Former Missouri DWI Judge and ACLU Lawyer Talk Warrant Requirement For Breathalyzer; Scalia BalksProsecutors have all the power in these cases in the first place -- the fact is prosecutors have been getting guilty verdicts withOUT alcohol-percentage tests for more years than they have with them. We cannot continually chip away the 4th Amendment
By: DWI Center of St. Louis Missouri Missouri law already compels DWI defendants to submit to a blood, urine or breathalyzer test at the risk of losing their license anywhere from 90 days to a year. Apparently, however, the loss of one's license is not enough for Missouri prosecutors who contend that they very much need alcohol-percentage evidence to get DWI convictions. Some Missouri prosecutors want police to have qualified medical personnel take blood from non-willing suspects without a court's order (a warrant). Long time DWI Lawyer and former Judge Mike Carter pointed out that: "It's already the case that police officers only need a 'reasonable suspicion' to take someone's driver license for up to a year. Now police want to stick needles in suspect's arms without a warrant? I have overseen these cases and was personally found innocent of a DWI by a jury in about nine minutes. Prosecutors have all the power in these cases in the first place -- the fact is prosecutors have been getting guilty verdicts withOUT alcohol-percentage tests for more years than they have with them. There simply is no compelling reason to take away citizens' fourth amendment rights more than the government already has when taking driver licenses away based on 'reasonable suspicion'. The ACLU attorney in this United States Supreme Court case was closer to right when he indicated warrants should be required for breathalyzer and urine tests too. Although Scalia clearly didn't buy into the idea." The Missouri DWI case that the United States Supreme Court heard involved a DWI suspect (Tyler G. McNeely) who refused to volunteer for breath or blood tests and so police took him to the hospital, handcuffed and forced him to submit to a blood test. The police never obtained a search warrant prior to the blood draw. The U.S. Supreme Court is deciding whether that was an unreasonable search in light of the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution. DWIs are one of the most common crimes committed in the US, but they usually aren't committed by what the general public typically sees as criminals. Ordinary, respectable citizens often find themselves being charged with this incredibly serious offense -- judges, gubernatorial & senatorial candidates, football coaches, football players, grandmas, grandpas, moms and dads. "Prosecutors and defense attorneys alike have begun to sense a growing dissatisfaction with DWI laws among jurors hearing DWI cases across the state. During initial jury interviews, jurors routinely acknowledge knowing someone who has been adversely affected by a DWI allegation," Mike Carter is an independent- This motivated Carter to take an active role in fighting the injustices that can sometimes come along with a DWI case. Carter is the senior attorney at DWI CENTER and runs a website that offers information to those charged with DWI at http://www.DwiCenter.com. Missouri's DOR's DWI website is http://r20.rs6.net/ CONTACT: Mike Carter +1-314-895-4040, carter@DwiCenter.com http://www.45BUCKS.com http://www.TrafficSTL.com http://www.DidYouBlow.com Photo: https://www.prlog.org/ End
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