Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Christopher B. Stokes

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 21, 2025
Docket2024-CA-1436
StatusPublished

This text of Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Christopher B. Stokes (Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Christopher B. Stokes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Christopher B. Stokes, (Ky. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

RENDERED: NOVEMBER 21, 2025; 10:00 A.M. TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals NO. 2024-CA-1436-MR

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM TODD CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE JOE W. HENDRICKS, JR., JUDGE ACTION NO. 22-CR-00031

CHRISTOPHER B. STOKES APPELLEE

OPINION VACATING AND REMANDING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CALDWELL, COMBS, AND EASTON, JUDGES.

EASTON, JUDGE: The Appellee (Stokes) is charged with Murder resulting from

a motor vehicle accident. The Commonwealth alleges Stokes was driving under

the influence (DUI) of drugs other than alcohol at the time of the accident. The

circuit court suppressed the blood test results obtained by a police officer at a

hospital where Stokes had been taken by ambulance. In granting the suppression, the circuit court relied on the effect of the implied consent warning which may

have been read to Stokes before he consented to the blood test.

Because the circuit court essentially applied a presumption to be

rebutted or “overcome” in its totality of the circumstances analysis, we vacate and

remand for further proceedings. As we are vacating the decision, we also note for

purposes of remand that the circuit court proceedings did not include consideration

of the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule. This must be considered as a

matter of law depending on the facts found, because the exclusionary rule may be

applied only for the purpose of deterrence of future police conduct.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

An effective evaluation of the totality of circumstances requires the

presentation of evidence of all the circumstances. The circuit court’s suppression

decision in this case was hampered by the limited information presented, although

much more information clearly was available. We will outline what was presented

during the approximately forty minutes of testimony and identify important

referenced information we do not find in the record.

At about 11:30 a.m. on the morning of August 14, 2020, Stokes was

involved in a head-on collision with a vehicle driven by Suzanne Reynolds.1

1 Sue Reynolds was 68 years old. She was a pastor at the Bethel Cumberland Presbyterian Church in Clarksville, Tennessee.

-2- Reynolds died at the scene. There were officers at the scene before Stokes was

taken by ambulance to the nearby Tennova hospital just across the border2 in

Tennessee. None of these officers provided evidence, and very little about what

they had observed was offered through the officer in charge of the investigation at

the initial suppression hearing. A review of this initial hearing indicates that it was

to be just a beginning to the gathering of evidence for the motion. Only two

officers in court that day gave testimony, and they were subject to recall.

There were seven further court appearances after the partial

evidentiary hearing on September 26, 2022. No further evidence or information

was provided to the circuit court about the circumstances of the consent given by

Stokes.

As an example of missing evidence, KSP3 Trooper (Tpr.) Brian

Graves, who apparently was not present for the initial hearing, spoke with an

unidentified witness at the scene. This interaction was recorded, but that recording

is not in the record. Stokes apparently told the witness that he had sneezed just

prior to the collision, but Stokes also said that the collision occurred in his lane of

travel. We do not know what else this recording may have disclosed about

observations of Stokes by others, or statements made by Stokes at the scene. We

2 The accident occurred in Todd County, Kentucky, which borders Tennessee to the south. 3 Kentucky State Police.

-3- also do not know whether Stokes was aware of the fatality, although it would seem

unlikely that Stokes would not have been aware of the seriousness of the collision

before he was removed from the scene.

The lead investigating officer, KSP Sergeant (Sgt.) Nicholas Rice, did

not arrive at the scene until after Stokes had been taken away by ambulance. Sgt.

Rice directed KSP Tpr. Michael Dennis to go to the Tennova hospital to obtain a

blood sample from Stokes. Sgt. Rice explained that protocol required seeking a

blood test when a fatality had occurred.

Tpr. Dennis is an eighteen-year veteran with the KSP. His experience

as an officer had been with alcohol-related DUI cases, not cases involving other

drugs. He went to the hospital and met with Stokes. No one suggests that Stokes

was under arrest at the hospital or that Tpr. Dennis in any way detained Stokes.

The circuit court even remarked that an arrest in Tennessee could be seen as

“kidnapping” because of the lack of jurisdiction for a Kentucky officer to arrest in

Tennessee.

Tpr. Dennis asked Stokes for his consent to a blood test. When asked

if he read the then current implied consent warning to Stokes before seeking the

blood test, Tpr. Dennis replied: “to the best of my knowledge, I did.”4 No

4 Record (R.) 9-26-22 at 3:00:25-33.

-4- evidence was offered from the nurse5 who performed the blood draw about the

circumstances of the draw, including the nature of any statements read to Stokes.

Stokes himself did not provide any evidence about whether he heard the implied

consent information or how it impacted him.

Tpr. Dennis described Stokes as “pretty jovial.” Stokes did not seem

“really concerned” about the situation. Tpr. Dennis said: “I don’t know if he was

fully aware of what happened.”6 Tpr. Dennis recalls telling Stokes he had a right

to consult an attorney, which he chose not to do. Stokes consented to the blood

draw. The testing of that blood would reveal the presence of fentanyl.

One of the few items discussed during the hearing is a hospital record

form about the blood draw. This form is a single page. It is page 110 out of 137

pages of hospital records. The other 136 pages are not part of this court record.

Unless these records were reviewed in total by the circuit court, that court could

not know if a blood draw occurred separately for medical treatment reasons and

was thus inevitable. This could have impacted the suppression decision.

Another important question remains unanswered. Stokes’s counsel

assumed a fact not in evidence and asked the following question of Tpr. Dennis:

5 One of the attorneys informed the circuit court at a subsequent court appearance that the nurse was not cooperative. A subpoena often has the effect of altering cooperation attitudes. 6 R. 9-26-22 at 3:04:14-56.

-5- “Are you aware that he (Stokes) was administered fentanyl at the hospital for

pain?”7 If this is true, which would have provided the required good faith basis for

the question and which also could have been easily confirmed by the missing

hospital records, it may be a circumstance relevant to the consent given.

In its Order granting Stokes’s motion to suppress the blood test

results, the circuit court found that Tpr. Dennis was “under no suspicion that

[Stokes] was under the influence of any substances”8 when he sought consent,

despite the uncontradicted testimony of Tpr. Dennis that he thought Stokes was

impaired with his additional description of Stokes’s having “glossy” and “wide

open” eyes and that Stokes was talking “quite frequently.”9

Regardless of any factual finding as to observed impairment, the

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Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Christopher B. Stokes, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-of-kentucky-v-christopher-b-stokes-kyctapp-2025.