Maine v. Rudy

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 4, 2014
DocketCUMcr-14-4530
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Maine v. Rudy, (Me. Super. Ct. 2014).

Opinion

EN i E ~ f D JAN 1 3 2015

STATE OF MAINE UNIFIED CRIMINAL DOCKET CUMBERLAND, ss. No. CR-14-4530 1DW- CUtvl- Of-{)) -JO t5 STATE OF MAINE

v. ORDER

DANIEL RUDY,

Defendant

A hearing on the defendant's motion to suppress in the above-captioned case was held on

December 11, 2014.

The court finds as follows:

On Friday July 11, 2014 the Westbrook Police Department established a sobriety

checkpoint for both eastbound and westbound traffic on Route 302. The checkpoint was

approved by the Chief of Police and was supervised by Westbrook Police Captain Thomas Roth.

The location was selected based on frequency of QUI arrests along that route and because the

road at that location was straight enough not to present any safety hazards.

The checkpoint was conducted from approximately 9:00pm on July 11 to approximately

2:00am on Saturday July 12. Public notice had been given that checkpoints would be employed,

including on that weekend, but no advance notice was given as to the specific date and location

of the Route 302 checkpoint. The checkpoint was identified by vehicles with flashing lights, by

traffic cones along the center and sides of the road, and by officers wearing reflective vests and

carrying flashlights.

The checkpoint was conducted according to a standard procedure designed by Captain

Roth. The officers had no discretion as to which vehicles to stop, and all vehicles were stopped except on three occasions when traffic became backed up and Captain Roth then gave

instructions to wave through all cars until the there was no longer any significant delay.

There were usually three officers available to speak with motorists in both the eastbound

and westbound lanes so three cars could be checked at any one time. 1 The typical interaction

with a driver would last less than a minute, consisting of a brief explanation by the officer that

this was a sobriety checkpoint followed by one or two questions, such as "where are you coming

from?" and "have you had anything to drink?" A total of 185 vehicles were stopped at the

checkpoint, and two drivers were arrested for QUI.

Measured against the standards set forth in Michigan v. Sitz, 496 U.S. 444 (1990), and

State v. Kent, 2011 ME 42, 15 A.3d 1286, the court concludes that the State has established by a

preponderance of the evidence that the conduct of the checkpoint and the initial stop of

defendant Daniel Rudy's vehicle were legally valid.

Rudy was proceeding westbound on Route 302 when he encountered the checkpoint at

approximately 9:50pm, just after a number of vehicles had been waved through because traffic

had backed up. At the checkpoint Rudy encountered Officer Benjamin Hall, who was the

easternmost of the three officers checking westbound traffic. Unlike all of the motorists who

preceded him, Rudy did not fully roll down his window to speak with Officer Hall. He rolled his

window down only \14 of the way. Rudy also did not answer the officer's questions as to where he

was coming from or whether he had consumed any alcohol. Instead, he kept asking why he was

being detained and whether the officer had any right to stop him.

At that point the two other motorists who were being checked at the same time had

moved on. Officer Hall and a Sergeant who was also in the roadway then requested Rudy to

1 Occasionally there were fewer than three officers if a car was pulled out of line or if an officer had to attend to other duties, but where possible, Captain Roth would direct other officers t

2 proceed forward about 50 to 75 feet and pull into a side road. Officer Hall then walked forward

and engaged Rudy in further conversation, during which time Officer Hall noticed the odor of

alcohol, glassy eyes, and dilated pupils and Rudy told him that he had consumed some alcohol

that evening. Those observations led to Officer Hall requesting Rudy to step out of his vehicle

and perform field sobriety tests.

At the time that Officer Hall requested that Rudy pull out of line for further discussion,

Officer Hall testified that he had seen no indication that Rudy was impaired. Hall did not testify

that Rudy's failure to roll down his window more than 1/34 of the way or tha~ Rudy's demeanor

- which Hall described as "argumentative" - led him to suspect that Rudy might have been

impaired. Hall also testified that Rudy could have continued driving rather than following the

officer's request to pull to the side. However, under the circumstances on that evening, where

Rudy had already been stopped at a checkpoint, the court finds that the officer's subsequent

request that Rudy pull into the side road would have been considered to constitute an order.

In State v. McPartland, 2012 ME 12 ~ 10, 36 A.3d 881, the Law CoUrt held that once a

motorist has been stopped at a sobriety checkpoint, a law enforcement officer cannot refer the

motorist to the side of the roadway for additional screening unless the law ¢nforcement officer

has an objectively reasonable basis for suspecting that the motorist has been driving under the

influence. The court does not need to consider whether Rudy's failure to roU down his window,

his demeanor, and his failure to answer the officer's questions could have J:1rovided a basis for

reasonable articulable suspicion because Officer Hall testified that he had no indication of

impairment when he asked Rudy to pull out of line and turn into the side ro~d. In this case the

3 State has not met its burden of proof of establishing objectively reasonabLe suspicion to refer

Rudy for further screening. 2

Defendant's motion to suppress is granted.

Dated: January ~' 2015

Thomas D. Warren Justice, Superior Court

' This is true even though the court would find that after Rudy pulled his vehicle into the side road and was subjected to further screening, Officer Hall thereafter acquired a reasonable articulable suspicion justifying field sobriety tests. But that only occurr¢d after Rudy was detained for additional interaction for which the officer did not have reasonable articulable suspicion.

4 STATE OF MAINE DISTRICT COURT CUMBERLAND, ss. CRIMINAL ACTION DOCKET NO. ww- C/AJ1I\- o~OLf/ f4 STATE OF MAINE MOTION TO SUPPRESS v. (Roadblock)

DANIEL RUDY

NOW COMES Defendant, by and through counsel, and moved to suppress as

evidence all statements made by the Defendant; all out of Court identifications of

Defendant; all physical evidence obtained from Defendant or his motor vehicle and any

observations made of Defendant or his motor vehicle subsequent to the initial

investigatory confrontation.

As grounds for such relief, Defendant asserts that the roadblock that was

implemented by the Westbrook Police Department was illegal and violated the

Defendant's Constitutional rights. The roadblock that provided the government with the

opportunity to initiate an investigatory confrontation with the Defendant, does not meet

the requirements set forth in Michigan v. Sitz, 496 U.S. 444 (1990). The n~adblock thus

constituted an illegal stop and seizure of the Defendant. 29-A M.R.S.A. § 2414.

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Related

Michigan Department of State Police v. Sitz
496 U.S. 444 (Supreme Court, 1990)
State v. Kent
2011 ME 42 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2011)
State v. McPartland
2012 ME 12 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2012)

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