State v. Reed

Decision Date14 June 2013
Docket NumberNo. SD 32465.,SD 32465.
PartiesSTATE of Missouri, Plaintiff–Appellant, v. Jason REED, Defendant–Respondent.
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Andrew J. Rehmer, Bloomfield, MO, for Appellant.

Daniel T. Moore, Poplar Bluff, MO, for Respondent. (No brief filed.)

NANCY STEFFEN RAHMEYER, J.

A Missouri State Highway Patrolman made contact with Jason Reed when Reed drove to pick up a passenger in a car where the driver had been stopped for erratic driving and was subsequently charged with driving while intoxicated. The trooper thought that Reed stopping thirty yards from the location of the stopped car and remaining in the car was “unusual.” The trooper approached Reed and had him perform field sobriety tests. Without Reed's consent and without a warrant, the trooper transported Reed to a hospital for a blood draw approximately two hours later. Reed was then charged with driving while intoxicated. At the subsequent hearing on Reed's motion to suppress, the trial court found:

[T]here were no emergency circumstances or “special facts” of any kind that prevented [the trooper] from following the well established procedure for obtaining the search warrant that may have delayed the process as little as one hour. Further, there was no evidence submitted by the State that other law enforcement officers were unavailable to assist [the trooper]. In fact, [the trooper] did request and receive the assistance of a Deputy Sheriff in transporting Reed to the jail. There was no reason given why that Deputy, or others, could not have helped in completing the application for and obtaining a search warrant.

... [T]here was no accident to investigate and no need to arrange for the medical treatment of an injured person. In fact, there was no[t] even erratic driving to investigate.

....

[The trooper] had a host of choices before him.... [H]e chose not to seek a search warrant. He did not call the Office of the Prosecuting Attorney to determine whether search warrants would readily be available. He testified that he knew how to do so, was trained to do so, and had done so in the past.

The court, citing the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and similar provisions in the Missouri Constitution, suppressed the laboratory results. The State appeals the suppression claiming that “exigent circumstances” or “special facts” existed to justify a warrantless blood draw because: (1) the trooper had to complete a prior DWI investigation prior to turning his attention to Reed; (2) the trooper had to allow twenty minutes for Reed to attempt to contact an attorney before refusing to consent to the blood test; (3) the trooper had to transport Reed to the hospital (for the test); (4) the evanescent nature of blood alcohol concentration; and (5) the additional hour or two delay necessary to obtain a search warrant. The State frames the argument thusly: “Does a two hour and five minute delay caused by a prior driving while intoxicated investigation, the evanescent nature of blood alcohol concentration in a person's blood, and an additional hour or two hour delay necessary to obtain a search warrant create an exigent circumstance to the search warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment?”

Although the State acknowledges that State v. McNeely, 358 S.W.3d 65 (Mo. banc 2012), was the controlling authority in Missouri, its argument does not attempt to distinguish the facts of McNeely but rather focuses on authorities outside the State of Missouri supporting a “per se” rule that the dissipation of blood alcohol creates exigent circumstances. Other than the “evanescent” nature of blood alcohol concentration, the State primarily relies upon the approximate two-hour delay caused by a prior investigation.

We note that it is the State that had the “burden of going forward with the evidence and the risk of non-persuasion to show by a preponderance of the evidence that a motion to suppress should...

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1 cases
  • State v. Jackson
    • United States
    • Missouri Court of Appeals
    • December 26, 2013
    ...and consider all evidence and reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the trial court's ruling.” State v. Reed, 400 S.W.3d 509, 511 (Mo.App.S.D.2013). As a result, we must disregard all evidence and inferences contrary to that ruling. State v. Hutchinson, 796 S.W.2d 100, 104 (M......

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