OPINION
¶ 1 The state appeals from the trial court’s order suppressing certain evidence relevant to the sole charge of manslaughter against defendant/appellee John Rosengren. Rosengren cross-appeals from that order, contend *115 ing the trial court should have dismissed the case with prejudice. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
¶ 2 We view the evidence presented at the suppression hearing in the light most favorable to sustaining the trial court’s ruling.
State v. Bentlage,
¶ 3 Rosengren also told investigating police officers at the scene that he had consumed alcohol before the accident. The on-scene officers observed the following possible signs of alcohol impairment on Rosengren: a strong odor of intoxicants on his breath, flushed face, bloodshot and watery eyes, slurred speech, a noticeable stagger while walking, and a sideways body sway. An officer read Rosengren the Miranda 1 warnings, and Rosengren invoked his right to remain silent. The officer interpreted that as a refusal to perform any field sobriety tests and did not ask Rosengren if he would perform them. Unbeknownst to Rosengren, the officer audiotaped and videotaped the investigation.
¶ 4 The police handcuffed Rosengren and transported him to St. Mary’s Hospital to obtain a blood sample, arriving there at 2:32 a.m. Officers then urged Rosengren several times to provide a blood sample and told him he could go home after doing so. At 2:39 a.m., Rosengren asked to contact his father and informed the officers that the father was an out-of-state attorney. The police denied that request and instead offered Rosengren the opportunity to call any local attorney listed in the Tucson telephone book, in fact, urging him to do so. Rosengren declined that offer. He also refused to give a blood sample.
¶5 After declining Rosengren’s request that he call his father, and after deciding to arrest Rosengren, one of the officers administered a horizontal 'gaze nystagmus (HGN) test by observing Rosengren’s eyes while using a pen as a stimulus. The officer then formally arrested Rosengren at 2:58 a.m. for driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor (DUI). The officer informed Rosengren of Arizona’s implied consent law, A.R.S. § 28-1321, and again denied his repeated request to talk to his father. Rosengren still refused to give a blood sample.
¶ 6 At 3:15 a.m., the police obtained a telephonic search warrant and obtained two gray-topped tubes of Rosengren’s blood, drawn by a hospital phlebotomist at 3:28 a.m. The phlebotomist also drew two additional, red-topped tubes of Rosengren’s blood for hospital purposes. At 4:00 a.m., an officer booked Rosengren into the Pima County jail, where he apparently remained until sometime later that morning.
¶ 7 Rosengren was indicted for manslaughter. Alleging a violation of his right to counsel and to due process, Rosengren moved to dismiss the charge with prejudice. Following an evidentiary hearing, the trial court found that the police had violated Rosengren’s “right to remain silent and right to consult with counsel of his choice in a situation where such would not interfere with the investigation.” Based on those findings, the trial court suppressed the following evidence: the results of the state’s blood test and of the HGN test, Rosengren’s refusal to voluntarily submit to a blood test, and all observations and statements of Rosengren that occurred after his arrival at the hospital at 2:32 a.m.
¶ 8 The trial court granted the state’s motion to dismiss the ease without prejudice for purposes of challenging the suppression order.
See State v. Million,
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 9 Generally, a trial court’s ruling on a motion to dismiss the indictment or to
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suppress evidence will not be overturned absent an abuse of discretion.
State v. Carter,
DISCUSSION
¶ 10 Under Rule 6.1(a), Ariz.R.Crim. P., 16A A.R.S., Rosengren had “the right to consult in private with an attorney, or the attorney’s agent, as soon as feasible after [he was] taken into custody.”
2
That rule “recognizes the federal and state constitutional right to counsel.”
Kunzler v. Pima County Superior Court,
¶ 11 In view of the trial court’s uncontested factual findings and the state’s concessions on appeal, the only issue we must address is whether the court chose an appropriate remedy for the state’s violation of Rosengren’s rights. The state contends the only “appropriate remedy is to suppress the fruits of the [officers’] illegal conduct,” which, the state argues, are limited to any “statements derived from custodial interrogation” after Rosengren invoked his Miranda rights. In contrast, Rosengren contends the trial court should have dismissed the ease with prejudice or, alternatively, precluded the state “from admitting evidence relating to his purported intoxication.” If Rosengren is correct, we need not address separately the specific items of evidence that the trial court suppressed. Therefore, we address the cross-appeal first.
1. Request for Dismissal
¶ 12 As our supreme court has noted:
[I]n a D[U]I investigation, it is crucial for both the state and the defendant to gather evidence relevant to intoxication close in time to when the defendant allegedly committed the crime. Otherwise, any alcohol that may have been in the blood will have decomposed before the blood can be tested.
McNutt v. Superior Court,
¶ 13 When the state unreasonably interferes with a DUI suspect’s ability “to attempt to gather evidence exculpating him on the issue of intoxication,” “[dismissal of the case with prejudice is the appropriate remedy because the state’s action foreclosed a fair trial by preventing [the defendant] from collecting exculpatory evidence no longer available.”
McNutt,
Because we value the right to counsel so highly, Gideon v. Wainwright,372 U.S. 335 ,83 S.Ct. 792 ,9 L.Ed.2d 799 (1963), when the right to counsel is violated, then the conviction obtained as a direct result must be set aside. This is the rule because it is impossible to foresee what advice would have been given defendant had he been able to confer privately with counsel. It is quite possible that he would have been instructed to obtain, in some manner, exculpatory evidence.
Holland,
¶ 14 Relying primarily on Holland and Sanders, Rosengren contends the state’s admitted violation of his right to counsel requires dismissal with prejudice of the charge. According to him, “the crux of this case” is the state’s violation of his due process “right to develop evidence of lack of impairment and lack of signs and symptoms of impairment in order to counter the police officers’ observations.” Rosengren argues that, had he been permitted to contact his father,
the father could have arranged to have Rosengren observed by an attorney, physician or investigator, to have his voice tape recorded to show that he was not slurring his words, to have him videotaped up close to show that his eyes were not bloodshot and his face was not flushed, and to arrange for independent HGN or other field sobriety tests. The ability to gather this evidence is lost forever.
¶ 15 Addressing similar arguments below, the trial court noted that Rosengren might “have lost the opportunity to gather additional exculpatory evidence in the form of examinations by medical personnel or lay witnesses or investigators and close-up videography of [his] person and face.” Although Rosengren presented no evidence that he could or would have undertaken such steps or that his father would have offered such advice, the trial court ruled:
The defense makes a very strong case for outright dismissal of all charges based upon the intentional violation of defendant’s right to counsel and the resulting interference with defendant’s ability to garner exculpatory evidence. The court does not regard defense claims that additional exculpatory evidence could have been gathered as purely speculative, nor does Holland allow the Court to so assume.
*118 Nevertheless, most of the cases which support defendant’s request for due process dismissal involved situations where independent blood tests were denied or the accuracy of the tests obtained by the State could not be verified.
¶ 16 Based on the evidence presented at the suppression hearing, the trial court found that Rosengren had been “provided with several blood samples taken at or very near the time that police obtained a blood sample pursuant to a telephonic search warrant.” The court further found that Rosengren “has available to him some exculpatory evidence in the form of video and audio-taped footage of [his] physical and mental capabilities at the accident scene.” Based on its review of the videotape, the trial court noted that Rosengren “did not appear to sway and stagger and was capable of quickly and concisely answering questions of a biographical nature.” Based on its factual findings, the trial court ruled that Rosengren “is not forever left without exculpatory evidence,” noting that he had “secured testable blood and has the favorable observations of the paramedics and videotape available at any future trial.” Accordingly, the court ruled that the charge against Rosengren “need not be dismissed.”
¶ 17 For several reasons, we find no error in that ruling. First, violation of the right to counsel and the concomitant due process right to gather independent evidence of sobriety requires outright dismissal only if evidence of intoxication is essential to the prosecution of the offense.
See Smith v. Coda,
¶ 18 Second, despite the broad language in Sanders, dismissal is not the exclusive or automatic remedy for a denial of the right to counsel, even in cases in which the defendant’s alleged intoxication is essential to proving the offense. See Keyonnie. Even Holland, on which the court in Sanders relied, did not establish an absolute requirement of dismissal, regardless of the circumstances.
¶ 19 Third, and more importantly, in determining whether dismissal is required, the pertinent cases primarily have focused on whether the violation of right to counsel has “foreclosed a fair trial by preventing [the defendant] from collecting exculpatory evidence no longer available.”
McNutt,
II. Scope of Remedy
¶ 20 Although the state concedes that the officers clearly violated Rosengren’s rights to counsel and to remain silent, it contends “the trial court grievously erred by suppressing the evidence that it did.” The state essentially argues that well-established exclusionary rule principles should control here, such that only evidence “tainted” by the police misconduct should be suppressed.
See Murray v. United States,
¶ 21 In a related argument, the state contends it had a statutory right and valid evidentiary basis to obtain and execute the search warrant for Rosengren’s blood sampie, unrelated to any violation of Rosengren’s rights.
6
See
A.R.S. § 28-1321(D)(l);
State v. Clary,
¶ 22 The state’s argument has a ring of validity and squares with federal exclusionary rule jurisprudence. In general, that rule applies to illegally obtained evidence and requires suppression only when a causal connection exists between a constitutional violation and the government’s obtaining of such evidence.
Nix v. Williams,
¶ 23 In addition, “Sixth Amendment deprivations are subject to the general rule that remedies should be tailored to the injury suffered from the constitutional violation and should not unnecessarily infringe on competing interests.”
United States v. Morrison,
¶ 24 In sum, in the Sixth Amendment context, controlling federal precedent requires suppression of only tainted, illegally obtained evidence. In this case, Rosengren refused to submit to either a voluntary or implied consent blood test after the police violated his right to counsel. Thus, the state did not obtain its BAC evidence as a direct or indirect result of the violation. Because that evidence was not tainted by, or causally connected to, the violation of Rosengren’s right to counsel, federal exclusionary rule principles would not require suppression of that evidence. And, that Rosengren could have obtained independent testing of one of his hospital-drawn blood samples, declined an independent blood draw by a physician of his own choosing, and neither he nor any attorney could have prevented the police from seeking and obtaining the search warrant ultimately used for extracting his blood strengthen the state’s position.
¶25 If this case involved denial of right to counsel in connection with an offense in which BAC evidence played no significant role, we would be hard pressed to reject the state’s argument. This action, however, involves an admitted violation of Rosengren’s right to counsel under Rule 6.1, Ariz.R.Crim. P., and, more importantly, the resulting infringement of his due process right to obtain independent exculpatory evidence bearing on his alleged alcohol impairment, an issue the state deems pivotal to its case. In this particular area of the law, our courts have created special rules that transcend, or at least differ from, standard exclusionary rule principles.
¶26 Despite their surface appeal, the state’s arguments have one major flaw: They either directly contravene or cannot be reconciled with pertinent Arizona authority. For example, in Kunzler, our supreme court stated that, when the state unnecessarily denies a defendant’s “right to consult his attorney, any evidence obtained following this violation of defendant’s right to counsel must be suppressed.”
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¶27 In short, none of the pertinent Arizona eases involving violation of the right to counsel and related due process concerns in the DUI context have limited suppression only to evidence that is “tainted” by the violation. Our supreme court, in no uncertain terms, has stressed the importance of and has assiduously protected the right to counsel in this area. When that right is violated, as it admittedly was here, the court has imposed stringent remedies, ranging from suppression of any evidence obtained after the violation to outright dismissal of the action. Moreover, when the state violates a defendant’s due process right to obtain independent, potentially exculpatory evidence of sobriety, as the trial court found, the violation equates to a de facto suppression of any such evidence that the defendant might have obtained but for the violation.
See Cada,
¶28 The inability to seek other independent evidence relevant to a suspect’s sobriety level during the critical time is particularly significant in a case such as this, in which the defendant is not charged with illegally driving with a BAC over a particular level, but rather, with reckless manslaughter. Actual impairment, not the BAC level per se, is the most critical factor in the recklessness element of that charge. Having refused Rosengren’s repeated requests to speak with his counsel of choice, his father, and having essentially sequestered Rosengren for several hours, thereby depriving him of the opportunity to obtain independent, nonscientific evidence during the critical window of availability, the state should not be permitted to present a one-sided story on the issue of impairment by utilizing incriminating evidence obtained after the violation of his right to counsel. A contrary result, based on the notion that only “tainted” evidence should be suppressed, arguably would violate principles of fundamental fairness, on which the due process guarantee is based.
See Oshrin v. Coulter,
¶ 29 Contrary to the state’s contention, the trial court’s ruling does not improperly expand the exclusionary rule to hinder the truth-seeking process. Rather, a defendant’s “right to present his or her version of the events at issue” implicates “a due process fourteenth amendment right,” which “goes to the heart of insuring the validity of the fact-finding process.”
McNutt,
¶30 That the state ultimately obtained Rosengren’s blood sample via a search warrant does not change the result. The state may not use a search warrant to escape the consequences of a denial of due process.
See State v. Lewis,
¶ 31 Nor do we find error in the trial court’s suppression of other, post-violation evidence. The state’s contention that the trial court erred by suppressing evidence of Rosengren’s refusal to voluntarily submit to a blood test is without merit. Suppression of that evidence is required, not because of any Fifth Amendment violation, but rather, because of the state’s violation of Rosengren’s right to counsel.
See Juarez; Kunzler; State v. Thornton,
¶ 32 The trial court also suppressed all statements by and alleged observations of Rosengren that occurred after his arrival at the hospital at 2:32 a.m. The court essentially attempted to level the playing field by suppressing state evidence obtained after that time. Given the various and repeated infringements of Rosengren’s rights from that time forward, we cannot fault this aspect of the trial court’s ruling or the court’s choice of sanction to remedy the constitutional violations. As the court aptly noted, determination of an appropriate remedy in this case “requires a balancing of the public interest in prosecuting criminal offenses with the notion that the remedy for violation of crucial constitutional rights must not render such rights hollow or illusory.” To limit the remedy in the manner that the state proposes would markedly and unfairly shift that balance.
¶ 33 The state’s reliance on
State v. Schulze,
¶ 34 Finally, we reject the suggestion in the state’s reply brief that “[sjome form of Willits
7
instruction” would adequately remedy the due process violation. Such an instruction is appropriate when a defendant proves that he was prejudiced by the state’s loss or destruction of or failure to preserve material and reasonably accessible evidence that tended to exonerate him.
State v. Atwood,
¶ 35 The trial court did not abuse its discretion in fashioning an appropriate remedy for the violation of Rosengren’s rights. Carter; Pecard. Accordingly, the trial court’s order suppressing evidence is affirmed.
Notes
.
Miranda v. Arizona,
. The Sixth Amendment right to counsel arises only when a defendant is formally charged with a crime.
Moran v. Burbine,
. As the court noted in
State v. Carr,
[T]he person contacted by the arrestee could arrange for a photograph to be taken to demonstrate that the arrestee’s eyes were not bloodshot but were clear and white; prepare a tape recording to demonstrate that the arrestee had clear speech; videotape the arrestee to show that he or she has balance and is able to walk in a straight line; perform a gaze nystagmus test to show smooth eye pursuit at all angles; or simply serve as a witness who observed the aforementioned characteristics of sobriety.
.
See, e.g., McNutt
(police inexplicably denied defendant’s request to telephone his attorney and ignored his request for independent blood test, instead holding him for two-and-one-half hours while any alcohol dissipated from his body);
Amos v. Bowen,
. We also reject Rosengren’s apparent argument that the state’s alleged bad faith, or “[djeliberate and intentional misconduct,” requires dismissal. First, the trial court did not expressly find that the officers’ violation of Rosengren’s right to counsel was in bad faith. Second, as noted above, dismissal is not necessarily mandated unless the state’s action forecloses the possibility of a fair trial.
McNutt; Keyonnie.
Bad faith alone does not necessarily preclude a fair trial.
See United States v. Morrison,
. In separate motions to suppress, Rosengren argued that the officers had illegally arrested him and had obtained an invalid search warrant. Although the trial court deemed those motions moot in light of its ruling on the denial of counsel/due process issue, the court nonetheless stated that it "would have ruled that probable cause to arrest existed” before the officers transported Rosengren to the hospital based on their observations and Rosengren’s voluntary statements at the accident scene. In view of our disposition, we do not address the validity of the arrest or search warrant.
.
State v. Willits,
