OPINION
Bily Huсkaby appeals from a conviction for reckless driving, AS 28.35.040. The sole issue in the merit appeal concerns the admissibility of a breathalyzer test result. The sentence is also appealed as excessive.
Huckaby was indicted and tried for three counts of negligent homicide growing out of a single vehicle accident during which he lost control of a pickup truck he was driving; it left the road and turned over. The decedents wеre friends of Huck-aby riding as passengers in the rear-bed of the truck. The evidence at trial established *976 that Huckaby was speeding and had been drinking. Thе breathalyzer examination administered to Huckaby after the accident resulted in a .17 blood alcohol count.
Huckaby makes two separate attacks on the admission of the breathalyzer test result at his trial. First, he contends that the superior court erred in refusing to hold an evidentiary hearing on his motion to suppress, which was based on an affidavit of his counsel that the breathalyzer machine may not have been properly calibrated since the machine required thirty minutes to warm up as opposed to the twenty minutes the manufacturer’s manual indicated shоuld be required. Second, Huckaby claims that because the state did not meet its burden of proving that the statutory foundational requirements were mеt, the court erred in admitting the breathalyzer result.
Huckaby challenged the “breathalyzer” with a pretrial motion for an order in li-mine. The trial court did not dеny the motion on its merits but simply held that Huckaby’s factual assertions were insufficient to present a probability of machine malfunction or warrant аn evidentiary hearing. We agree. In any event, Hucka-by waived the issue by failing to object to the introduction of the breathalyzer evidence аt trial. We find no error.
Huckaby contends that the court was clearly mistaken in categorizing him as a worst offender and that the one-year sentеnce imposed is excessive. Generally, the maximum sentence should not be imposed without some foundation for characterizing the defendant as the worst type of offender within the class of persons convicted of a particular crime.
Sielak v. State,
Huckaby suggests that the severe sentence indicates that the judge, despite his comments, placed undue emphasis on the fact that three people died. Wе believe Huckaby’s extreme recklessness warranted his sentence. We cannot say the record suggests that the judge improperly considеred the three deaths.
2
That there were
*977
three people in the rear of his pickup who were extremely vulnerable in case of any accident wаs an undisputed fact at trial and one the judge could properly consider at sentencing in evaluating the extent of defendant’s recklessnеss.
See Alexander v. State,
Huckaby also argues that his sentence is excessive in the light of statistics which show that the normal sentence for reckless driving is zero to three or five days in jail, barring an extensive record of prior traffic violations and that thirty to sixty days is typical for cases involving a death. These statistics would be relevant only if it were shown that the other offenders were similarly situated with Huckaby.
Compare Salazar v. State,
The sentencing judge carefully discussed the
Chaney
factors and the weights he accorded them.
3
The severity of Huckaby’s offense within the crime of reckless driving and the need to
deter him, to
deter others, and to reaffirm societal norms justify the onе-year term. The sentence was not clearly mistaken.
McClain v. State,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Many of the factors often stressed in declaring a person a “worst offender” are simply inapposite in a traffic case-for instance, whether the crime is violent, premeditated, or intended to harm multiple victims. See
generally Wilson v. State,
. A trial judge imposing sentence may consider any facts relevant to the defendant’s reformatiоn or the need to protect the community from the defendant or those similarly situated, which are verified in the record.
Nukapigak v. State,
We would, however, caution judges rendering conclusions inconsistent with implicit jury findings to make their determination and the supporting reasons clear. Here the trial court specifically dеclined to consider the charge from which Huckaby was acquitted. We do not find that he unduly emphasized the underlying facts.
. His emphasis was consistent with the supreme court’s observation in other motor vehicle cases that the nature of the crime — no criminal intent but serious consequences — mandates heavy emphasis in sentencing on deterrence of others and the reaffirmation of societal condemnation for driving while intoxicated.
Bishop v. State,
