Appellant Benito Diaz entered a conditional guilty plea to a felony charge of driving under the influence (DUI). Diaz had moved to suppress the results of a blood alcohol content (BAC) test, claiming that a “forced” blood draw violated his constitutional rights. The district court denied his motion. We affirm.
I.
On April 9, 2005, Officer Scott Montgomery stopped a red Ford Mustang on Highway 30 in Buhl for erratic driving. The driver was later identified as Diaz. Montgomery noticed that Diaz’s eyes were bloodshot and glassy and that his speech was slurred. After reviewing his license and registration he asked Diaz to leave his car and perform field sobriety tests. Diaz tried to start his ear instead. Montgomery arrested Diaz for ob *302 structing and delaying and took him to the Twin Falls County Jail.
At the jail Montgomery conducted several standardized field sobriety tests, but Diaz refused to take the walk and turn test and the one leg stand. Montgomery advised Diaz of the consequences of refusing to undergo such testing, which Diaz said he understood. He then asked Diaz to take a breathalyzer test but he refused. Montgomery informed him that if he continued to refuse, he would be taken to a hospital and his blood would be drawn. After stating that he would submit to a breathalyzer test Diaz again refused to cooperate so Montgomery handcuffed him and took him to the Magic Valley Regional Medical Center where a hospital technician drew his blood. Diaz did not physically resist transportation to the hospital or the taking of his blood, but he continued to protest the blood draw. Diaz had prior DUI convictions in 2001 and 2003 so he was charged with felony DUI. I.C. §§ 18-8004, 18-8005(5). Diaz’s BAC concentration was 0.26, more than three times the legal limit.
The district court denied Diaz’s motion at trial to suppress the results of the BAC test under the Fourth Amendment and the Idaho Constitution. Diaz subsequently entered a conditional plea of guilty to felony DUI, reserving the right to appeal the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress.
II.
In this opinion we address two issues: 1) whether an involuntary blood draw violates federal or state constitutional protections in cases where no death or serious bodily injury is involved, and 2) whether Idaho Code § 18-8002(6)(b) prohibits involuntary BAC testing in cases where no death or serious bodily injury is involved.
A.
In reviewing an order granting or denying a motion to suppress evidence, this Court will defer to the district court’s factual findings unless clearly erroneous.
State v. Donato,
B.
The administration of a blood alcohol test constitutes a seizure of a person and a search for evidence under both the Fourth Amendment and Article I, § 17 of the Idaho Constitution.
Halen v. State,
Diaz argues that death or serious bodily injury is required to justify an involuntary blood draw under the exigency exception to the warrant requirement. Exigency, however, is not the lone applicable exception here; consent is also a well-recognized exception to the warrant requirement.
Halen,
Regardless of how it qualifies as an exception to the warrant requirement, a blood draw must comport with Fourth Amendment standards of reasonableness.
Schmerber,
Diaz asserts that Art. I, § 17 of the Idaho Constitution provides greater protection than that afforded under the Fourth Amendment. However, Diaz failed to present any argument or authority in his opening brief to support this contention. “When issues on appeal are not supported by propositions of law, authority, or argument, they will not be considered.”
State v. Zichko,
C.
Diaz also argues that Idaho Code § 18-8002(6)(b) does not permit a police officer to order an involuntary blood draw absent suspicion of one of the enumerated offenses, which include aggravated DUI and vehicular manslaughter. We first addressed this question in
Halen,
We look first to the literal words of a statute and give those words their plain, usual and ordinary meaning.
State v. Parker,
The Legislature clearly intended to delineate when an officer could compel or order hospital personnel to draw blood rather than just request that they do so. In this case the technician at the Magic Valley Regional Medical Center chose to honor Montgomery’s request to draw Diaz’s blood, which is permissible under our statutory scheme. Halen and Worthington were ruled correctly, and we decline to overturn them here.
III.
We affirm the denial of Diaz’s motion to suppress and thus affirm his conviction.
