Posts Tagged ‘urine test’

Minnesota DWI Implied Consent Test Certification: Is Defective Good Enough?

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

 

On March 30, 2010, the Minnesota Court of Appeals filed an unpublished opinion in a case entitled Kruckow v. Comissioner of Public Safety, in which the petitioner, Ms. Kruckow, challenged the revocation of her driver’s license under Minnesota’s Implied Consent law with two arguments: First, she challenged the certification of her test results because it appeared that the officer had certified her urine test results before the test results were actually known; and second, she argued that her procedural due process rights had been violated because the test results weren’t certified properly.  The Appellate Court disagreed. 

Police officers must comply with certification requirements when determining whether there is probable cause to request an individual suspected of driving under the influence of alcohol to submit to a breath, urine or blood test under the Implied Consent law in Minnesota, according to Minnesota Statute section 169A.52 subd. 4(a), which reads: 

“Upon certification by the peace officer that there existed probable cause to believe the person had been driving, operating, or in physical control of a motor vehicle in violation of section 169A.20 (driving while impaired) and that the person submitted to a test and the test results indicate an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more or the presence of a controlled substance listed in schedule I or II . . . then the commissioner shall revoke the person’s license. . .” 

This certification is really line nine on the Implied Consent form; officers check the box next to line nine once they have the results of a person’s blood, breath or urine test and those results indicate an alcohol concentration of over 0.08.  The officer then signs the form and this is the certification to which the statute refers. 

Kruckow challenged the certification in her case because the signature and the checking of the box in line nine were in a different color ink and she argued it appeared as though the box had been checked and the signature completed before her urine test results had been returned.  

In disagreeing with Kruckow, the Appellate Court cited to a case entitled Johnson v. Commissioner of Public Safety, decided in 2006, in which the Court of Appeals stated that even when a peace officer’s certificate is defectively completed, as long as the officer provides other supporting documentation – like the officer’s narrative report, the notice of order and revocation and the test results showing the individual’s blood alcohol was over the legal limit – the certification is proper. 

The second argument Krukcow made unsuccessfully was that her procedural due process rights had been violated because of the improper certification. The Court again disagreed and cited to Johnson, stating that the alleged improper certification had not created “a direct and personal harm,” which is what is required to prove a procedural due process violation.  In this case as well, the Court stated that because it was undisputed that Kruckow’s urine test results were 0.18, she also had not proven a direct and personal harm, which would have given her due process argument merit.

Minnesota Court Issues Ruling in DWI Urine Test Case

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

 

Within the last several months there has been a string of rulings by the Minnesota Court of Appeals with regard to urine test challenges.  I have discussed these rulings in my earlier blog postings.   http://www.kanslaw.com/blog/minnesota-court-issues-ruling-on-reliabililty-of-urine-testing-in-dwi-cases.html and http://www.kanslaw.com/blog/minneapolis-dwi-lawyer-mn-court-issues-ruling-on-urine-testing.html.  These cases, for the most part, dealt with the issue of  ”urine pooling” and whether and expert witness should be allowed to testify with regard to this issue at the hearing or trial.

However, in the present case, Stucco vs. Commissioner of Public Safety, the court focused on this issue of whether a urine test obtained by the police after a DWI arrest is in violation of driver’s Fourth Amendment Constitutional right against unlawful searches and seizures.

In Stocco, the driver was asked to submit to a urine test subsequent to his DWI arrest and after he was read the Minnesota Implied Consent Advisory informing him that a refusal to submit to a test is a crime under the Minnesota Implied Consent Law.  The driver submitted to the urine test which ultimately was tested by the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA ) and revealed an alcohol concentration of .14.

The driver’s attorney first argued that the urine test was not reliable because of the delay between the submission of the urine test and its ultimate testing by the BCA.  An expert witness, testifying for the defense at the hearing in the lower court, stated that if the urine sample remained at room temperature or below freezing  prior to testing, it may not be reliable.  Without proof or evidence that either of these things actually occurred, the court ruled against the driver on this issue.

The second issue raised by the driver was whether the urine test was obtained by the police in violation of his Fourth Amendment Constitutional right against unlawful searches and seizures.  The driver’s attorney argued that the ”implied consent” in this case was not voluntary consent as the test was coerced when the police told the driver he would be charged with the crime of refusal if he did not provide the urine sample.  Furthermore, it was argued, since the driver did not give consent the police needed a warrant in order obtain his urine sample.  Lastly, the driver’s attorney argued since the police did not have a warrant and the exigent exception to the warrant requirement did not exist, the urine test should be thrown out as violation of the driver’s Fourth Amendment Right.

 However, the court, citing its earlier rulings, held that exigent circumstances did, in fact, exist in this case allowing for an exception to the warrant requirement.  The court, citing an earlier Minnesota Supreme Court ruling, found that the natural dissipation of alcohol creates this exigency allowing for the exception.

Minnesota’s DWI/BWI Breath Tests

Friday, July 10th, 2009

Anyone who has either experienced DUI or BWI charges, or who has had a friend or colleague experience DUI or BWI charges, probably wondered why were there two types of breath tests?  

The first breath test an individual facing DUI or BWI charges experiences is called the PBT — or preliminary breath test.  Sometimes this is also referred to as the “portable breath test”, because it’s a hand-held unit that officers carry in their squad cars or boats and it’s administered on the road side or in the boat, before an officer places an individual under arrest for DUI or BWI, but after an officer has stopped a car or boat.

The PBT is rarely used as evidence against an individual for the purpose of charging him or her with DUI or BWI.  Instead, the PBT is used by the officer to determine whether he has probable cause to arrest an individual with DUI or BWI in order to bring the individual into a police station and administer the evidentiary blood alcohol concentration test.

It is NOT a crime to refuse the PBT.  However,  an officer may use an individual’s refusal of a PBT as probabe cause to arrest the individual for DUI or BWI.  The statute that governs how and when a PBT can be used is located at Minn. Stat. 169A.42, and can be found here: https://www.revisor.leg.state.mn.us/statutes/?id=169A.41

The “evidentiary blood alcohol concentration test” is a breath, urine or blood test.  When it is a breath test, the Intoxilyzer 5000EN machine is used.  Lately, there has been a lot of coverage of the challenges in district court in Minnesota to the Intoxilyzer machine.  You may have heard some of the buzz regarding “Source Code Motions”.  For more on what the source code is and why it was challenged, check out the in-depth article here on our website: http://www.kanslaw.com/intoxilyzer-500en.html

The statute that governs how and when the evidentiary chemical tests can be used is Minn. Stat. 160A.51, and is located here: https://www.revisor.leg.state.mn.us/statutes/?id=169A.51

The evidentiary chemical test is the breath test that individuals are required to submit two breath samples.  This can be confusing, given the way Statutes 169A.41 and 169A.51 are written.  The PBT does not have to be administered twice — and in fact, rarely is.  However, the PBT is the less reliable test and the test that is not used as evidence to charge an individual with DUI or BWI.  The evidentiary test, if a breath test, requires two breath samples, and this is to the individual’s advantage because the way the law is written, the police officers have to take the lower of the two readings and they have to round off the third decimal place, which can result in a lower score.  For example, if an individual blows a 0.099 on the first try, and a 0.121 on the second, the reading that is officially recorded is 0.09, because that is the lowest reading, rounded off.

It is important to remember that the evidentiary chemical test is the breath or urine or blood test to which an individual cannot refuse to submit without facing additional charges.  This is also known as Minnesota’s Implied Consent Law.  To read the statute that discusses the consequences of refusing the evidentiary test, click here: https://www.revisor.leg.state.mn.us/statutes/?id=169A.52

One of the unintended side-effects of the success of Minnesota DUI lawerys’ challenges to the Intoxilyzer Source Code is that some police stations are now administering only urine and/or blood tests when individuals are arrested for DUI or BWI.  Because urine and blood tests have to be sent into the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension’s lab to be analyzed, the dramatic increase in the number of these tests being sent to the lab have created a back log.  Individuals who have been arrested for DUI or BWI and given urine tests can be told they have to wait 3-6 weeks for the results of their chemical test.

During this holding period, though, an individual can still be charged with driving or boating under the influence of alcohol and still be given a court date for arraignment.  Therefore, it is a good idea to contact a Minnesota DUI lawyer as soon as an individual has been arrested for DUI or BWI, even if charges haven’t been finalized yet, because the wait time for the urine or blood test results does not stop the clock from ticking on the criminal process that is set into motion by an arrest.


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