Accident with unconscious driver was
exigency for police to take blood. State v.
Jones 441 NJ Super. 317(App. Div. 2015)
In Missouri v. McNeely, 133 S. Ct. 1552 (2013),
the United States Supreme Court considered whether "the natural
metabolization of alcohol in the bloodstream presents a per se exigency that
justifies an exception to the Fourth Amendment's warrant requirement for
nonconsensual blood testing in all drunk-driving cases." Id. 133 S. Ct. at
1556, (emphasis added). Concluding that fact alone did not present a "per
se exigency," the Supreme Court held, "consistent with general Fourth
Amendment principles, that exigency in this context must be determined case by
case based on the totality of the circumstances." Ibid. This matter was
summarily remanded to the court by the Supreme Court for reconsideration in
light of the Court's decision in State v.
Adkins, ___ N.J. ___ (2015), holding that the totality of the circumstances
analysis described in McNeely should be given pipeline retroactivity.
This was not a routine DWI case in which the
dissipation of blood alcohol was the sole basis for determining an exigency
existed. To the contrary, defendant caused a multiple vehicle accident at a
busy intersection and crashed into a building, raising concern the building
would collapse. Numerous police, firefighters and emergency medical services
personnel responded to the scene, where the investigation took hours. It took
one-half hour to extricate defendant, who was unconscious, from her badly
damaged vehicle. Both she and a passenger in another car had to be transported to
the hospital.
Viewing the totality of the circumstances, the court is satisfied that an
objective exigency existed and that the officer "might reasonably have
believed that he was confronted with an emergency, in which the delay necessary
to obtain a warrant, under the circumstances, threatened 'the destruction of
evidence[.]'" Schmerber, supra, 86 S.
Ct. at 1835. The court finds no reason to disturb our prior decision reversing
the order that suppressed the results of the blood sample
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