", State v.

    Bailey, 51 Ore. App. 173, 624 P. 2d 663 (1981), should suffice.

    The failure to maintain lane statute, O.C.G.A. 40-6-48, has counterparts in every

    state, and every statute employs identical or nearly identical language. One of the

    most recent decisions that reviewed a plethora of case law is Rowe v. State, 363

    Md. 424, 769 A. 2d 879 (2001). In that case the arresting officer noticed the

    Appellant's van cross the "white edge line" by about eight inches, return to theslow lane of I-95, and later touch the white line again. In reversing the

    Appellant's conviction for a drug offense, the Court held that more than the

    integrity of lane markings, the purpose of the statute is to promote safety on

    laned roadways. Id. In other words, the statute is not violated unless a vehicle

    fails to stay within its lane and such movement is not safe or not made safely.

    As the Rowe court noted, the cases in which courts have upheld traffic stops

    based on violations of this statute involve conduct much more egregious than that

    in the instant case. Specifically, they distinguished Sledge v. State, 239 Ga. App.

    301 (1999) (trying to change lanes without signaling, straddling middle and slow

    lanes, straddling middle and left lanes); Maddox v. State, 227 Ga. App. 602

    (1997) (weaving across lanes

    1

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    defending a clientaccused of driving whileunder the influence.

    of traffic onto the shoulder); State v. Holcomb, 219 Ga. App. 231 (1995) (weaving

    from shoulder of roadway to left lane). Other courts have interpreted language

    identical to that in the Georgia statute as requiring more for a violation than a

    momentary crossing or touching of an edge or lane line. Frasier v. Driver and

    Motor Vehicle Services Branch (DMV), 172 Ore. App. 215 (2001).

    Maryland and Oregon are not alone. In interpreting Utah's counterpart to

    O.C.G.A. 40-6-48, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals held that an isolated incident

    of a vehicle crossing two feet into the emergency lane on an interstate highway

    was not a violation. United States v. Gregory, 79 F. 3d 973 (10th Cir. 1996).

    Similarly, it has been held that, "Where a vehicle is driven on a roadway with no

    other traffic present, there was no speeding, erratic driving or other conduct,

    except for the edge line incident, to ind icate that appellee was impaired, the

    balance is in favor of the right of privacy and against the need for a stop." State

    v. Gullett, 78 Ohio App. 3d 138, 604 N.E. 2d 176 (1992) (crossing the edge line

    twice). Time and again, appellate courts have held that touching or going over a

    fog line or edge line does not justify a stop unless the driver is operating the

    vehicle erratically. E.g., State v. Lafferty, 291 Mont. 157, 967 P. 2d 363 (1998).

    In many cases the arresting officer will concede that a defendant did not drive his

    car off the roadway, only drove on the fog line, and did not come close to striking

    another vehicle, an individual, or anything else. These facts are strikingly similar

    to Crooks v. State, 710 So. 2d 1041 (Fla. App. 1998), wherein the court held that

    even if the driver was briefly outside the margin of error, there was no objective

    evidence suggesting that he failed to ascertain that his movements could be made

    safely. Id. At 1043. The Crooks court also observed that a violation does not

    occur in isolation, but requires evidence that the driver's conduct created areasonable safety concern. Id. Once again, although weaving within a lane of

    traffic can justify a traffic stop, there must be something more than merely

    touching or even going over a fog line; there must be evidence of erratic or unsafe

    operation of the motor vehicle. State v. Cerny, 28 S.W. 3d 796 (Tex. App. 2000);

    State v. Tarvin, 972 S.W. 2d 910 (Tex. App. 1998).

    Perhaps no court has gone further than holding, "A vehicle's brief, one time

    straddling of the center line of an undivided highway is a common occurrence and,

    in the absence of oncoming or passing traffic, without erratic operation or other

    unusual circumstances, does not justify an intrusive stop by a police officer."

    State v. Caron, 534 A. 2d 978 (Maine 1987) (straddled the center line for 25 to 50

    yards). Perhaps you can suggest to your judge that you are not asking him/her to

    "push the envelope like your judicial brethren in Maine" but to afford the statute a

    common sense interpretation and lim it police intrusion to those cases involving

    erratic driving, which means more than merely touching a fog line under

    circumstances that offer no hint of danger to the safety of others or their

    property.

    2.

    What about the officer's good faith belief that a statute has been violated?

    Although an officer's reasonable mistake of fact may provide the objective grounds

    for reasonable suspicion or probable cause required to justify a traffic stop, an

    officer's mistake of law may not. United States v. Chanthasouxat, 342 F. 3d 1271

    (11th Cir. 2003). The officer's mistake of law cannot provide the objective

    grounds for reasonable suspicion or probable cause required to justify a traffic

    stop. United States v. Lopez-Soto, 205 F. 3d 1101 (9th Cir. 2000); United States

    v. Lopez-Valdez, 178 F. 3d 282 (5th Cir. 1999).

    These Federal decisions are not inconsistent with the pronouncements of the

    Georgia Court of Appeals. State v. Armstrong, 223 Ga. App. 350 (1996), shed

    light on the mistaken interpretation of the "Laying Drags" statute. In that case

    the driver was spinning his tires and creating smoke in a crowded parking lot

    during the Christmas shopping season, thereby causing the officer to be

    concerned for the safety of pedestrians. Id. at 350. The key element of danger to

    the public overcame the Defendant's argument that the stop was unlawful since

    no statute had been violated. In the typical "failure to maintain lane" case there

    will be no similar legit imate concern for the safety of others.

    In the In terest of B.C.G., 235 Ga. App. 1 (1998) makes it clear that when "...a

    statute upon which an officer bases his stop is later determined to have not been

    violated, the stop still must be justified by specific, articulable facts sufficient to

    give rise to a reasonable suspicion of criminal conduct." Id. at 5. Missing in most

    cases of touching the fog line, according to this analysis, is the element of danger

    to the public or anything that would indicate your client was about to violate the

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    law in any manner.

    Sooner or later our appellate courts will grapple with the issue of just how bad a

    person's driving must be in order to justify a traffic stop. To date the reported

    cases involve "erratic" driving, but in my practice I am constantly confronted with

    cases where the client's driving is as good as the cop's on the way to the station

    the night of the arrest, the judge on the way to court in the morning , or your

    mother on her way to church on Sunday. The only difference is that my clients

    are followed (many times for mile after mile) from a bar and, therefore, touching a

    fog line is an excuse for stopping them. Use these non-Georgia cases, and good

    judges will from time to time find the police lacked the requisite articulable

    suspicion to detain your client.

    Before we leave this subject, I want to bring to your attention one of my favorite

    cases from the past year, State v. Puckett, No. E2002-01959-CCA-R3-CD (Tenn.

    Crim. App. decided July 9, 2003). In this case the appellate court reviewed a

    videotape and disagreed with the arresting officer's characterization of the

    appellant's driving. The court observed that the defendant's vehicle touched the

    right white line and eventually either crossed or touched the left white line. Not

    only was her less than perfect driving insufficient to justify a stop, but the court

    explicitly rejected the State's argument that Fourth Amendment requirements

    should be relaxed in DUI cases. As the majority wrote, "This court simply cannot

    apply a different standard in reviewing the requirements for a

    3.

    traffic stop for a DUI investigation than we would apply in reviewing any other

    traffic stop. The constitutional standards are not lessened, nor does the

    governmental officer have broader authority, because the stop is for a DUI

    investigation."

    ISSUE: PROBABLE CAUSE FOR THE DUI ARREST

    8. State v. Taylor, 3 Ohio App. 3d 197 (1981).

    9. Saucier v. State, 869 P. 2d 483 (Ak. App. 1994).

    10. People v. Royball, 655 P. 2d 410 (Colo. 1982).

    11. State v. Swanson, 164 Wis. 2d 437 (1991).

    With the exception of State v. Batty, 259 Ga. App. 431 (2003), we do not have

    much in the way of good case law in Georgia. Bad facts make bad law, so perhaps

    we should not be surprised the Court of Appeals has held that driving over 100

    miles per hour coupled with bloodshot and glassy eyes, the odor of an alcoholic

    beverage, and a positive result on the Alco-Sensor constituted probable cause for

    an arrest. See State v. Sledge, 264 Ga. App. 612 (2003). But, it gets worse.

    "Even in the absence of the field sobriety tests, the officer's observation that a

    suspect had bloodshot, watery eyes and exuded an odor of alcohol was sufficient

    to show probable cause to arrest him for driving under the influence."

    Cann-Hanson v. State, 223 Ga. App. 690 (1996).

    Observation: So why do we even need field sobriety tests?

    Is there any way around this obstacle erected by the Court of Appeals? First,

    note that in both of the decisions cited in the preceding paragraph the defendants

    had "bloodshot" and "glassy" eyes. If that testimony was true, the defendants

    may well have been less safe drivers, but the bloodshot eyes allegedly observed

    by many police officers are not caused by ethanol ingestion bu t allergies, fatigue,

    smoky bars, or the pollen season. There is a difference between eyes that appear

    to be a bit bloodshot and the glassy eyes of a drunk. So, how do you minimizethe importance of bloodshot eyes? Let's see if NHTSA's own studies can offer any

    assistance.

    Appendix E of the NHTSA study (Sept. 1997, DOT HS 808 654) "The Detection of

    DWI at BACs Below 0.10" concludes with the following observation: "Finally,

    some cues were eliminated because they might be indicators more of social class

    than of alcohol impairment. For example, officers informed us that a flushed or red

    face might be an ind ication of a high BAC in some people. However, the cue also

    is characteristic of agricultural, oil field, and other outside work. Similarly,

    bloodshot eyes, while associated with alcohol consumption, also is a trait of many

    shift workers and

    4.

    people who must work more than one job, as well as those afflicted by allergies.

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    A disheveled appearance simi larly is open to subjective interpretation. We

    attempted to limit the recommendation to clear and objective post-stop

    behaviors."

    Some officers who pride themselves on their expertise will admit that they are

    familiar with this study. If your client's "bad driving" was de minimus and he or

    she declines field sobriety testing (which is becoming more common in my

    practice) as well as the Alco-Sensor (also becoming more common), what is the

    officer left with in many cases but the odor of alcohol? While there may be a

    paucity of Georgia case law on the subject, our sister states have an abundance.

    Before turning to that out-of-state case law, let us review the standard for

    determining probable cause for a DUI arrest in Georgia.

    The probable cause necessary for an arrest for driving under the influence was set

    forth in the case of Griggs v. State, 167 Ga. App. 582 (1983) which states as

    follows:

    "As to the question of whether the arrest of defendant, for the offense of driving

    under the influence, was made with probable cause, we turn to the standards set

    forth in Beck v. Ohio, 379 U.S. 89,91 (85 SC 223, 13 LE2d 142). See also Vaughn

    v. State, 247 Ga. 136, 137 (274 SE2d 479). Whether the arrest was

    constitutionally valid depends in turn upon whether, at the moment the arrest was

    made, the officers had probable cause to make it whether at that moment the

    facts and circumstances within their knowledge and of which they had reasonably

    trustworthy information were sufficient to warrant a prudent man in believing that

    the petitioner had committed or was committing an offense. Beck v. Ohio, 379

    U.S. 89, 91, supra. The question is whether the investigating deputy at the time

    of defendant's arrest had knowledge or reasonably trustworthy information that:

    (1) defendant was in actual physical control of a moving vehicle; (2) while underthe influence of any drug; (3) to a degree which renders defendant incapable of

    driving safely." (Emphasis added).

    The standard for probable cause remains whether the officer had knowledge or

    reasonably trustworthy information that a suspect was actually in physical control

    of a moving vehicle while under the influence of alcohol to a degree which renders

    him incapable of driving safely. Malone v. State, 261 Ga. App. 420 (2003).

    Therefore, it can surely be argued that the odor of alcohol standing alone does not

    provide probable cause to believe that an individual is incapable of driving safely.

    Drinking and driving is not illegal in Georgia. This is specifically recognized in the

    pattern jury instruction which takes into account a defendant's manner of driving,

    and which states, "merely showing that the defendant has been drinking, without

    proof of the defendant's driving or manner of driving is not sufficient." Suggested

    Pattern Jury Instructions, Volume I I, Court of Superior Court Judges, Part 4,

    (S)(2)(f). Since Georgia does not prohibit driving an automobile after

    consuming 5.

    intoxicants, the odor of alcohol cannot reasonably and objectively provide probable

    cause to believe that the driver is under the influence of alcohol. This is

    especially true in the case where the officer does not testify to any manifestations

    (other than odor) commonly associated with intoxication. To conclude otherwise

    is to hold that conduct which is totally lawful is, without more, evidence of an

    offense sufficient to warrant arrest. Were this true, then "zero tolerance" would be

    the standard necessary to arrest rather than the standard of "under the influence

    to the extent that the defendant was a less safe driver." There is no correlation

    whatsoever between the odor of alcohol on a person's breath and their blood

    alcohol level.

    The Georgia courts have never directly answered the question of whether the odor

    of alcohol provides sufficient probable cause for an arrest for DUI. In Clay v. State

    193 Ga. App. 379 (1989), however, the Georgia Court of Appeals (in reversing thedefendant's conviction) stated in dicta that:

    "... the mere fact that he (the defendant) had an odor of alcohol on his breath

    clearly was not sufficient, in and of itself, to give rise to an in ference that he was

    intoxicated. Indeed the state's attorney conceded as much at trial, stating,

    "Certainly the smell of alcohol by itself is not an indication, but it can be an

    indication that somebody had been drinking..." Under the circumstances, we

    must conclude that the officer's opinion that the appellant was under the influence

    of alcohol to the extent that it was less safe for him to drive was without

    evidentiary foundation."

    While Georgia has not directly decided this issue, it has been addressed by a

    number of other appellate courts. Beginning with State v. Taylor, 3 Ohio App. 3d.

    197,198 (1981), Ohio has a long line of cases specifically stating that the odor of

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    alcohol (even when combined with other factors) does not provide probable cause

    to make an arrest. In one of the more recent cases, State v. Segi, No.18267

    (Ohio App. District 2), dated August 18, 2000, the arresting officer testified that

    the defendant Segi was arrested because he crossed the white line edge marker

    three times, he admitted to consum ing alcohol, and had a "strong odor" of alcohol

    about him. Reversing the trial court's denial of Segi's motion to suppress, the

    Ohio Court of Appeals stated,

    "Odor of an alcoholic beverage is insufficient, by itself, to trigger a reasonable

    suspicion of DUI, and nominal traffic violations, being common to virtually every

    driver, add nothing of significance... The law prohibits drunken driving, not

    driving after a drink... Smelling too drunk to drive, without other reliable indicia

    of intoxication is not enough to constitute probable cause to arrest."

    The Court of Appeals of Alaska has summarized its position succinctly:

    "The mere odor of alcohol about a driver's person.... maybe indicia of alcohol

    ingestion, but is no more a probable indication of intoxication than eating a meal

    is of gluttony." Saucier v. State, 869 P. 2d 483 (Ak. App. 1994).

    Wyoming likewise has differentiated between drinking and driving and drunken

    driving. In Keehn v. Town of Torrington, 834 P. 2nd 112 (Wyo. 1992), the

    Wyoming Supreme Court stated:

    "A third legal reality worth noting is that it is lawful in Wyoming as in other

    states, to drink and drive safely. Wyo. Stat. 31-5-233 (June, 1989). A peace

    officer may not arrest an individual for DWUI merely because it is late at night

    and, during an unrelated traffic stop, the officer detects the odor of alcohol.

    Rather the peace officer must have probable cause to believe the individual has

    actual physical control of a motorized vehicle while legally intoxicated."

    Colorado has also applied this analysis even to cases which have involved motor

    vehicle collisions. In affirming the trial court's suppression of the blood test based

    on lack of probable cause for arrest, the Colorado Supreme Court in People v.

    Royball, 655 P. 2d 410 (Colo. 1982), recites that:

    "All we learned from the record is that an accident took place, the defendant was

    driving one of the cars involved, and he an odor of alcoholic beverage about him.

    Although the officer's testimony and his decision to administer a blood alcohol test

    are suggestive of an opinion that the defendant was under the influence of

    alcohol, the single objective fact to which he testified in support of any such

    conclusion is the odor of alcoholic beverage. An odor of alcoholic beverage is not

    inconsistent with the abilit y to operate a motor vehicle in compliance with the

    Colorado law."

    (Note: The Court also specifically states that, "the prosecution has cited no case in

    which an odor of alcoholic beverage, without more, has been held to constitute

    probable cause to believe a person is under the influence of intoxicating liquor."

    There also exists no such case in Georgia).

    Wisconsin recently affirmed a long line of cases beginning with State v. Swanson,

    164 Wis. 2d 437 (1991), that held that the odor of alcohol, even when combined

    with other indicia of intoxication, "may add up to a reasonable suspicion, but not

    probable cause." State v. Hanson, 233 Wis 2d 89 (Wis. App. 2000). Both

    Louisiana and Washington, in reversing their respective trial courts, have held that

    even in cases involving traffic fatalities, "the mere fact that a person consumed

    alcohol prior to a vehicular accident does not prove that the person was under the

    influence or that alcohol consumption caused the accident." State v. Garrett, 525

    So. 2d 1235 (La. App. 1st Cir. 1988) and State v. Gillenwater 96 Wn. App. 667,

    (1999). As you can see, there is a plethora of case law from around the country

    holding that the odor of alcohol does not provide probable cause for a DUI arrest.

    7. ISSUE: PROBABLE CAUSE FOR A DUI DRUNK DRIVI NG BLOOD TEST

    ON AN UNCONSCIOUS PERSON

    ;

    12. State v. Kliphouse, 771 So. 2d 16 (Fla. App. 2000). 13. Schmerber v.

    California, 384 U.S. 757 (1966).

    On October 6, 2003, the Georgia Supreme Court held that O.C.G.A. 40-5-55 was

    unconstitutional to the extent that it required chemical testing of the driver of a

    vehicle involved in a traffic accident resulting in serious injuries or death

    regardless of any determination of probable cause. Cooper v. State, 277 Ga. 282

    (2003). But what is the standard for determining if probable cause exists to

    obtain a blood test of a driver rendered unconscious in an accident.

    State v. Kliphouse, 771 So. 2d 16 (Fla. App. 2000) provides some guidance. In

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    that case the appellee was driving a motorcycle when he was struck by a car and

    rendered unconscious. A police officer arrived at the scene and smelled alcohol on

    the appellee's breath. While he was still unconscious the officer requested

    medical personnel to draw a blood sample at the hospital. The issue, as framed

    by the court, was: Does the mere odor of alcohol on the breath of a driver, who

    was involved in an accident not in any way attributab le to said driver, without

    other indicia of impairment, give an officer reasonable cause to believe that the

    driver was under the in fluence of alcohol...?"

    The court noted that, "As the trial court observed, the p resence of an odor of

    alcohol alone is generally not considered an accurate and reliable measure of

    impairment and, thus , is rarely deemed sufficient for a finding of probable cause."

    Id. At 23. In other words, if a driver was not responsible for an accident and isrendered unconscious by injuries sustained in the accident, the odor of alcohol

    alone not will justify a search of his blood by the state.

    This situation is distingu ishable from a case where a motorist drives his car off the

    roadway, strikes a tree, smells of liquor, and the condition of his eyes is

    "bloodshot, watery, sort of a glassy appearance." In that case, probable cause for

    the search exists. Schmerber v. California, 384 U.S. 757 (1966). The same

    court that decided Kliphouse has held that the smell of alcohol on a defendant's

    breath, along with evidence that the driver had caused an accident resulting in

    serious bodily injury, gave the officer sufficient probable cause to request a blood

    test. State v. Cesareti, 632 So. 2d 1105 (1994).

    8. ISSUE: ADMISSIBILITY OF FIELD SOBRIETY TESTS IN DRUNK

    DRIVING LAWS

    14. State v. Homan, 89 Ohio St. 3d 421 (2000).

    15. State v. Schmitt, 101 Ohio St. 3d 79 (2004). 16. State v. Lasworth, 131 N.M.

    739, 42 P. 3d 844 (N.M. App. 2001).

    17. United States v. Horn, 185 F. Supp. 2d 530 (D. Md. 2002). 18. State v.

    Chastain, 960 P. 2d 756 (Kan. 1998).

    Although an examination of Georgia case law pertaining to field sobriety testing is

    beyond the scope of this paper, and was covered during the morning session,

    even a cursory review of the decisions from our Court of Appeals reveals that they

    have taken a very relaxed approach to the admissib ility of field sobriety tests.

    Their approach has won less than universal approval. In State v. Homan, 89 Ohio

    St. 3d 421 (2000), the Ohio Supreme Court ruled that in order for the results of

    field sobriety tests to serve as evidence of probable cause to arrest, the police

    must have administered the tests in strict compliance with standardized testing

    procedures. Obviously, if the test "results" were inadmissib le to determineprobable cause to arrest, they were inadmissible at trial.

    Following the Homan decision the Ohio legislature "fixed the problem"

    by enacting a statute providing that an arresting officer need not

    administer the FST's in strict compliance with his training in order for the "results"

    to be admissible at trial. Instead, an officer may now testify concerning the

    results if the FST's are administered in substantial compliance with the

    standards. The Supreme Court of Ohio has since ruled that prior to the effective

    date of the statute testimony based on the officer's firsthand observation of the

    defendant's conduct and performance as a lay witness is admissible, but the Court

    still prohibited testimony regarding the test results, which may be tainted, if the

    tests are not conducted "by the book." State v. Schmitt, 101 Ohio St. 3d 79

    (2004). The court also explicitly extended the Homan rule to the admissibility of

    test results at trial.

    We all know that Drs. Marcelline Burns and Herbert Moskowitz, doing business as

    the Southern California Research Institute, conducted research on field sobrietytests back in the 1970's under a NHTSA contract. Prior to her appearance in State

    v. Lasworth, 131 N.M. 739, 42 P. 3d 844 (N.M. App . 2001), Dr. Burns had been

    recognized as an expert on horizontal gaze nystagmus in at least twenty-six

    states. A plucky trial judge ruled that, although Dr. Burns could testify as to the

    reliability of HGN, she was not qualified to establish its validity. Under New

    Mexico law, before scientific evidence may be admitted, the proponent must

    convince the trial court that the technique

    has scientific validity. In other words, there must be proof of the technique's

    ability to show what it purports to show. State v.Alberico, 116 N.M. 156, 167

    (1993).

    The appellate court agreed with the trial court that without a more detailed

    understanding of the causes of HGN, they could not be sure the results obtained

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    by Dr. Burns, et. al., were not a "coincidence." The court then reviewed the 1995

    Colorado FST validation study and made some interesting observations. The mean

    BAC of the 234 motorists who were detained was .152. Of the 234 motorists, 184

    had BAC's in excess of the statutory limit. If the police had simply arrested every

    one of the 234 drivers, seventy-nine percent of their arrest decisions would have

    been correct. In the actual study the arrest decision was correct eighty-six

    percent of the time, so FST's had only a marginal impact on correct decision

    making. Furthermore, even Dr. Burns has conceded that lack of smooth pursuit

    and distinct nystagmus at maximum deviation occur at low BAC's with some

    people but not others or on some occasions but not others. She has also admitted

    that there is evidence that smooth pursuit may break down at BAC's as low as .04

    and that controlled experiments at low BAC's are needed. Because thesestatements suggest that the HGN may be prone to false positives under New

    Mexico law, the appeals court opined that it was reasonable for the trial court to

    want to know more about the effects of low alcohol levels on the physiological

    mechanisms that produce HGN.;

    It gets better. The court noted that HGN was originally "validated" as a means of

    distinguish ing BAC's below .10 and those at or above .10. In the 1995 Colorado

    study the FST battery was used to distinguish BAC's above or below .05, and in

    the same study Dr. Burns suggested the FST's are also effective when the criterion

    for arrest is .08. As the appeals court said, "The district court could reasonably

    have wanted to hear a more detailed scientific explanation of how the

    physiological cues that make up the HGN FST vary with a subject's BAC in such a

    remarkable manner that the HGN FST can provide statistically valid and reliable

    evidence at varying criterion BAC's.

    The magnum opus on FST's must be United States v. Horn, 185 F. Supp. 2d 530

    (D. Md. 2002). The defendant called Spurgeon Cole, Ph.D., Professor ofPsychology at Clemson University, Yale Caplan, Ph.D., former chief toxicologist for

    the Office of the Medical Examiner in Maryland, Joel Wiesen, Ph.D., an industrial

    psychologist, and Harold Brull, a licensed psychologist, who testified either in

    person or by affidavit, that the tests were unreliable to prove a person was

    impaired by alcohol. Dr. Cole was particularly critical of the methods used by

    NHTSA to test and validate the FST's. He noted the unacceptably high error rates

    of 47% in the 1977 study and 32% in the 1981 Final Report, which were both

    eclipsed by the inter-rater reliability rate of only 57%. Dr. Cole's own study

    showed officers classified 46% of sober individuals as too impaired to drive. Of

    course, the studies upon which NHTSA had relied were not subjected to peer

    review nor published in the sense contemplated by Daubert.

    10.

    The magistrate ruled that:

    1.Results of properly conducted FST's are admissible to show probable cause to

    arrest.

    2. FST's cannot be used to establ ish a blood alcohol content.

    3. HGN has been shown to be caused by alcohol consumption among other

    reasons.

    4. If the officer is properly trained and qualified to perform FST's he may testify

    about his observations only, without referring to terms like "failed the test" or

    "exhibited" a number of "standardized clues."

    5. If the officer testifies he performed and observed HGN, the defendant may

    bring out the numerous other causes of HGN through cross-examination or judicial

    notice.

    6. The officer's lay opinion cannot include his technical or specialized knowledge

    concerning HGN.

    Although many courts across the country have casually admitted HGN evidence by

    reference to NHTSA materials or other court decisions, a handful have actually

    excluded HGN evidence. State v. Chastain, 960 P. 2d 756 (Kan. 1998), found that

    HGN does not satisfy the Frye standard and is, therefore, inadmissib le before the

    trier of fact. Mississippi, while allowing HGN evidence for probable cause

    determinations, has also held that HGN does not satisfy Frye. Young v. City of

    Brookhaven, 693 So. 2d 1355 (Miss. 1997).

    11. ISSUE: ADMISSIBILITY OF STATE ADMINISTERED BREATH TESTS IN

    DUI CASES

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    19. Patton v. City of Decatur, 337 So. 2d 321(Ala., l976).

    20. Fuenning v. Superior Court, 139 Ariz. 590, 680 P. 2d 121 (1984).

    21. Mayo v. City of Madison, 652 So. 2d 201(Ala., l994).

    The vast majority of states have statutory requirements very sim ilar to O.C.G.A.

    40-6-392 (a), which is based on the Uniform Motor Vehicle Code. It has been

    uniformly held that blood and breath test results are not admissible under these

    shortcut statutes if it cannot be shown that the tests were conducted in

    accordance with the "methods approved" by the responsible state agency. E.g.,

    State v. Broyles, 94 Ore. Appp. 334, 765 P. 2d 239 (1988); Westerman v. State,

    1974 Ok. Cr. 151, 525 P. 2d 1359 (1974). It goes without saying that a test

    cannot be performed according to approved methods if there are no approved

    methods.

    Last year the Court of Appeals deflected a frontal assault daring the State to

    reveal both the existence and content of their illusory approved methods. Scara v.

    State, 259 Ga. App. 510 (2003). This year they have gone even farther and held

    that the instructions in the Intoxilyzer 5000 operator's manual are not part of the

    methods approved by DFS, so a deviation therefrom goes to weight and not

    admissibility. State v. Palmaka, 2004 WL 595320 (Ga. App. decided March 26,

    2004).

    Currently, Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. R. 92-3-06 (12) provides that, "Administrative,

    procedural, and or/clerical steps performed in conduct ing a test shall not

    constitute a part of the approved method of analysis." Basically, DFS is saying,

    "How we do it is not a part of how we do it." While I must reluctantly concede

    that I do not expect our Court of Appeals to rectify the situation in my lifetime,

    perhaps some day the persuasive precedents from across the country will sway

    our Supreme Court.The Supreme Court of Alabama faced a si tuation not unlike the

    current state of affairs in Georgia when they decided Patton v. City of Decatur, 337

    So. 2d 321(Ala., l976). The Alabama statute provided that, "Chemical analyses of

    the person's blood, urine, breath to be considered valid under the provisions of

    this section shall have been performed according to methods approved by the

    State Board of Health..." In Patton the police officer testified that he had a license

    issued by the appropriate State authority to operate the breath testing device. In

    fact, that officer went farther than the officer in Scara and testified as to the

    procedure he followed, which was printed in the form of a check list on a card. The

    trial court had before it no certified methods promulgated by the

    12.

    Board of Health for the administration of breath tests. The Alabama Supreme

    Court ruled that their inability to ascertain the validity of the results

    demonstrated the absolute necessity for written procedural methods governing its

    use. Id. at 324. The Court also observed that unwritten standards were the

    equivalent of having no standards at all. As in Patton, no Georgia court has before

    it any evidence concerning the content of the "methods approved by the Division

    of Forensic Sciences" other than "How we do it is not a part of how we do it."

    The Division of Forensic Sciences and prosecutors all over the state apparently

    expect our courts to accept the proposition that "procedural steps" are not part of

    the approved methods, and in Palmaka the Court of Appeals impl icitly did so. My

    research has yielded only one reported appellate decision wherein the State

    explicitly put forward this proposition. In rejecting this method-procedure

    dichotomy, the Supreme Court of Arizona noted that method and procedure are

    interchangeable words. Fuenning v. Superior Court, 139 Ariz. 590, 680 P. 2d 121

    (1984).

    The appellate courts of other states have gone even further in requiring

    compliance with the requirement that breath tests be conducted according to

    methods approved by the applicable state agency. For example, it has been held

    that the state's failure to specify inspection procedures as part of their published

    administrative rules prohibited the prosecutor from proving that the chemical

    analysis was "performed according to methods approved by the Department of

    Forensic Sciences." Mayo v. City of Madison, 652 So. 2d 201(Ala., l994). The

    Court observed that, at a minimum, DFS should adopt particularized rules to

    ensure that the Intoxilyzer 5000 machines are effectively inspected for accuracy

    and reliability. Id. At 209. Interestingly, the rule in effect in Alabama at the time

    merely provided that each breath testing machine would be checked periodically

    and lacked any specific instructions regarding how the machine would be

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    inspected, what standards would be employed to determine that a machine was

    sufficiently accurate, nor what parts of the machine would be checked. In other

    words, the Alabama rule that was found lacking by the Mayo court is exactly what

    we have in Georgia today. Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. R. 92-3-.06 (8) provides, in

    part, that, "The Director, Division of Forensic Sciences: (a) will cause each

    instrument used in the administration of breath tests to be checked periodically

    for calibration and operation and a record of the results of all such checks to be

    maintained."

    The purpose of requiring published techniques and methods is to make the court's

    job easier. If proper, published regulations existed regarding the operation of the

    machine, the maintenance of the machine, and the competence and qualifications

    of permit holders, the court could simply go down the list and admit the test

    result, confident that the testing process met scientific standards that have been

    promulgated in an open setting and determined to be fair.

    13.

    The existing GBI implied consent rules can be summarized as follows: "We will

    approve whatever machine we want to, we will calibrate it whenever we feel like

    it, we will calibrate it to whatever standard we feel like, and we will issue permi ts

    to whoever we want. We will not publish any of our rules, and they are subject to

    change without notice. Go read the Forensic Sciences Act of 1997."

    ISSUE: FAILURE TO PRESERVE EXCULPATORY EVIDENCE IN DUI CASES

    22. California v. Trombetta, 467 U.S. 479 (1984).

    23. Arizona v. Youngblood, 488 U.S. 51 (1988).

    24. State v. Meza, 203 Ariz. 50, 50 P. 3d 407 (Ariz. App. 2002). 25 . Ex parte

    Gingo, 605 So. 2d 1237 (Ala. 1992).

    California v. Trombetta, 467 U.S. 479 (1984), involved a due process challenge to

    a DUI conviction where the state failed to preserve the defendant's breath

    sample. The Court rejected the defendant's argument, reasoning that samples

    were unlikely to be exculpatory since the procedures for running the Intoximeter

    rendered the results reliable. However, the Court's conclusion was premised on

    the reliability of the breath testing instrument and the fact that California law

    gave the defendant the opportunity to inspect the machine as well as that

    machine's weekly calibration results and the breath samples used in the

    calibrations. Trombetta did hold that the government violates due process when it

    fails to preserve evidence containing a known exculpatory value and comparable

    evidence is not obtainable by reasonable means. In other words, a due process

    challenge will be sustained when the exculpatory value of the evidence is apparent

    before it is destroyed.

    In Arizona v. Youngblood, 488 U.S. 51 (1988), the Supreme Court held that

    unless a criminal defendant can show bad faith on the part of the police, failure to

    preserve potentially useful evidence does not constitute a denial of due process of

    law. Justice Stevens' concurring opinion is notable for the remark that, "In my

    opinion there may well be cases in which the defendant is unable to prove that the

    State acted in bad faith but in which the loss or destruction of evidence is

    nevertheless so critical to the defense as to make a criminal trial fundamentally

    unfair."

    14.

    For a case where an appellate court found bad faith requiring suppression of a

    breath test result, please read State v. Meza, 203 Ariz. 50, 50 P. 3d 407 (Ariz.

    App. 2002). The Arizona Court of Appeals held that the state's failure to disclose

    Alcohol Data Acquisition Management System (ADAMS) records violated discovery

    rules, the State crime lab acted in bad faith when it concealed results of the

    breath analyzer's failed calibration tests from ADAMS and the defendant,

    suppression of test results was the appropriate sanction, and the defendant

    was entitled to a restitut ionary monetary sanction to alleviate the costs

    undertaken due to discovery violations.

    In a case where bad faith was not shown, the Alabama Supreme Court excluded

    test results in a hazardous waste disposal prosecution. Ex parte Gingo, 605 So.

    2d 1237 (Ala. 1992). Distinguishing Youngblood the court observed that in this

    case there was no evidence available to refute the test results because the

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    samples had been destroyed, and the very evidence necessary to convict the

    defendants was the test results. In other words, the defendants were indicted

    solely because of the test results done on the samples. Citing Justice Stevens'

    concurring opinion in Youngblood the unanimous Court excluded the State's test

    results. This case might be of use in that limited number of instances where the

    crime lab destroys blood or urine samples in a DUI-drugs case before you are

    retained. This would be especially true in a case where the arresting officer does

    not have the relevant skills, experience, or training to render an opinion as an

    expert on the issue of whether your client was under the influence of a drug. See

    People v. Workman, 312 Ill. App. 3d 305, 726 N.E. 2d 759 (2000).

    15. ISSUE: DUI COLLATERA L ESTOPPEL - DUI CRIMI NAL vs. DUI CIVIL

    TRIALS

    26. Gumma v. White, 345 Ill. App. 3d 610, 803 N.E. 2d 130 (2003).

    It seems well established that the state is not collaterally estopped from

    presenting evidence that a defendant refused to submit to state test at

    defendant's trial for DUI because an adminis trative law judge found that the police

    officer who stopped the defendant failed to properly inform the defendant of

    his/her implied consent rights. The ALJ's decision has no preclusive effect in a

    criminal trial because the state did not have a full opportunity to litigate the issue

    of whether the defendant refused testing during the administrative hearing.

    Swain v. State, 251 Ga. App. 110 (2001). Please note that in Swain, unlike earlier

    cases, an evidentiary hearing was held and the ALJ reached a decision on the

    merits.

    There are four requirements for application of the doctrine of collateral

    estoppel: 1. Both proceedings must involve the same parties or their privies. 2.

    The issue must have been actually litigated and determined in the first

    proceeding. 3. The determination must have been essential to the judgment

    in the first proceeding. 4. The party against whom the doctrine is asserted

    must have had a full opportunity to liti gate the issue in question.

    The Swain court said that even if the first three criteria had been met, the last had

    not. Affording great weight to the fact that only the driver, and not the State,

    may seek judicial review of an ALJ's decision, the court concluded that the State

    did not have a full opportunity to litigate the issue of whether Ms. Swain refused

    testing. The court also emphasized that the purpose of the driver's license

    suspension hearing was to provide a quick, informal procedure to remove

    dangerous drivers from Georgia's roadways. The court also cited the Supreme

    Court of Illinois for the proposition that to rule otherwise would make it necessary

    for the State to treat the suspension hearing as an integral part of the criminaltrial, so the process would seldom, if ever, be swift. People v. Moore, 138 Ill. 2d

    162, 561 N.E. 2d 648 (1990).

    Why would reliance on the Illinois decision be important? In Gumma v. White,

    345 Ill. App. 3d 610, 803 N.E. 2d 130 (2003), the Illinois Court of Appeals

    distinguished the situation where the criminal proceeding has preceded the

    administrative hearing. Mr. Gumma's breath was held inadmissible because the

    police had failed to maintain records required by Illinois Administrative Code, and

    the DUI charge was dismissed. Therefore, the rationale of the Moore decision, that

    the administrative process be swift, was inapplicable, and collateral estoppel

    precluded the suspension of Mr. Gumma's license. This decision will be of

    limited applicability in Georgia because a non-DUI disposition of the underlying

    charge results in deletion of the administrative suspension, but at least in cases of

    alleged refusal it will be of some utility.

    16. ISSUE: DUI DWI Drunk Driving R OADBLOCKS

    27. State v. McCleery, 251 Neb. 940, 560 N.W. 2d 789 (1997).

    28. Commonwealth v. Buchanon, 122 S.W. 3d 565 (Ky. 2004).

    In State v. McCleery, 251 Neb. 940, 560 N.W. 2d 789 (1997), the issue was

    whether stopping one's car one-fourth of a block from a sobriety checkpoint and

    then backing away from the checkpoint constitutes sufficient evidence to have a

    reasonable suspicion that the driver is, has been, or is about to be engaged in

    criminal behavior. The checkpoint was conducted in total compliance with the

    Department of Transportation policy, and a DOT report on "The Use of Sobriety

    Checkpoints for Impaired Driving Performance" provides in part, "A motorist who

    wishes to avoid the checkpoint by legally turning before entering the checkpoint

    area should be allowed to do so unless a traffic violation is observed or probable

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    cause exists to take other action. The act of avoiding a sobriety checkpoint does

    not constitute grounds for a stop." So, the Nebraska Supreme Court reversed the

    trial court's order denying defendant's motion to suppress all evidence obtained

    pursuant to her unlawful detention.

    The case from Kentucky is interesting, and with Baker on the books should be

    persuasive in Georgia. The Court held that the evidence indicated that the

    primary purpose of a roadblock conducted by the sheriff's department, which was

    conducted by the department placing a "spotter" several hundred yards before the

    roadblock who radioed ahead if a vehicle looked "suspicious," was the interdic tion

    of illegal drugs, and thus the roadblock was in violation of the Fourth

    Amendment. Commonwealth v. Buchanon, 122 S.W. 3d 565 (Ky. 2004). The

    court was not persuaded by the clever sheriff's tactic of placing signs announcing

    a DUI roadblock by the side of the highway.

    17. ISSUE: THE JUSTIFI CATION AND NECESSITY DUI DEFEN SE

    29. Stodghill v. State, 2004 WL 193187 (Miss. App. decided February 3, 2004).

    30. People v. Pena, 197 Cal. Rptr. 264 (Cal. Ct. App. 1983) .

    While I am unaware of any Georgia case law addressing the justification and

    necessity defense in a DUI case, I have successfully used the defense on one

    occasion. We do have one case holding that the defense is available in a habitual

    violator prosecution. The defendant was charged while driving his very pregnant

    wife to the doctor, and the trial court refused to charge the jury on the

    justification defense. The Georgia Supreme Court reversed the conviction and

    ruled that a jury could have found that seeking med ical help was proper

    justification, so the instruction should have been given. Tarvestad v. State, 261

    Ga. 605 (1991).

    Stodghill v. State, 2004 WL 193187 (Miss. App. decided February 3, 2004),

    reminds me of the case I tried several years ago. Mr. Stodghill and his girlfriend

    were spending the night at a cabin in a remote location when she became

    violently ill with seizure-like activity. He was unsuccessful in summoning an

    ambulance on his cell phone, so he decided to drive her to the hospital. He was,

    of course, stopped, charged with DUI, and convicted. In reversing the conviction

    the Court of Appeals noted that three elements must be established by the

    defendant: 1) the act charged must have been done to prevent a significant evil;

    2) there must have been no adequate alternative; and 3) the harm caused must

    not have been disproportionate to the harm avoided.

    And now for my favorite case of the thirty, People v. Pena, 197 Cal. Rptr. 264 (Cal.

    Ct. App. 1983). A deputy sheriff observed the defendant and his girlfriend asleep

    in his car and decided to investigate because of the late hour. Upon approaching

    the car, the officer stated that he smelled alcohol. The girlfriend was semi-nude,

    wearing only a long fur coat over a "brief see-through teddy nightgown." The

    deputy then conducted what he claimed was a search for weapons, examining the

    lady's body under her fur coat with a flashlight and continuing his examination of

    the lady's rear. He then ordered her into his patrol car to take her home,

    ostensibly for her protection.

    Proving that chivalry is not dead, the defendant followed them out of fear for his

    girlfriend's safety and was arrested at her house for DUI. The California Court of

    Appeals held that the defense was available to the defendant and that he would

    be entitled to an acquittal, notwithstanding the fact that he was legally

    intoxicated, if he could establish the defense on the facts by convincing the jury

    that: 1) he held a genuine belief that the lady was in danger of assault by or

    through the deputy, 2) his good faith belief was objectively reasonable under thetotality of the circumstances, 3) he operated his vehicle only because of his fear

    for the girlfriend's safety and for no other purpose, 4) he had no opportunity to

    engage in alternative legal means of protecting his g irlfriend from the danger he

    believed she faced; and 5) he was not substantially at fault in the creation of the

    emergency situation which he claims justified his action in driving while

    intoxicated.

    While rare, these cases can and do arise. And remember, when the use of a

    flashlight and the circumstances don't quite fit, you must acquit.

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