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35 Crim. Just. 27 (2020-2021)
The Privacy Implications of DUI Refusals and Forced Blood Alcohol Tests: What Judges Can Do

handle is hein.journals/cjust35 and id is 93 raw text is: 
CRIMINAL   JUSTICE  I SUMMER   2020


The Privacy Implications


of DUI Refusals and


Forced Blood Alcohol


Tests





BY  -ON.  ZUBERI   BAKARI   WILLIAMS


Usually, a refusal   to take an alcohol breath test
      ends the collection of evidence of alcohol for
      routine DUI stops. (DUI and DWI are used in-
terchangeably for the purposes of this article. The fo-
cus is on all alcohol-related driving offenses.) In most
jurisdictions, a refusal allows the prosecutor to argue
for a negative inference against the driver, but that
typically results in pleas and convictions for lesser
alcohol-related offenses. Without some horrible ac-
cident or shocking behavior by the driver caught on
police body-worn camera, a refusal significantly alters
the prosecution of DUI cases. That is, until now.
  In Mitchell v. Wisconsin, 139 S. Ct. 2525 (June 27,
2019), the Supreme Court explained that the right
mix of circumstances in a DUI encounter can create
an exception to the warrant requirement and allow a
forced blood test of the driver (here the driver was
unconscious  and could not consent; Wisconsin is an
implied-consent state). In Mitchell, the Court deter-
mined  such circumstances did not exist in the case at
bar. However, in reaching its conclusion, the Court re-
inforced the preference that law enforcement should
first seek warrants from judges or magistrates in DUI
cases. Some state and local prosecutors are seizing
on this language to support a new policy of seeking
warrants from judges in routine DUI cases where the
driver is conscious but refuses to take the breath
test. If the warrants are granted, it improves pros-
ecutors' ability to seek DUI convictions for greater
offenses, leverage more favorable plea offers, and ask
judges for longer jail sentences.

Published in Criminal Justice, Volume 35, Number 2, Summer 2020. © 2020 by
the American Bar Association. Reproduced with permission. All rights reserved.
This information or any portion thereof may not be copied or disseminated in
any form or by any means or stored in an electronic database orretrieval system
without the express written consent of the American Bar Association.


  This article is aimed at igniting a policy discussion
on the role of judges in granting warrants for forced
blood draws, post-Mitchell. To be sure, none of
the suggestions below are required as a matter of
law. Some of these recommendations  may even be
perceived as provocative or difficult to administer.
However, given the serious nature and consequences
of forcibly taking a person's blood for evidence,
critical and novel thinking is warranted. First, the
judge should use an evidentiary standard greater
than the mere probable cause required by law
because  blood draws are fundamentally invasive and
eviscerate traditional notions of privacy. Second,
judges should prescribe the manner of collection,
retention, and destruction of the blood seized to
prevent misuse of samples, including DNA data
collection. Third, judges should keep demographic
data on drivers and determine if there is a pattern or
practice that violates notions of fundamental fairness
and equal protection, especially for people of color
and other historically targeted groups.

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