Com. v. Zamperini, B.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 28, 2017
DocketCom. v. Zamperini, B. No. 191 WDA 2017
StatusUnpublished

This text of Com. v. Zamperini, B. (Com. v. Zamperini, B.) 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. Zamperini, B., (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

J-S43039-17

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA v.

BETHANN ZAMPERINI

Appellant No. 191 WDA 2017

Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence January 19, 2017 In the Court of Common Pleas of Butler County Criminal Division at No(s): CP-10-CR-0001174-2016

BEFORE: STABILE, SOLANO, and FITZGERALD* JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY FITZGERALD, J.: FILED JULY 28, 2017

Appellant, Bethann Zamperini, appeals from the judgment of sentence

entered in the Butler County Court of Common Pleas following her conviction

in a non-jury trial of driving under the influence 1 (“DUI) and speeding.2

Appellant contends the evidence was insufficient to sustain a guilty verdict

for DUI. We affirm.

At trial, Officer Christopher Miller, patrolman for the Jackson Township

Police Department, testified for the Commonwealth.

The Commonwealth: Officer, I want to draw your attention to the early morning hours of February twenty-fourth, two thousand and sixteen. . . .

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. 1 75 Pa.C.S. § 3802(a). 2 75 Pa.C.S. § 3362(a)(3). J-S43039-17

* * *

Can you tell us how you came into contact with [Appellant] that night?

A: I was stationed at the RE/MAX Building on Route nineteen. In front of the building there are two sets of two hundred foot speed lines. I was exposed in a manner that I could observe both sets of lines, and I observed the vehicle traveling southbound. It was clearly traveling at a high rate of speed. I timed at least twenty miles over the speed limit. It was clocked with department AccuTracker. I got seventy-four point eight in a posted fifty mile an hour zone there. I initiated a traffic stop on the vehicle . . . . I made contact with the driver. After sometime she was able to produce her driver’s license. . . . Through the course of speaking with her through the window I could detect an odor of an alcoholic beverage, intoxicating beverage coming out of the vehicle. She was the only occupant in the vehicle. I asked her if she had been drinking. She said, no. I asked her where she was coming from. She said Three B’s, which was a bar in Zelienople. She said she was bartending and had just finished. While speaking with her I could detect that, observed her speech to be a little slurred. Her eyes also appeared glassy and bloodshot. I asked that she step from the vehicle at that point.

[The Commonwealth]: . . . How were you able to see the lines?

A: I, you could see the lines when the headlights first hit the lines itself it illuminates them. I sit there in total darkness, and, you know, I am able to see the lines without any lighting from vehicles passing, but, I mean, it’s even more pronounced when a vehicle passes through.

Q: Was there any other traffic on the road at that time.

A: Very light. She was by herself in that vehicle.

-2- J-S43039-17

Q: [W]hat else did you observe with your initial contact with her?

A: Her speech was slurred at times. When I asked her to produce her driver’s license, it took her a little bit longer than what a reasonable person [sic]. She seemed to fumble with some of her items in her wallet. She avoided eye contact with me, didn’t want to answer really many questions that I asked her, during the course of that conduct, contact.

Q: [W]hat did you do next?

A: I asked her to step from the vehicle, to perform standardized field sobriety [sic] to which she did and she agreed to do that.

Q: Which test did she perform?

A: We conducted the HG[N Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus], walk and turn, one leg stand, and she was also issued a PBT [pre-arrest breath test] at the end of that.

Q: Now, I don’t want to get into the HGN.[3] We are not allowed to talk to [sic] about that in a trial. I want you to go through the walk and turn test and one leg stand and explain each one how she performed on each one of those tests if you would, please?

A: The walk and turn test is a series of there’s [sic] eight clues that can be observed in a walk and turn test. She’s instructed to remain in a ready position which would be her left foot on the line, right foot in front of it touching heel to toe, hands at side. I instruct her to remain in the position while I demonstrate the test. While I did that she started the test and started to walk. I had to stop her, tell

3 HGN test results have been deemed scientific evidence by Pennsylvania courts, and therefore require an adequate foundation prior to their admissibility. Commonwealth v. Stringer, 678 A.2d 1200, 1201 (Pa. Super. 1996).

-3- J-S43039-17

her to remain in that position. Once I demonstrated the test and asked her if she understood the test, she started the test and took eighteen steps and then stopped the test completely. I had to instruct her to turn, you know, finish the turn portion of the test and then return steps. So, she pivoted rather than take a series of small steps and then returned another eighteen to twenty steps on the way back to where she first started.

Q: How many clues did she show in that, performing that test?

A: In that there was four of eight.

Q: And what were those clues specifically?

A: She started the test too early. She took too many steps. She stopped the test and then she turned improperly.

Q: How many steps was she supposed to take?

A: Nine consecutive. Stop, take a series of small steps then return an additional nine steps.

Q: Okay. You said the other test she did was the one leg stand. Explain how she performed on that?

A: She was again instructed to remain in a ready position while I demonstrated the test with her feet together and hands at her side. I conducted the test, demonstrated it for her and instructed her to begin. She indicated she understood. When I instructed her to begin, she was, during when I demonstrated the test she was instructed to take her right or left foot, didn’t matter, raise it six inches from the ground keeping her legs straight and toe pointed forward parallel with the ground, her hands supposed to be kept at her side. While conducting the test count out loud by one thousandths until I tell her to stop. We timed the test. I use a stop watch on my personal phone and estimate a passage of thirty seconds. While she’s doing the test she’s supposed to remain, keep looking at her toe,

-4- J-S43039-17

hands at her side, count out by one thousand, when I instructed her to do so she used her arms for balance and put her foot down at the twenty-five seconds. I instructed her to keep going. She picked her foot up, put it right down immediately again. With that test I observed two clues.

Q: That was going to be my next question. Are there clues connected with that test?

A: Four total.

Q: She showed two?

A: She showed two.

Q: Okay. And then what else did you observe with her in your interaction with her on the side of the road?

A: When I was conducting the HGN, I was up close with her. I could smell the odor of an alcoholic beverage, intoxicating beverage emanating from her person at that point. She was also when standing still would sway side to side, which gave me some other indications she was possibly over her limit of alcohol.

Q: And did you administer a PBT . . . ?

A: I did.

Q: Was it positive for alcohol?

A: It was positive, yes.

Q: Did you have any opinion at that point, Officer, about her condition to drive a motor vehicle?

A: It was my opinion at that point that she was over the legal limit, clearly, and placed her, took her into custody.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Stringer
678 A.2d 1200 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1996)
Commonwealth v. Segida
985 A.2d 871 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2009)
Commonwealth v. Widmer
744 A.2d 745 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2000)
Commonwealth v. Ratsamy
934 A.2d 1233 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2007)
Commonwealth v. Brown
52 A.3d 1139 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Com. v. Zamperini, B., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-zamperini-b-pasuperct-2017.