Following the deaths of two persons whose car was struck from the rear by the defendant’s car, the defendant was convicted of two counts of manslaughter and two counts of vehicular homicide. There was abundant evidence that the defendant was intoxicated — that he had been drinking in the hours before the accident, that his car was travelling erratically and at high speed, that his breath smelled strongly of alcohol, that his voice was “thick-tongued,” his eyes glassy, and his gait wobbly, that he failed a field sobriety test, and that his breathalyzer readings (.25 and .21) and blood test reading
Before trial, in response to a motion to suppress various statements the defendant made to police officers at the accident scene and during booking, the judge excluded all such statements based on “overwhelming evidence of [the] defendant’s high degree of intoxication,” from which the judge concluded that the “statements were not voluntary and the product of a rational intellect and a free will and that the defendant was too intoxicated to have voluntarily, knowingly and intelligently waived his Miranda rights.”
At trial the defendant objected to the admission in evidence of the breathalyzer and blood test results on the ground that the defendant had not been informed prior to electing to take the tests that the accident victims had died. 2 It was conceded, however, that the police officers did tell the defendant that he was being charged with operating under the influence of intoxicating liquor, and it is inferable that the defendant must have known from the crushed condition of the victims’ car that they at least suffered serious bodily injury. 3 The judge overruled the objection, and this ruling is the principal claim of error.
The defendant casts his contention on appeal somewhat differently from his objection below: there, he focused on the officers’ failure to inform him of the full seriousness of the charges; on appeal, he focuses on an alleged contradiction
Where there is probable cause to believe that a defendant has been operating a vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, the defendant has no constitutional right to refuse a blood test or a breathalyzer test.
Schmerber
v.
California,
“Implied consent” statutes typically forbid testing where the suspect refuses or withholds his consent at the scene.
4
So far as we have found, no State court has interpreted its statute to require consent or waiver in accordance with the “voluntary, knowing, and intelligent” standard applicable to waiver of important constitutional rights. Decisions suggesting the contrary are numerous.
See Bush
v.
Bright,
Here there is no question that the defendant consented to the two breathalyzer tests in the customary sense of that term and that he requested the blood test when told of his right to such a test by the police. The only suggestion of nonconsent arose from doubts as to his sobriety at the time. The testing therefore complied with the statutory requirements, and the results were properly admitted in evidence. 5
The judgments require modification, however, for a different reason. The Commonwealth concedes that the motor vehicle homicide convictions were duplicative of the manslaughter convictions. See
Commonwealth
v.
Jones,
So ordered.
Notes
Paragraph (e) of subdivision (1) was amended after the accident by St. 1986, c. 620, § 11, without altering the statutory standards for presumptions of not being under the influence (.05 or below) and being under the influence (.10 or above).
The judge observed that the defendant should have raised any objection to the admission of the test results by way of a pretrial motion to suppress. See Mass.R.Crim.P. 15(c),
The police officers indicated at trial that they would not themselves draw a conclusion as to death but would wait until the medical examiner had pronounced death.
The various States’ “implied consent” statutes are the product of Federal mandate. See the discussion in the Report of the Legislative Research Council Relative to Massachusetts Implementation of the National Highway Safety Act of 1966, Sen. Doc. No. 980 at 48-53 (1968).
Commonwealth
v.
Angivoni,
