OPINION
The defendant was found guilty by a trial justice of the Superior Court, sitting without a jury, of driving under the influence of alcohol pursuant to G.L.1956 (1968 Reenactment) § 31-27-2, as amended by P.L.1974, ch. 120, § 2. He has now appealed to this court from the judgment of conviction.
The facts are not in substantial dispute. Charlestown police officer Donald Middle-brooks arrested defendant in the early morning hours of November 14, 1976. While leaving the Charlestown Town Hall parking lot, the police officer observed a man in a motor vehicle stopped in the northbound lane of Route 2 “revving up” the engine. The officer stopped his vehicle behind the other vehicle. Presently the party under observation spun the wheels of his car and slid the car across the center line of the highway.
After stopping the vehicle, the driver backed up and repeated this action of spinning the car’s wheels. Upon moving alongside the motor vehicle, the police officer trained his strobe light on the automobile to indicate that he wanted the operator to pull the car over to the side of the road. Officer Middlebrooks observed defendant, Gary L. Locke, behind the wheel of the motor vehicle. Instead of pulling to the side of the road, the operator of the motor vehicle drove off and in the process spun the car wheels for a third time. The officer gave chase in his patrol car, sometimes reaching *846 speeds of'-ninety miles per hour. The pursued vehicle, at times crossing the center line, was ariven in an erratic manner. When they came to the town line at Richmond, the officer, fearing the dangers involved, discontinued pursuit.
At approximately 1:50 a. m. of the same day, Officer Middlebrooks, while checking a stopped motor vehicle on Shannock Road, observed a Plymouth Duster drive up behind his police cruiser. He immediately recognized the ear as the same motor vehicle to which he had previously given chase. The automobile stopped and defendant alighted. Locke staggered and almost fell. He approached the police officer and spoke to him in a loud voice, slurring his words. Observing the condition of defendant, the officer placed Locke under arrest for driving under the influence and advised him of his Miranda rights. The officer then placed defendant in the police cruiser and transported him to the town of Westerly to administer a breathalyzer test to him. At trial the officer explained that the reason he took defendant to Westerly was because Charlestown did not have breathalyzer equipment. A police officer of the town of Westerly performed the test on defendant in Westerly.
Prior to taking the test, the police, in accordance with G.L.1956 (1968 Reenactment) § 31-27-2.1, as amended by P.L.1978, ch. 174, § 1, advised defendant of his rights under that section and further advised him that refusal to submit to the test would result in a mandatory fine and a possible suspension of his driver’s license. The defendant signed a consent form- and submitted to the test. The test results were consistent with a finding of intoxication. Before trial defendant filed a motion to suppress the results of the test on the ground that the threat of license suspension coerced him into submitting to the test and rendered his consent involuntary. Because the charge was tried without a jury, the trial court permitted defendant to proceed to trial before the court had ruled on his motion to suppress; the trial justice heard argument on defendant’s motion after the close of evidence. On direct examination defendant conceded the legality of the initial arrest, but he testified that he had submitted to the breathalyzer test only because of the threat of license suspension. He claimed that the test as administered was therefore an unreasonable search and seizure in violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments of the Federal Constitution, and art. I, sec. 6 of the Rhode Island constitution.
In further support of his motion to suppress defendant argued that when Officer Middlebrooks transported him from the town of Charlestown to the town of Westerly, the officer lost his authority as a police officer to hold him under arrest. As a result, the fruits of the illegal arrest, he claimed, were constitutionally infirm and, therefore, inadmissible in evidence.
The trial justice denied the motion to suppress and found defendant guilty as charged. The defendant then filed an appeal with this court.
In support of his contention that the breathalyzer test was an .unlawful search and seizure the results of which should have been excluded from evidence at trial, defendant in this court presses two theories: (1) that at the time the police conducted the breathalyzer test they held him under an unlawful arrest and, therefore, searched him in violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments of the Federal Constitution and art. I, sec. 6 of the Rhode Island constitution, and (2) that the implied-consent law, G.L.1956 (1968 Reenactment) § 31-27-2.1, which threatens suspension of the driver’s license of any person suspected of driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor who withholds his consent to a test of his breath, blood, or urine conducted for the purpose of ascertaining his blood-alcohol level, places an unconstitutional condition on the exercise of his federally and state guaranteed immunity from unreasonable searches and seizures.
I
The taking of blood, breath, or urine samples from a suspect is a search
*847
and seizure under the Fourth Amendment and R.I.Const., art. I, § 6.
State v. Bentley,
The defendant first contends that once Officer Middlebrooks transported him outside Charlestown, the officer no longer had the authority to hold him under arrest; therefore, because the breathalyzer test was administered when he was unlawfully arrested, its results were inadmissible in evidence. In support of his argument defendant relies wholly on
Page v. Staples,
The
Page
case is distinguishable from the instant case. Instead, our ruling in
Cioci v. Santos,
In
Page
the travel in another county was for the convenience of the defendant-sheriff and not as part of the sheriff’s duties. In the instant case, as in
Cioci,
an emergency existed that impelled the officer to carry the suspect outside of his jurisdiction. Officer Middlebrooks acted to protect the public from a drunken driver and to protect Locke from himself. Under the circumstances public policy required the officer, in carrying out his duties, to administer a breathalyzer test so that he could intelligently decide whether to remove defendant from the highway because of his condition.
*848
See Descoteaux v. Bonaventura,
The travel to Westerly was not merely for the convenience of the arresting officer. An emergency did exist; the test had to be given without delay. To allow the delay would have in time resulted in the elimination of the traces of alcohol in Locke’s blood.
Schmerber v. California,
We therefore conclude that the police officer, under these circumstances, was justified in carrying defendant outside his municipality and did not lose custody of defendant. Accordingly, the police conducted the breathalyzer test pursuant to a lawful arrest.
See Gustafson v. Florida,
II
Locke next claims that in the absence of a warrant issued on probable cause the police conducted a search of his body without his voluntary consent and obtained breath samples, the records of which were admitted in evidence against him. Attacking the voluntariness of his consent to the search, defendant contends that he consented to the search only because the police had informed him that if he refused to submit to the test, his driver’s license could be suspended by operation of G.L.1956 (1968 Reenactment) § 31-27-2.1. The threat of losing his license, he argues, coerced him into taking the test, thereby rendering his consent involuntary. Locke complains of no other form of coercion but confines his challenge of the constitutionality of the search to the threat of license revocation built into the statutory scheme. The exercise of his right to refuse the breathalyzer search, he claims, cannot, in consistency with the Fourth Amendment guarantees, be conditioned on the forfeiture of his driver’s license.
Faced with a claimed Fourth Amendment violation in circumstances similar to the one before us, although not involving the operation of an implied-consent statute, the United States Supreme Court upheld a compelled search of a defendant’s body as reasonable under the Fourth Amendment.
Schmerber v. California,
On the operative facts of the case before us, which we believe are indistinguishable from Sehmerber, one, therefore, cannot argue that the police who conducted a breathalyzer search on Locke subjected him to an unreasonable search and seizure. 2 To say that the search in the ease before us was reasonable, however, does not end our inquiry because in Rhode Island certain statutory requirements must be met before the test results may be properly admitted in a trial for driving under the influence.
In State
v. Berker,
R.I.,
Section 31-27-2(b) imposes seven conditions on the admissibility of breathalyzer test results in driving-under-the-influence trials, including the requirement of defendant’s actual consent.
“(b) In any criminal prosecution for a violation of paragraph (a) of this section, evidence as to the amount of intoxicating liquor * * * in the defendant’s blood at the time alleged as shown by a chemical analysis of the defendant’s breath, blood or urine or other bodily substance shall be admissible and competent provided that evidence is presented that the following conditions have been complied with.
(1) The defendant had consented to the taking of the test upon which said analysis is made.”
We believe the Legislature included the consent requirement to prevent a violent confrontation between an arresting officer and a suspect unwilling to submit to a test of this sort.
In response to defendant’s contention that his consent to the test was the product of coercion built into the statutory scheme, we believe that the driving-under-the-influence statute represents a valid exercise of state police power to regulate conduct that by its very nature directly affects the lives, health, and general welfare of the people of the state.
See People v. Brown,
The goal of the legislation against drunken driving is to reduce “the carnage occurring on our highways which is attributable to the persons who imbibe alcohol and then drive.”
DiSalvo v. Williamson,
The penalty of license forfeiture is a nonviolent method of exacting consent to the minimal intrusion necessary to obtain evidence of intoxication.
DiSalvo v. Williamson,
The state’s compelling interest in highway safety justifies the procedure of imposing summary suspension, effective pending the outcome of the promptly available postsuspension hearing, on those who refuse to consent to a test of this type.
See Mackey v. Montrym,
Of course the arresting officer must inform the person under arrest of his
Miranda
rights, of his right to be examined by a physician of his choice, of his right to refuse to submit to the breathalyzer examination, and of the consequences of the failure to consent to the test.
DiSalvo v. Williamson,
The police in the instant case in no way prevented Locke from refusing his consent and precluding the admissibility of the test results in evidence. He had a choice; if he chose not to submit to the test, it would not have been given.
Furthermore, the threatened sanctions are not arbitrarily imposed. The statute provides for an administrative hearing at which the defendant had the right to be heard on the issue of his license suspension.
See Mackey v. Montrym,
The defendant’s appeal is denied and dismissed, the judgment of conviction is affirmed, and the cause is remanded to the Superior Court.
Notes
. Several courts have validated the action of police officers who have held defendants under arrest without the territory in which the police were authorized to act as police on the theory that the police had the power to act as private individuals.
See e. g., People v. Monson,
. The four cases that defendant cites to us in support of his contention that he was unlawfully searched are clearly distinguishable from the
Sehmerber
case and the instant appeal.
Cupp v. Murphy,
. In
State v. Berker,
R.I.,
