A4284
– S2939 Expands Implied Consent Statute to Include Blood And Urine Testing.
On June 24, 2013 the New Jersey Assembly introduced a
bill to expand the implied consent of motor vehicle operators to include blood
and urine testing. The bill would amend P.L.1966, c.142 which currently on
includes breath. The bill is aimed at giving police more tools when a driver is
suspected of driving while intoxicated. The driver would be given a copy of all
the information resulting from the breath, blood and/ or urine test. Currently
suspected drunk drivers in New Jersey are deemed to have given consent to a
breathalyzer test to determine their BAC. Any driver that refuses the
breathalyzer is subject to 7-12 months license suspension and a fine of
$300-$500 for the first offense; two year suspension and $500-$1000 fine for
the second offense; and 10 year suspension and $10,000 fine for the third
offense.
A4284
is in response to the recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling Missouri v. McNeely, 569 U.S.
___ (2013), holding police cannot always take warrantless blood tests from
suspected drunk drivers under exigent circumstance
exception of alcohol dissipating. Suspected drunk drivers could still refuse to
give samples and face the consequences in the existing statute outlined above.
Police could not forcibly take a sample from a person resisting and pursuant to
Section 2(c) of P.L. 1966, c. 142, the suspected drunk driver still has the
right to select the person or physician taking the sample.
This
amendment if enacted substantial changes the information police would have
access to beyond the BAC of the suspected drunk driver. Blood and urine tests
would show other influences on the driver, such as, pregnancy, private medical
conditions, drugs, both prescription or illegal. Would the blood sample test
only be for alcohol? The amendment to the breathalyzer only addresses alcohol,
not other substances. And the legislative history states “drunk drivers,”
suggesting that if blood and urine samples were used to test for other
substances that would be beyond the consented scope of the statute. The take away, is that if A4284 is enacted, it
may infringe on constitutionally protected privacy rights not addressed by the
New Jersey Legislator and be constitutionally invalid.
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ReplyDeleteAaron Andrew @ Criminal Attorney Las Vegas