Lauren Olsen v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 14, 2020
Docket01-18-00281-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Lauren Olsen v. State (Lauren Olsen v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lauren Olsen v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 14, 2020

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-18-00281-CR ——————————— LAUREN OLSEN, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 16th District Court Denton County, Texas Trial Court Case No. F17-2202-16

DISSENTING OPINION

Lauren Olsen contends that she was entitled to a jury instruction under article

38.23 of the Code of Criminal Procedure because the evidence raised disputed fact

issues as to the lawfulness of her arrest for driving while intoxicated with a child

passenger. See TEX. PENAL CODE § 49.045(a). She argues that the jury should have been instructed that if it resolved these disputed fact issues in her favor, it was then

required to disregard the laboratory results of her post-arrest blood draw because this

evidence was illegally obtained. The majority rejects Olsen’s position, holding that

Olsen did not introduce evidence controverting several factors on which the arresting

officer relied in deciding that he had probable cause to arrest her for driving while

intoxicated. In particular, the majority concludes that Olsen failed to present any

evidence contradicting the arresting officer’s testimony that she exhibited signs of

intoxication during the field sobriety tests. Because the arresting officer’s own

testimony creates a disputed fact issue as to Olsen’s performance on these tests and

the arresting officer also testified that this was the sole basis for probable cause, I

respectfully dissent.

Background

The arresting officer, C. Brown, testified about the circumstances of Olsen’s

arrest. While on patrol one evening, Officer Brown came upon a disabled sedan. The

sedan was still running when Brown stopped to render aid. Brown testified that the

sedan’s hazard lights were not turned on, but he conceded that his report said

otherwise.

Brown approached the driver’s side window and got the driver’s attention.

The driver—Olsen—was on her cell phone when he approached. Once Brown had

gotten Olsen’s attention, she got out of the sedan.

2 Olsen told Brown that she was driving home to Sherman after attending a

barbeque at a friend’s home in Lewisville. Based on the sedan’s location, Brown

noted that Olsen had been traveling in the wrong direction.

Both tires on the driver’s side of the sedan were flat. There were holes in the

tires, and they bore a white circular marking consistent with “curb marks,” which

are made when tires in motion rub against a curb.

Brown initially testified that Olsen told him that she thought someone had

slashed her tires. But Brown later conceded that his dashcam video showed that

Olsen had said she had a blowout and that it was Brown who had said that it looked

as though her tires had been slashed.

By the time a tow truck arrived to tow away Olsen’s sedan, Brown had

decided to investigate the possibility that Olsen was intoxicated. He testified that

several circumstances made him suspicious:

● Olsen was traveling in the wrong direction to reach her stated destination;

● Olsen was inconsistent as to the identity of the person with whom she was speaking on her cell phone; and

● the curb marks on the sedan’s tires.

Brown conceded, however, that he did not think the condition of the tires was

itself evidence of intoxication. He also testified that he did not know with whom

Olsen had been speaking on her cell phone and that Olsen had merely told him that

she was speaking with one of the children’s grandparents without specifying which 3 particular grandparent. Given his limited knowledge and understanding of the cell

phone conversation, Brown conceded that Olsen’s apparent inconsistency as to the

identity of the person with whom she was speaking was not necessarily evidence of

intoxication.

Brown asked Olsen if she had been drinking. She told him that she had not.

Brown later learned that Olsen’s representation was untruthful, but he only learned

that she had been untruthful at a family-court hearing held a few months after he

arrested her. At that hearing, Olsen admitted that she had drunk three beers while at

the barbeque.

According to Brown, Olsen did not show any signs of intoxication when she

got out of the sedan or while they examined its tires. Nor did Brown notice an odor

of alcohol on Olsen until after he had concluded his investigation. Brown testified

that he smelled a faint odor of alcohol on Olsen once he had put her in his patrol car

after her arrest. But he agreed that he did not record this in his report. His report

states the opposite—that Olsen did not have an odor of alcohol.

Brown administered three standardized sobriety tests: the horizontal-gaze-

nystagmus test, the walk-and-turn test, and the one-leg-stand test. He concluded that

all three tests indicated that Olsen was intoxicated. At one point during his

testimony, Brown agreed that when he arrested Olsen, he had no reason to think that

she had been drinking other than her performance on the field sobriety tests.

4 But Brown’s testimony about the field sobriety tests was inconsistent. He

agreed that Olsen’s attention may have been divided during the tests, as her ex-

husband’s mother, with whom she had a hostile relationship, had arrived on the

scene and began recording Olsen. Brown also conceded during cross-examination

that Olsen’s physical faculties were good or at least normal during the field sobriety

tests. As to her mental faculties, he identified a single deficiency—namely, that she

did not follow instructions. But Brown acknowledged that her failure to do so may

have resulted from the stress of the situation rather than intoxication. He did not

think a failure to follow instructions meant that a person was intoxicated. In general,

Brown said that nothing was wrong with Olsen’s mental faculties. On redirect,

Brown clarified that he did conclude that Olsen had lost the normal use of her

physical and mental faculties. He stated that his prior contrary testimony resulted

from him misunderstanding defense counsel’s questions.

Before Brown arrested Olsen, Olsen gave him her cell phone so that Brown

could speak to her grandmother (rather than one of her children’s grandmothers).

Olsen’s grandmother testified at trial that during their conversation Brown told her

that Olsen had passed the field sobriety tests. Brown could not recall whether he had

told Olsen’s grandmother that Olsen had passed the tests. More generally, Brown

testified that the field sobriety tests are not “pass/fail” in nature and that their

outcome depends on “clues” that he observes while he administers the tests.

5 Despite Brown’s testimony that Olsen did not show any physical signs of

intoxication, he also stated in his report that Olsen’s eyes were red and watery. His

report also noted that she swayed and was a little unsteady.

Based on his investigation, Brown arrested Olsen. He requested a blood draw.

See TEX. TRANSP. CODE §§ 724.012(b)(2), 724.013 (peace officer shall require

breath or blood sample when he arrests person for offense of driving while

intoxicated with child passenger and person arrested for this offense cannot decline

to provide sample). The laboratory results from the blood draw showed that Olsen

had an alcohol concentration of 0.135.

Applicable Law

Driving While Intoxicated with a Child Passenger

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