Following a bench trial, the State Court of Fayette County found Lee Jacobs guilty of driving while having an alcohol concentration of 0.08 grams or more (DUI per se), OCGA § 40-6-391 (a) (5). Jacobs appeals, contending that the undisputed facts established that he was stopped at a highway roadblock that was implemented by a field officer, rather than by a supervisor at the programmatic level, and, therefore, that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence obtained as a result of that roadblock. 1 Finding no error, we affirm.
It is axiomatic that stopping a vehicle is a seizure that violates the Fourth Amendment unless it is reasonable.
City of Indianapolis v. Edmond,
To justify a stop under this exception, the State must prove that a highway roadblock program “was implementеd at the programmatic level for a legitimate primary purpose,”
3
that is, that the roadblock was ordered by a supervisor rather than by officers in the field and was “implemented to ensure roadway safety rather than as a constitutionally imрermissible pretext aimed at discovering gen
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eral evidence of ordinary crime.” (Citations omitted.)
Hobbs v. State,
In addition, the State must prove that
all vehicles [were] stopped as opposed to random vehicle stops; the delay to motorists [was] minimal; the roadblock operation [was] well identified as a police checkpoint; and the screening officer’s training and experience [was] sufficient to qualify him [or her] to makе an initial determination as to which motorists should be given field tests for intoxication.
(Citation and punctuation omitted.)
LaFontaine v. State,
In this case, Jacobs focuses on the dichotomy between field officers and supervisory officers, contending that the officer who implemented the roadblock that led to his DUI arrest was a field officer because she “solely worked in the fiеld.” In addition, Jacobs contends that the officer’s plan to conduct that specific roadblock was not approved in advance by a superior officer at a programmatic level and that the authority to order a roadblоck had not been delegated to her, either explicitly by the chief of police or other administrative officer or implicitly through a department manual or formal policy.
The only witness at the hearing on Jacobs’ motion to supprеss was Officer Crawshaw, who held the rank of captain in the uniformed division of the Fayetteville Police Department. Crawshaw testified that she decided, before going out on the road at the beginning of the shift, to conduct a roadblock beginning at 1:00 a.m. оn July 25, 2009, on Georgia Highway 54 at Cobblestone Boulevard. As a captain, Crawshaw was the senior officer in the field, charged with supervising a shift that consisted of herself, a lieutenant, and at least five officers. Above Crawshaw in the chain of command were one of four majors and the chief of police, who decided the policies *119 within the departments. The Fayetteville police chief established departmental uniform goals, pursuant to which each shift would conduct a certain numbеr of road safety checks per quarter. Before July 25, 2009, Crawshaw discussed the uniform goals generally, along with the prescribed procedure for conducting a roadblock, with the chief and the majors. As a shift supervisor, Crawshaw was authorized by her superiors to plan and implement roadblocks. Although she obtained some input from her subordinates, Crawshaw did not obtain prior approval, either written or verbal, from her superiors of her plan to have a roadblock on July 25, 2009.
Crawshaw was present to supervise the roadblock and did not interact with motorists when the flow of traffic was light. When traffic was backed up, however, she stepped in to assist her subordinates. As a result, Crawshaw was the officer who approached Jacobs’ window аnd asked for his driver’s license and proof of insurance. She immediately smelled alcohol on Jacobs’ breath, told Jacobs to pull off to the side of the road, and directed a subordinate officer to conduct a DUI investigation. As a result of the investigation, the subordinate officer arrested Jacobs for DUI.
Applying controlling precedents, we conclude that Crawshaw was a supervisor by virtue of the fact that her rank and job duties required her to supervise the work of a number of officers of subordinate rank, even though she supervised those subordinates in the field, rather than from behind a desk, and even though she initially screened Jacobs at the roadblock.
5
Turning to whether the State proved that the roadblock was implemented аt the programmatic level for a legitimate primary purpose, we note that our courts have not precisely defined what it means for a decision to be made at the programmatic level.
6
We conclude, however, that Crawshaw’s
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decision to implement the partiсular roadblock that resulted in Jacobs’ arrest was made at the programmatic level for a legitimate primary purpose because she decided to set up the roadblock to carry out the directive of her superior officers to conduct road safety checks at a prescribed frequency.
7
Her testimony that she was expressly authorized to plan and implement roadblocks, which was uncontradicted, is sufficient to establish that fact, regardless of whether this delеgation of authority was memorialized in a written manual or policy.
8
Further, “the fact that the officer who order[s] [a] roadblock also attend [s] it does not mean that the roadblock was not implemented at the programmatic level.” (Punctuation and footnote omitted.)
Harwood v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
When the evidence adduced at a hearing on a motion to suрpress is uncontroverted and no question of witness credibility is presented, the trial court’s application of the law to undisputed facts is subject to de novo appellate review.
State v. Tousley,
See
LaFontaine v.
State,
See
City of Indianapolis v. Edmond,
See also
United States u.
Sczubelek,
See
Gonzalez v. State,
See, e.g.,
Giacini v. State,
See
Gonzalez v. State,
See
Rappley v. State,
LaFontaine v. State,
Cf.
Thomas v. State,
