Com. v. Whitmire, T.

2023 Pa. Super. 137, 300 A.3d 484
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 28, 2023
Docket1302 WDA 2022
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2023 Pa. Super. 137 (Com. v. Whitmire, T.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Com. v. Whitmire, T., 2023 Pa. Super. 137, 300 A.3d 484 (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

J-S22044-23

2023 PA Super 137

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : TROY JORDAN WHITMIRE : : Appellant : No. 1302 WDA 2022

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered August 24, 2022 In the Court of Common Pleas of Butler County Criminal Division at CP-10-CR-0000460-2021

BEFORE: OLSON, J., STABILE, J., and MURRAY, J.

OPINION BY MURRAY, J.: FILED: July 28, 2023

Troy Jordan Whitmire (Appellant) appeals from the judgment of

sentence imposed after the trial court convicted him of two counts of driving

under the influence (DUI)—controlled substance.1 We affirm.

The trial court explained:

Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Nicholas Dahlstrom testified [at Appellant’s non-jury trial] that he has been employed by the Pennsylvania State Police [(PSP)] for approximately four and a half years as a patrol trooper. He testified that on January 9, 2021, he encountered [Appellant] while investigating a report of harassment between [Appellant] and his sister, Kara Whitmire. Ms. Whitmire was granted an emergency [protection from abuse order (]PFA[)]. Trooper Dahlstrom contacted [Appellant] via phone and asked him to come to the Butler PSP barracks to be served the emergency PFA, to which [Appellant] agreed. N.T., Non-Jury Trial, July 8, 2022, pg. 19. On cross-examination, [Trooper Dahlstrom] explained that [Appellant] was asked to come to the barracks to be served the emergency PFA because when the trooper attempted to serve [Appellant] in the field, he was unable to locate [Appellant]. Id. at 28. ____________________________________________

1 75 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 3802(d)(1)(i) and 3802(d)(2). J-S22044-23

According to [Trooper Dahlstrom’s] testimony, [Appellant] arrived at the [PSP] barracks at approximately 10:30 p.m. The trooper walked out to the lobby area to meet [Appellant] and advised him of the PFA. While speaking with [Appellant, Trooper Dahlstrom] observed [Appellant] rambling about the people listed on the most wanted poster in the lobby and about the people in Butler who use drugs. The trooper asked [Appellant] if he had taken any drugs that day and [Appellant] responded that he smoked marijuana earlier that day. Id. at 20.

[Trooper Dahlstrom] testified that he went to the communications room to ask if Trooper Treadway was available for a drug recognition evaluation. Trooper Dahlstrom testified that [Appellant] drove himself to the [PSP] barracks that evening. He based that on the fact that [Appellant’s] vehicle was outside with nobody else inside and [Appellant] said he drove his vehicle [to the barracks] from the Bruin area. Id. at 21. The Commonwealth submitted Commonwealth’s Exhibit “3,” which is the [PennDOT] DL-26 [chemical test warnings] form that Trooper Dahlstrom read to [Appellant]. Both [Appellant] and [Trooper Dahlstrom] signed the form and [Appellant] agreed to submit to a blood draw. The Commonwealth also offered Commonwealth’s Exhibit “4,” which is the paperwork provided by the phlebotomist at Butler Memorial Hospital and shows that [Trooper Dahlstrom] witnessed [Appellant’s] blood draw, signed [the accompanying form,] and noted the date and time. Both exhibits were admitted without objection.

Trooper Treadway did conduct a drug recognition evaluation of [Appellant] approximately 20 to 25 minutes after [Appellant] arrived at the barracks. Id. at 22. At approximately 11:30 p.m., Trooper Dahlstrom transported [Appellant] to Butler Memorial Hospital for a blood test. [Trooper Dahlstrom] read the DL-26 blood test warnings to [Appellant]. The trooper testified that [Appellant] understood the warnings, signed the document and agreed to submit to a blood test. Id. The test was administered at approximately 11:55 p.m. Id. at 23. The Pennsylvania State Police sent the blood sample to NMS Labs for analysis. Id. at 24. Trooper Dahlstrom received the lab results on February 1, 2021[; the results] showed active and inactive ingredients of marijuana. Id. at 25. [Trooper Dahlstrom] testified that he has encountered and observed approximately 100 people under the influence of marijuana over the course of [his] employment as a trooper and

-2- J-S22044-23

that [Appellant’s] behavior was consistent with those observations. Id. at 26.

Next, Trooper Philip Treadway testified that he is a patrol trooper, drug recognition expert and drug recognition expert instructor. The parties stipulated that the trooper would testify as an expert in drug recognition. Id. at 35-36. Trooper Treadway testified to the 12-step evaluation conducted by a drug recognition expert and specifically, his findings regarding [Appellant]. The breath alcohol test [Appellant performed] eliminated alcohol as an impairing substance. Next, [Trooper Treadway] interviewed the arresting officer, Trooper Dahlstrom, who related that [Appellant] was acting erratically in the lobby and [Trooper Dahlstrom] had concerns that [Appellant] might be drug impaired. Next, Trooper Treadway ruled out other potential reasons for [Appellant’s] impairment, such as lack of sleep, food, drink, [or] medical impairment. Id. at 37.

Trooper Treadway continued with his testimony, noting that [Appellant’s] sense of time was off by more than an hour. [Appellant] presented extreme mood swings[; Appellant was] joking and relaxed one moment to being paranoid and argumentative the next and having a very short attention span. [Appellant] denied using prescription or illicit drugs. [Trooper Treadway testified that Appellant’s] first pulse check was elevated and his eye examination showed a lack of convergence. Id. at 38.

Next, Trooper Treadway testified that the modified Romberg balance test indicated [Appellant’s] lack of time perception, i.e., [Appellant] estimated 13 seconds to be 30 seconds. [Appellant’s] eyelids showed tremors[,] which points to potential recent marijuana usage. [Appellant] proceeded to the walk and turn test[,] which indicated eight out of eight possible clues of impairment. The trooper noted[, with respect to the walk and turn test,] that the decision point to arrest roadside only requires two of the eight validated clues of impairment. Id. at 39.

The next test was the one leg test, which [Appellant] demonstrated three out of four clues of impairment on his first attempt and two out of four on the second attempt. [Appellant] also demonstrated a great lack of attention to counting on this test. Id. Next was the finger to nose test, which showed [Appellant’s] lack of perception of distance. [Trooper Treadway]

-3- J-S22044-23

then checked [Appellant’s] vital signs, which indicated that his pulse was elevated, blood pressure [was] elevated and body temperature [was] normal. The eye exam showed that [Appellant’s] eyes were dilated above the DRE (Drug Recognition Evaluation) range and there was a yellow-green coating on his tongue, both of which indicate recent cannabis usage. [Appellant’s] third pulse check was elevated. The trooper asked [Appellant] about his drug usage and explained the results of the evaluation. [Appellant] stated that he smoked medical marijuana four or five hours [before arriving at the PSP barracks]. Trooper Treadway recommended to Trooper Dahlstrom that [Appellant] be transported to the hospital for a blood test. Id. at 40.

Trooper Treadway also gave his opinion, as a DRE expert, that [Appellant] “was not currently safe to operate a motor vehicle in the Commonwealth and that was due to recent cannabis usage.” Id. at 40-41. His opinion was rendered based on his training and experience to a reasonable degree of DRE certainty. Id. Commonwealth’s Exhibit “6,” the drug influence evaluation report, was admitted without objection.

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Com. v. Whitmire, T.
2023 Pa. Super. 137 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2023)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2023 Pa. Super. 137, 300 A.3d 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-whitmire-t-pasuperct-2023.