Lead Opinion
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
In this interlocutory appeal by the prosecution, we review the trial court's decision to suppress defendant Rodger Null's incriminating statements, to suppress his refusal to take a breath test, and to dismiss the driving-under-the-influence ("DUI") charge against him. The suppression of Null's statements presents an appropriate basis for interlocutory appeal, but the suppression of his refusal to take a breath test and the dismissal of the DUI charge do not. To avoid piecemeal litigation and potential double-jeopardy concerns, we exercise our discretion to review the entire appeal under Rule 21 of the Colorado Appellate Rules, and we affirm.
In this case, Null was detained on the side of the road while Washington County police officers investigated him for drunk driving. Null was not free to leave during this time, and he failed a series of roadside sobriety tests, including a preliminary breath test. Following this relatively lengthy detention, two officers surrounded Null, whose back was against a patrol car, and interrogated him without first advising him of his Miranda rights. Null gave several inerimina-ting responses. Applying our precedent in People v. Taylor,
The express consent statute not only obligates a driver to take a blood or breath test but also obligates law enforcement to provide a driver with the test that he or she chooses absent extraordinary circumstances. The trial court found that no extraordinary circumstances justified law enforcement's failure to provide Null with a blood test. As a remedy for this violation, the court suppressed Null's refusal to take the breath test and dismissed the DUI charge. We agree with the trial court's findings of fact and conclusions of law. According to the language of the express consent statute and our precedent, the prosecution has the burden to show that extraordinary or non-routine circumstances prevented medical personnel from responding to law enforcement's requests for a blood draw. The prosecution in this case presented no evidence to explain why medical personnel refused law enforcement's request. It therefore failed to carry its burden. Thus, we affirm the trial court's decision to suppress the evidence of Null's refusal to take a breath test. We also conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by dismissing the DUI charge. We remand this case to the trial court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. Facts and Proceedings Below
In April 2009, Deputy Henderson of the Washington County Sheriff's Office responded to a call concerning a stranded motorist on County Road 80. When Deputy Henderson arrived at the scene, he saw Null sitting in a van parked on the side of the road. Null flashed his headlights at Henderson, and Henderson pulled over and approached the vehicle. Null's eyes looked bloodshot, and his speech appeared slurred. Henderson asked Null for his license and registration, and Null provided a Colorado Identification Card. Henderson contacted dispatch and discovered that Null's license had been revoked. Deputy Henderson asked Null if he had been drinking, and Null responded that he had consumed a few beers earlier. Henderson then asked Null to perform several roadside sobriety tests, such as walking heel-to-toe in a straight line and counting while standing on one leg. Null failed these tests.
Henderson then told Null to lean against his patrol car while he called another officer, Deputy Palmer, to come to the seene to administer a preliminary breath test. While Henderson called Palmer, Null began to walk away from the patrol car into an adjacent field. Henderson followed Null into the field and told him to turn around and stop. Null lay down in the field. Henderson then told Null to get up and return to the patrol car. Null complied.
Approximately fifteen minutes after Henderson first encountered Null, Palmer arrived to administer a preliminary breath test. The results showed that Null had a breath alcohol level of 0.19, well in excess of the legal limit.
The two officers then began to question Null about how much alcohol he had consumed, where he was coming from, and how he had arrived at his present location. The officers testified that they knew these questions were likely to lead to incriminating responses. Null answered the officers' ques
After questioning Null, Deputy Palmer advised him of his right to choose either a breath or blood test under Colorado's express consent statute, section 42-4-1301.1(2)(a)(I). Null requested a blood test. The officers then advised Null of his Miranda rights and placed him under arrest for driving under the influence of alcohol.
Henderson placed Null in his patrol car and took him to the Washington County jail. The Washington County Sheriff's Office contracts with the ambulance service for Washington County to do blood tests for alcohol under the express consent statute. On the way to the county jail, Henderson called police dispatch and asked them to contact the ambulance service for a blood test. Dispatch called the ambulance service but received no response. Upon arriving at the jail, Henderson contacted dispatch again, and dispatch called the ambulance service a second time. Several minutes later, dispatch notified Henderson that the ambulance service had refused to respond. Dispatch did not tell Henderson why the ambulance service refused to respond, and the prosecution has offered no evidence explaining this refusal. Henderson informed Null that no one was available to do a blood test and that Null would have to take a breath test instead or refuse testing. Null refused testing.
The prosecution charged Null with a felony for aggravated driving after revocation, in violation of section 42-2-206(1)(b), C.R.S. (2009); with a misdemeanor for driving under the influence, in violation of section 42-4-1301(1)(a), C.R.S. (2009); and with other offenses for driving under restraint, failing to have insurance, and failing to have a registration card with the vehicle.
After a pretrial evidentiary hearing, the court granted Null's motion to suppress his incriminating statements. The court ruled that, after Henderson brought Null back to the patrol car and the officers physically surrounded him, "a reasonable person in [Null's] position would have believed that his liberty was constrained to an extent associated with a formal arrest." The court explained that, at this point in the encounter, "the situation had morphed from an initial citizen-police encounter[,] to an investigatory detention, into a formal arrest." The court concluded that Null was in custody for Miranda purposes and suppressed the incerimi-nating statements that he made in response to the officers' questioning.
The court also granted Null's motion to dismiss the DUI charge and to suppress the evidence of his refusal to submit to the breath test. The court stated that the failure to provide Null with his requested blood test violated Null's statutory rights under Colorado's express consent statute. The court reasoned that suppression of Null's refusal to take the breath test and dismissal of the alcohol-related charge were proper remedies unless the prosecution presented evidence that exceptional cireumstances justified the failure to provide the requested test. The court found that the record did not disclose why the medical personnel refused to administer the blood test. The court concluded that "there [was] no showing of extraordinary cireumstances justifying the failure of the medical personnel responding to administer the test." Therefore, the court ordered the suppression of the evidence of Null's refusal to submit to a breath test and dismissed the DUI charge.
II. Jurisdiction
The prosecution brought this case as an interlocutory appeal pursuant to section 16-12-1022, C.R.S. (2009), and C.A.R. 4.1. Under C.A.R. 4.1, the prosecution may file an interlocutory appeal from a ruling of the trial court suppressing three types of evidence: (1) evidence obtained pursuant to an unlawful search and seizure, Crim. P. 4l(e); (2) an involuntary confession or admission, Crim. P. 4l1(g); or (8) an improperly ordered or supported nontestimonial identification, Crim. P. 41.1(0). See People v. Braunthal,
Where the grounds for an interlocutory appeal are absent, however, the Colorado Constitution and C.A.R. 21 provide this court with jurisdiction to review cases on the merits as original proceedings. Colo. Cons. art. VI, § 8; CAR. 21; Braunthal,
In the present case, the trial court's order to suppress Null's statements due to a Miranda violation involves an involuntary confession or admission under Crim. P. 41(g). Therefore, it presents a proper subject for interlocutory appeal under C.A.R. 4.1. However, the suppression of Null's refusal to take a breath test and the order to dismiss the DUI charge do not meet the requirements of C.A.R. 4.1 and the remedy would normally be an appeal to the court of appeals. See § 16-12-102(1), C.R.S. (2009) (order of court dismissing some, but not all, charges prior to trial is appealable to court of appeals); People v. Collins,
Suppression of Null's refusal to take a breath test could significantly impede the prosecution's case. Likewise, an appellate remedy could raise double jeopardy issues. For example, if the trial were to proceed with wrongly suppressed evidence, and if Null were to be acquitted, then he could not be retried. See People v. Casias,
III Miranda Violation
Initially, we review the trial court's determination that Null's Miranda rights were violated because he was in custody when he made incriminating statements to the arresting officers. The prosecution concedes that Null was subject to interrogation.
The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that no person "shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself." U.S. Const. amend. V. In order to protect this right, police must provide a suspect in custody with certain warnings before subjecting him or her to interrogation. Miranda v. Arizona,
When a trial court rules on a motion to suppress incriminating statements, the court engages in both fact-finding and law-application. People v. Hankins,
Roadside detentions pursuant to routine traffic stops often do not implicate Mi-ramnda protections. People v. Archuleta,
This is not to say, however, that routine traffic stops may not become custodial. "If a motorist who has been detained pursuant to a traffic stop thereafter is subjected to treatment that renders him 'in custody' for practical purposes, he will be entitled to the full panoply of protections prescribed by Miranda." Berkemer,
To determine whether a suspect was in custody, we ask whether a reasonable person in the suspect's position would have felt "deprived of his freedom of action to the degree associated with a formal arrest." People v. Taylor,
Although there is no exclusive list of factors, we have considered the following circumstances to determine whether a suspect was in custody during interrogation:
(1) the time, place, and purpose of the encounter; (2) the persons present during the interrogation; (8) the words spoken by the officer to the defendant; (4) the officer's tone of voice and general demeanor; (5) the length and mood of the interrogation; (6) whether any limitation of movement or other form of restraint was placed on the defendant during the interrogation; (7) the officer's response to any questions asked by the defendant; (8) whether directions were given to the defendant during the interrogation; and (9) the defendant's verbal or nonverbal response to such directions.
Hankins,
In People v. Thomas,
We came to a similar conclusion in People v. Taylor,
We concluded that the defendant was in custody for Miranda purposes. Id. at 698. We relied particularly on several factors. First, the defendant was limited in his movements. Id. Second, he was detained for a "relatively lengthy" period. Id. And, third, the officers had grounds to arrest the defendant, giving him " 'every reason to believe he would not be briefly detained and then released" Id. at 692-98 (quoting People v. Polander,
The present case is similar to both Taylor and Thomas. As in those cases, what began as a "routine" encounter between police and the defendant quickly became a custodial situation. First, Null was not free to go during questioning. When he attempted to walk away, Henderson followed him and told him to return to the patrol car. Henderson testified that if Null had walked away from the van again, he would have "chased" him. Second, Null's freedom of movement was significantly limited during questioning. Although he was not handcuffed and the officers had not drawn their weapons, the officers stood only a few feet from Null. One officer stood to his left and the other stood to his right, while Null had his back against the patrol car. Like the defendant in Taylor, Null appears to have been "surrounded" by the patrol car and the officers on either side of him. Third, Null was held on the side of the road for at least fifteen minutes (while Henderson waited for Palmer to arrive) plus the amount of time it took for Henderson to conduct several roadside sobriety tests and call dispatch to check Null's license. This was a relatively lengthy detention. Finally, Null failed two sobriety tests and the preliminary breath test before the interrogation began. As such, the officers had grounds to arrest Null. These circumstances, when combined, establish that Null had objective reasons to believe that he was under arrest and would not be briefly detained and then released.
Considering the totality of the circumstances, we conclude that Null was in custody during questioning. This was not the brief, and routine traffic stop contemplated by the courts in Berkemer,
Next we review the trial court's determination that law enforcement violated Null's statutory rights under the express consent statute and consider whether this violation warranted suppression of Null's refusal to take a breath test and dismissal of the DUI charge. A driver, by virtue of operating a motor vehicle upon the streets or highways of Colorado, consents to the provisions of the express consent statute. § 42-4-1801.1, C.R.S. (2009). Under this statute, a police officer with probable cause to believe that a driver has committed an alcohol-related offense may require the driver to select and to complete either a blood test or a breath test. Id. Once a driver has selected a particular test, the driver must submit to that test within two hours or refuse testing altogether. Id. Drivers who refuse to be tested may have their licenses revoked for a year. § 42-4-18301.2(1).
The express consent statute creates mutual "rights and responsibilities" that apply to both drivers and law enforcement officers. Turbyne v. People,
The statute, however, contains an "extraordinary circumstances" exception to the rule that law enforcement must provide a driver with his or her chosen test. § 42-4-1301.1(2)(a.5)(I). The legislature added this exception to the statute in 2007, directly incorporating language from our decisions in Riley v. People,
Subsection (A) provides a general definition of extraordinary circumstances. It states that "extraordinary circumstances means circumstances beyond the control of, and not created by, the law enforcement officer who requests and directs a person to take a blood or breath test ... or the law enforcement authority with whom the officer is employed." § 42-4-1801.1(2)(a.5)(IV)(A). Subsection (B) then offers examples of extraordinary cireumstances. It states that such cireumstances shall include "weather-related delays, high call volumes affecting medical personnel, power outages, malfune-tioning breath test equipment, and other circumstances that preclude timely collection and testing." § 42-4-1801.1(@2)(a.5)(IV)(B). Finally, subsection (C) lists cireumstances that shall not be considered extraordinary. It states that extraordinary cireumstances shall not include "inconvenience, a busy workload on the part of the law enforcement officer or law enforcement authority, minor delay that does not compromise the two-hour test period ... or routine cireumstances that are subject to the control of the law enforeement officer or law enforcement authority." § 42-4-1301.1(2)(a.5)(IV)(C).
Relying on subsection (A), the prosecution argues that the extraordinary cireumstances exception applies in this case because medical personnel refused to perform the requested blood test and that this refusal was a cireumstance outside law enforcement's control. The prosecution asserts that it is irrelevant why or how routinely medical personnel failed to respond to law enforcement's requests.
We decline to adopt the prosecution's interpretation of the statute. Instead, we hold that, where medical personnel do not respond to law enforcement's request for a blood test, the statute requires the prosecution to present evidence to explain why they were unable to respond. More precise
A. Statutory Construction
We review issues of statutory construction de novo. CLPF-Parkridge One, L.P. v. Harwell Invs., Inc.,
Turning to the first test, we conclude that the statutory language is ambiguous. Subsection (A) provides that the term "extraordinary cireumstances" means circumstances outside the control of the law enforcement officer or authority. © § 42-4-1301.1(2)(a.5)(IV)(A). Subsections (B) and (C) list examples of extraordinary cireum-stances, but these examples complicate rather than clarify the definition provided in subsection (A). See § 42-4-1801.1(2)(a.5)(IV)(B)-(C). Subsection (B) lists "weather-related delays" and "high call volumes affecting medical personnel" as examples of cireumstances that would justify the failure to provide a driver with his or her chosen test. § 42-4-1301.1(2)(a.5)(IV)(B). These examples do not relate solely to civreumstances within law enforcement's control. "[Hligh call volumes affecting medical personnel," by its very terms, relates only to cireumstances affecting medical personnel. Similarly, "weather-related delays" comes from Turbyne
Subsection (C) confirms this analysis. Subsection (C) indicates that "[iInconven-ience, a busy workload on the part of the law enforcement officer or law enforcement authority, [and] minor delay that does not compromise the two-hour test period" do not constitute extraordinary cireumstances. § 42-4-1801.1(@2)(a5)(IV)(C). The example of a busy workload, by its terms, relates to law enforcement. The term "inconvenience," however, does not contain that same limiting language. In other words, the statute suggests that inconvenience in general-whether it is on the part of medical personnel or law enforcement-will not constitute an extraordinary cireumstance justifying the failure to honor a driver's rights.
In sum, although subsection (A) might refer to law enforcement ouly, the examples listed in subsections (B) and (C) indicate that courts must also consider why medical personnel failed to provide a requested test and must determine whether that failure resulted from extraordinary cireumstances-such as bad weather or high call volumes-or ordinary ones-such as inconvenience. This conflict between the subsections renders the statute ambiguous. By adopting an interpretation that considers why medical personnel refused to respond, we attempt to harmonize these provisions. More importantly, we avoid rendering superfluous much of the language in subsections (B) and (C).
This interpretation also aligns with our case law in Riley and Turbyne, in which we
We reiterated this approach in Turbyne. In that case, we chose to apply the extraordinary circumstances exception because the prosecution presented evidence showing that the ambulance service had good reasons-high call volumes combined with bad weather-for failing to perform a requested blood draw. Turbyne,
Our approach also accounts for the requirement in subsection (C) that extraordinary cireumstances shall not include "routine circumstances that are subject to the control of the law enforcement authority." § 42-4-1801.1(2)(a.5)(IV)(C) (emphasis added). The statute does not define what should be considered "subject to the control of the law enforcement authority." Our case law, however, indicates that it should be interpreted to encompass the protocols that law enforcement establishes for providing drivers with their chosen tests. See Turbyne,
A contrary interpretation-one that allows the prosecution to present no evidence explaining why medical personnel refused to respond-would allow medical personnel to refuse routinely to respond to law enforcement's requests, without any explanation, yet that occurrence would be considered extraordinary under the statute. Drivers would then have no remedy for such violations, and law enforcement would have no incentive to develop more reliable protocols. Such an interpretation would undermine the legislative purpose of the statute, which is designed, in part, to provide drivers with the right to receive the test of their choice under ordinary cireumstances. See Spahmer v. Gullette,
Hence, we interpret the statute as requiring the prosecution to present evidence that extraordinary or "non-routine" cireumstances prevented medical personnel from responding to law enforcement's request. This approach better effectuates the legislative purpose of the statute, follows our case law, and ensures that law enforcement adopts adequate protocols that are able to provide a driver with his or her chosen test under ordinary circumstances.
B. Application
Having interpreted the statute, we now apply it to the present case. The record indicates that Henderson twice asked for a medical team to come to the jail to perform a blood test but that the medical team refused to respond to these requests. Our prior case law and the amended statute require the prosecution to present evidence that extraordinary circumstances prevented medical personnel from responding to law enforcement's request. The prosecution, however, offered no evidence to explain why medical personnel refused to respond. We do not know whether they may have refused for legitimate reasons, such as high call volumes, or for illegitimate reasons, such as inconvenience. Nor has the prosecution provided any evidence indicating whether such refusals were themselves routine or unusual. In the absence of such evidence, we are unable to conclude that medical personnel's refusal to perform a blood test constituted extraordinary cireum-stances. The prosecution failed to carry its evidentiary burden. We shall not give it "a second bite at the apple." Burks v. United States,
C. Suppression of Evidence and Dismissal of the DUI Charge
We next consider whether the trial court acted appropriately by suppressing the evidence of Null's refusal to take a breath test and by dismissing the DUI charge. Although the statute adopted the extraordinary cireumstances exception, which is a part of our jurisprudence on remedies, it otherwise remained silent on which remedies a court should employ when no extraordinary circumstances are found. Therefore, we look to our prior case law for guidance.
Courts retain discretion to fashion appropriate remedies for violations of the express consent statute. See Gillett,
In People v. Shinaut,
On the other hand, we have held suppression and dismissal to be appropriate where law enforcement failed to honor a driver's right to receive his or her chosen test. Gillett,
In the present case, Null did not change his mind or request an alternate test.
V. Conclusion
In light of the above considerations, we affirm the trial court's decision to suppress Null's incriminating statements, to suppress his refusal to take a breath test, and to dismiss the DUI charge against him. We remand this case to that court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Pursuant to section 42-4-1301(2)(a), C.R.S. (2009), it is a misdemeanor for "any person to drive a motor vehicle or vehicle when the persons [blood or breath alcohol content] is 0.08 or more ai the time of driving or within two hours of driving."
. At the pretrial evidentiary hearing, the officers testified that they asked Null questions that they knew were likely to lead to incriminating responses. Therefore, Null was subject to interrogation. See Rhode Island v. Innis,
. Although the statute has been amended since we issued our opinions in Riley and Turbyne, because the statute incorporated language directly from those cases, their facts and reasoning remain relevant when interpreting the language of the statute.
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I concur with the majority's affirmation of the trial court's suppression of Rodger Null's incriminating statements. However, I write separately because I conclude that the majority's discussion of Colorado's express consent statute, § 42-4-1801.1, C.R.S. (2009), and 'our decision in Turbyne v. People,
This case presents our first opportunity to construe the 2007 amendment to the express consent statute codifying the extraordinary cireumstances exception. Ch. 261, see. 1, § 42-4-1801.1, 2007 Colo. Sess. Laws 1022, 1023-24. In my view, the statute and our prior decisions require us to consider law enforcement diligence in determining the appropriate sanction for police noncompliance with the statute.
Dismissal of the charges against a defendant is a drastic remedy that may be appropriate in some cases but not in others. Turbyne,
Under the express consent statute and our decisions, the established protocol upon which law enforcement relies must be reasonably calculated to obtain a timely blood draw, given reasonably anticipated exigen-cles, and law enforcement must exercise a degree of diligence in complying with that protocol in any given case. See § 42-4-1301.1(2)(a.5)(I); Turbyne,
In this case, the fact that law enforcement twice attempted to obtain a response from the ambulance service is not sufficient proof of a good faith effort to follow an established and adequate protocol because the record lacks any proof of law enforcement's diligence in attempting to ascertain the reason for the service's non-response. Absent such proof in the record, suppression of Null's refusal to take a breath test and dismissal of the DUI charge may be appropriate sanc
Accordingly, I concur with the majority's affirmation of the suppression of Null's incriminating statements, but I do not join in the judgment affirming suppression of Null's refusal to take a breath test and dismissal of the DUI charge. In my view, the rule in this original proceeding should remand the case to the trial court for further findings. Thus, I respectfully dissent in part.
Concurrence in Part
concurring in the result in part and dissenting in part.
I respectfully dissent from the majority's conclusion that the DUI charges against Null must be dismissed because he did not receive a blood test within the statutory two-hour period. The Washington County Sheriff's Office had a contract with an ambulance service to perform blood draws upon its request, and that service had responded to requests by the sheriffs office in the past; in this case, however, the service refused to respond despite the arresting officer's repeated requests to send medical personnel to the county jail to perform a blood draw on Null. Under Turbyne v. People,
1.
As Justice Hobbs points out in his dissent, the "drastic remedy" of dismissal is appropriate only "when the police have no reasonable protocol in place to obtain and complete the blood test under routine cireumstances or when the blood test is not administered and there is no showing of a good faith effort by the arresting officer to follow that protocol." Cone. & dis. op. at 682 (citing Turbyne,
First, under Turbyne, the Washington County Sheriffs Office "hald al reasonable protocol in place to obtain and complete the blood test under routine cireumstances."
Second, the arresting officer made a "good faith effort ... to follow that protocol!" in contacting sheriff's dispatch to request that the ambulance service provide medical personnel to the county jail to perform a blood test on Null. The officer testified that he followed "normal procedure" in requesting the ambulance and that he did nothing that was "off the procedure." When the ambulance service did not respond to his first request, he made a second one. Again, there was no response to his request. The officer testified that he had no authority to order medical personnel to the jail. He also testified that because of the rural location of the Washington County Justice Center, there are few alternatives for blood draw services. According to the officer, the closest hospitals where blood could be drawn were a thirty-or forty-minute drive away (which would put the draw outside the two-hour period), and the closest jail that could complete the blood test was in another jurisdiction. Under the circumstances, the arresting officer made a "good faith effort ... to follow" the "protocol" established by the Washington County Sheriff's Office for performing blood draws.
The majority relies on our statement in Turbyne that a driver's statutory rights cannot be disregarded "with impunity." Maj. op. at 681 (citing Turbyne,
A closer examination of the cases leading up to Turbyne confirms the majority's error. As we recognized in Gillett,
In this case, however, there is little chance that the failure to administer a blood test within the two-hour period deprived Null of exculpatory evidence because there was overwhelming evidence of his intoxication. In such a case, dismissal is inappropriate, as there would be no "manifest unfairness in governmental procedures relating to the acquisition ... of evidence potentially favorable to an accused." (Gillet,
In this case, Null exhibited all the signs of intoxication. According to the officer, when he first spoke to Null, he noticed that Null's eyes were bloodshot and watery, his speech was slurred, and there was a strong odor of alcohol on his breath. After observing Null's condition, the officer subjected him to three tests for intoxication. First, he asked Null to keep his head still so that he could determine whether his pupils were involuntarily jerking. The officer, however, could not perform the test because Null was unable to keep his head still. When the officer moved on to another test for intoxication, which required Null to walk heel-to-toe nine steps and then turn around, Null could only take two or three steps before stumbling. The officer, concerned that Null would fall and injure himself, ultimately stopped him after his see-ond attempt. Finally, the officer asked Null to perform a third test involving him raising one leg six inches off the ground and counting out loud until the officer told him to stop. Null only counted five or six numbers before
The officer then asked Null to lean against his patrol vehicle while he contacted another officer who had the preliminary breathalyzer testing unit. By the time that the officer was finished radioing for backup, he noticed that Null was walking slowly through an adjacent field. The officer then followed Null and asked him what he was doing. At this point, Null lay down in the middle of the field and responded that he just wanted to "take a nap" because he was tired. When the second officer arrived and the preliminary breathalyzer test was administered, Null registered a 0.19, far above the limit for intoxication. See § 42-4-1301(2)(a), C.R.S. (2009). All of this evidence is highly suggestive that Null "hald] consumed aleohol ... to a degree that [he was] substantially incapable, either mentally or physically, or both mentally and physically, to exercise clear judgment, sufficient physical control, or due care in the safe operation of a vehicle." See § 42-4-1301(1)(F) (defining "Driving under the influence"). Indeed, there was little chance that a blood test within two hours would have yielded exculpatory evidence.
Under these facts, where the Turbyne test for dismissal has not been met and where there was overwhelming evidence of intoxication, the trial court abused its discretion in dismissing the DUI charges, and the majority errs in affirming that dismissal.
IL.
I also disagree with the majority's conclusion that there were no "extraordinary circumstances" to exeuse law enforcement's inability to administer a blood test to Null within the requisite two-hour timeframe. Maj. op. at 681. Under the plain terms of the statute, the ambulance service's repeated failure to respond was an "extraordinary cir-cumstancel ]" "beyond the control of, and not created by, the law enforcement officer who request[ed] and direct[ed] a person to take a blood or breath test ... or the law enforcement authority with whom the officer is employed." § 42-4-18301.1(2)(a.5)(IV)(A). In my view, the majority errs by relying on "ambiguity" in the statutory language to require that the prosecution demonstrate the reason why the service did not respond. Maj. op. at 679-80.
After we decided Turbyne, the legislature expressly adopted the "extraordinary cireum-stances" exception, which permits law en-foreement to decline to give the test chosen by the defendant if the chosen test cannot be performed within two hours, and to direct the defendant to take the other test. § 42-4-1801.1(2)(a.5)(D). Section 42-4-18301.1(2)(a.5)(IV)(A) defines "extraordinary cireumstances" as "circumstances beyond the control of, and not created by, the law enforcement officer who requests and directs a person to take a blood or breath test ... or the law enforcement authority with whom the officer is employed." (emphasis added). Under the plain terms of subsection (A), extraordinary cireumstances are those that are beyond the control of the officer and the officer's employer. In this case, as noted above, the Washington County Sheriffs Office had a contract with the ambulance service under which the service agreed to provide medical personnel to the county jail for the purpose of performing blood draws, and although it had done so "several times" in the past, it failed to respond in this case, despite repeated requests.
The majority comes to the contrary conclusion by finding the statute to be "ambiguous." Maj. op. at 679-80. The majority relies on the fact that subsections (B) and (C) give examples of what does and does not constitute extraordinary cireumstances. Under subsection (B), extraordinary cireum-stances include "weather-related delays, high call volume affecting medical personnel, power outages, malfunctioning breath test equip
But subsections (B) and (C) in no way conflict with subsection (A), nor do they require the prosecution to demonstrate the reason why medical personnel failed to respond. Subsection (A), by its plain terms, defines "extraordinary cireumstances." § 42-4-1801.1(2)(a.5)(IV)(A) ("As used in this paragraph (@5), 'extraordinary cireumstances' means cireumstances beyond the control of, and not created by, the law enforcement officer ... or the law enforcement authority ...." {emphasis added)). And, as the majority acknowledges, it defines such cireum-stances as those "beyond the control of, and not created by," law enforcement. Maj. op. at 679 ("[Alithough subsection (A) might refer to law enforcement only, ...."). Thus, the definitional inquiry is controlled by subsection (A). Subsection (B) simply lists circumstances that would fall within the definition of subsection (A), such as "weather-related delays" and "high call volume affecting medical personnel." While the majority is certainly correct that some of the cireum-stances listed in subsection (B) relate to medical personnel, maj. op. at 679, those cireum-stances are still ones that are beyond the control of law enforcement under subsection (A). In other words, law enforcement has no control over the weather, or a high call volume affecting medical personnel. The definition of subsection (A) still applies and is controlling.
The same is true of subsection (C), which provides that, among other things, "inconvenience" is not an "extraordinary circumstance." The majority takes from this reference that the prosecution must demonstrate that the reason that the ambulance service did not respond was not out of "inconvenience." Maj. op. at 679. Again, the reference to "inconvenience" is simply an example of a cireumstance that would fall outside the definition of subsection (A)-that is, inconvenience is not an extraordinary circumstance if it is within the control of law enforcement. Like subsection (B), subsection (C) in no way conflicts with subsection (A), but merely provides an illustration of its definition. Far from rendering subsections (B) and (C) "superfluous," maj. op. at 679-80, this interpretation interprets all three subsections in a harmonious fashion without any "ambiguity" or "conflict."
In sum, the question is not, as the majority sees it, whether the ambulance service had a good reason for not responding to the officer's repeated requests to come to the jail. Maj. op. at 680. Instead, the question is whether the law enforcement authority or individual officer had any control over the service not coming. Here, they did not.
I also take issue with the degree of seruti-ny the majority applies to the officer's determination of extraordinary circumstances, which is essentially de novo review. Section 42-4-1301.1(2)(a.5)(I) states that "/f a law enforcement officer who requests a person to take a breath or blood test ... determines there are extraordinary circumstances ..., the officer shall inform the person of the extraordinary circumstances and request and direct the person to take and complete the other test...." (emphasis added). This seetion suggests that at least some deference must be paid to the officer's determination that extraordinary cireumstances are present, as it provides that if the officer deter
It is important to note that, unlike the standard for dismissal of the charges described above, which the legislature did not address in its statute (and which is therefore governed by caselaw), the extraordinary circumstances determination is expressly governed by the new statute (which, in my view, supports a finding of extraordinary cireum-stances here). In our previous caselaw, which the majority finds informative, maj. op. at 679-80, we narrowly construed the presence of extraordinary circumstances because the statute did not recognize such a concept. See, eg., Riley,
Finally, it is not the case that this reading of the statute "allows the prosecution to present no evidence explaining why medical personnel refused to respond." Maj. op. at 680. Evidence of why medical personnel did not respond is certainly relevant to the determination of whether the cireumstance was beyond the control of the individual officer or the law enforcement authority. See, eg., § 42-4-1801.1(2)(a.5)(IV)(B). In this case, however, such evidence does not exist. Unlike in Turbyne or Riley, where the ambulance service stated that it would not be able to send medical personnel to the jail within the requisite time period, see Riley,
IIL.
For the foregoing reasons, I dissent from the majority's conclusion that the DUI charges against Null must be dismissed because he did not receive a blood test within the statutory two-hour period.
. I concur in the judgment with regard to the majority's conclusion that suppression of Null's statements was appropriate. Maj. op. at 677. By the time Null was questioned, he had failed two roadside sobriety tests, as well as a preliminary breath test, and was unable to hold his head still enough so that an examination of his pupils could be conducted. At that point, it was "apparent to all" that Null would not be released after the investigation concluded, but rather would be arrested. People v. Polander,
. Because the service had responded "several times" in the past, the failure to respond in this case was not routine, contrary to the majority's suggestion. Maj. op. at 681.
