Mogg v. State

918 N.E.2d 750, 2009 Ind. App. LEXIS 2852, 2009 WL 5173519
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 2009
DocketNo. 29A04-0902-CR-82
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 918 N.E.2d 750 (Mogg v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mogg v. State, 918 N.E.2d 750, 2009 Ind. App. LEXIS 2852, 2009 WL 5173519 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

ROBB, Judge.

Case Summary and Issues

Jennifer Mogg pled guilty to operating a vehicle while intoxicated, a Class A misdemeanor, and her jail sentence was suspended to probation. Following an admitted violation of her probation, which included as a condition that she consume no alcoholic beverages, the trial court extended Mogg's probation and imposed a further condition that she continuously wear a Secure Continuous Remote Aleo-hol Monitor ("SCRAM") bracelet. Following subsequent allegations of probation violations, the trial court revoked Mogg's probation on the basis of findings she consumed alcohol as evidenced by positive readings while on SCRAM. Mogg now appeals the revocation of her probation, raising a single issue that we expand and restate as: 1) whether the trial court abused its discretion in admitting evidence of Mogg's alcohol consumption generated by the SCRAM system; and 2) whether sufficient evidence supports the revocation of Mogg's probation. We conclude the trial court, based upon the uncontroverted expert testimony and evidence before it, did not abuse its discretion in determining the SCRAM read[753]*753ings were sufficiently reliable to be admissible as evidence of Mogg's alcohol consumption for purposes of a probation revocation. As a result, sufficient evidence supports the revocation of Mogg's probation, and we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Facts and Procedural History1

On January 16, 2007, Mogg pled guilty to operating a vehicle while intoxicated, a Class A misdemeanor. The trial court sentenced her to 365 days in jail, all suspended to probation. Condition 15 of Mogg's probation prohibited Mogg from consuming or possessing alcoholic beverages. On August 2, 2007, the State alleged Mogg violated her probation by being publicly intoxicated or operating a vehicle while intoxicated; as a condition of her bond, she was required to wear a SCRAM bracelet. In January 2008, Mogg was placed on a SCRAM II bracelet, an updated version of SCRAM. On March 17, 2008, Mogg admitted violating her probation in an agreement that extended her probation by four months and required her to remain on SCRAM II.

On June 20, 2008, the State filed an information of probation violation alleging Mogg violated her probation by consuming alcohol on June 14 and 15, 2008, "as evidenced by ... 2 positive SCRAM events." Appellant's Appendix at 83.2 On November 12, 2008, the State filed another information of probation violation alleging Mogg violated her probation by consuming alcohol on October 31 and November 1, 2008, "as evidenced by positive readings for alcohol while on SCRAM." Id. at 113.

On December 8, 2008, the trial court held an evidentiary hearing on both infor-mations. The State called Jeffrey Hawthorne, whom the trial 'court qualified as an expert witness based on his training as an electrical engineer, his experience in research and development of a hand-held alcohol breathalyzer, his position as co-founder and chief technology officer of Alcohol Monitoring Systems, Inc. ("AMS"), where he co-invented the SCRAM system, and his prior qualification as an expert witness in numerous jurisdictions. According to Hawthorne's testimony, the SCRAM system, which AMS manufactures, measures concentrations of trans-dermal alcohol, that is, alcohol perspired through a person's skin as sweat or vapor. Transdermal alcohol concentration ("TAC") rises and falls on a curve that lags four to five hours behind the curve of blood alcohol concentration, as it takes longer for alcohol to be perspired through a person's skin than to be absorbed into the bloodstream. The SCRAM bracelet, attached to the person's lower leg or ankle, uses a fuel cell to detect alcohol in vapor drawn into a collection chamber, and this alcohol detection technology is similar to that employed in many breath-testing devices.

Hawthorne testified the SCRAM brace let electronically transmits, every thirty minutes, transdermal alcohol readings through a modem in the person's residence to an AMS central computer. An AMS technician monitors the flow of data, AMS [754]*754analyzes the data, and AMS and its local service provider (here, Total Court Services, Inc.) notify the probation office supervising the person when the data indicate alcohol consumption of more than one drink per hour for an average person. The SCRAM system "does not 'flag' an event until three consecutive readings exceed [TAC of] 0.02%," which the average person reaches only with "more than one drink in his or her system. This gives the wearer the benefit of the doubt." Transcript at 299. When an alcohol consumption event is indicated, the person is given an opportunity to provide AMS with an alternative explanation for the positive readings, such as an environmental "inter-ferant" or other non-beverage alcohol exposure. Id. at 312. AMS technicians are trained to distinguish the TAC curve resulting from a true drinking event from one that is the result of an interferant. According to Hawthorne, the SCRAM system is not designed to measure a precise amount of aleohol in the body, rather, it is a "semi-quantitative" sereening device for determining "whether a person consumed a small, moderate or large amount of alcohol." Id. at 290. AMS protects against mechanical error by testing all SCRAM bracelets before shipping them, calibrating each bracelet before placing it online, and running remote diagnostic checks. AMS has tested the accuracy of the SCRAM system in a study involving 839 total events, which registered 62 true positive drinking events and one false positive.

The State also called Joe Cook, an employee of Total Court Services who fitted Mogg with the SCRAM II device. According to Cook, he had received twenty-four hours of training from AMS on both SCRAM I-the original version of the SCRAM bracelet-and SCRAM II, including how to properly fit a person with the SCRAM II bracelet. Cook testified he fitted Mogg's bracelet in accordance with his training, initialized the bracelet, and at that time the bracelet was working properly. The State also offered, and the trial court admitted over Mogg's objection, the violation report from the SCRAM system showing, based on Mogg's TAC graphs for the dates in question, two confirmed alcohol consumption events by Mogg on June 13-14, 2008, and October 31-November 1, 2008.

As a foundation for the reliability of the SCRAM results, the State offered, and the trial court admitted, two published studies. The first study (the "Sakai study") was published as Joseph T. Sakai et al., Validity of Transdermal Alcohol Monitoring: Fixed and Self-Regulated Dosing, 30 Al-coholisnx Climeal and Experimental Research 26 (2006). The Sakai study showed that in a laboratory study involving twenty-four persons and over eighty samples from those who did not consume alcohol, the SCRAM I bracelet had no false positive readings. However, "the [SCRAM I] device consistently detected consumption of approximately 2 standard drinks." Tr. at 226. The Sakai study was funded in part by a grant from AMS. The second study (the "NHTSA study") was a November 2007 report of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which involved twenty-two persons who wore SCRAM I over a period averaging four weeks per person and engaged in laboratory-dosed and self-dosed drinking totaling 271 episodes. The study concluded SCRAM I had no "false-positive problems when true BAC was <.02 g / dL." Id. at 241. The problems identified with SCRAM I were false negatives and that the bracelet's sengitivity and accuracy declined over the duration of wear.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
918 N.E.2d 750, 2009 Ind. App. LEXIS 2852, 2009 WL 5173519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mogg-v-state-indctapp-2009.