State v. Garcia

569 S.W.3d 142
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 2018
DocketNO. PD-0344-17
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 569 S.W.3d 142 (State v. Garcia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Garcia, 569 S.W.3d 142 (Tex. 2018).

Opinion

Keasler, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Hervey, Alcala, Richardson, Newell, and Walker, JJ., joined.

Following a catastrophic car crash, Appellee Joel Garcia was taken to a nearby hospital. Law-enforcement officers, suspecting that Garcia was intoxicated and concerned that he might soon receive an intravenous treatment, took a sample of his blood without a warrant. The State claimed that this action was necessitated by "exigent circumstances,"1 but the trial judge disagreed, suppressing the blood evidence. Deferring to the trial judge's findings of fact, we hold that he did not abuse his discretion in so ruling.

I. FACTS

The court of appeals' recitation of the facts was thorough and well expressed.2 With few exceptions, we adopt it for the purposes of this opinion, and we restate only those facts that are essential to understanding our holding.

In the early morning hours of Christmas Eve, 2014, El Paso police and emergency medical responders were dispatched to the scene of a "serious" car accident.3 The circumstances were "hectic-officers were trying to control traffic, two cars were on fire, and people were walking around the entire area."4 Three people would ultimately die as a result of the crash. The lead investigating officer, Andres Rodriguez, arrived on-scene at approximately 1:52 a.m. While there, Rodriguez discovered that Garcia was the driver of one of the wrecked vehicles-a fact that Garcia initially tried to deny. Rodriguez also began to suspect that Garcia was under the influence of alcohol. So when Garcia refused Rodriguez's request to provide a sample of breath or blood, Rodriguez left the scene between 2:40 and 2:45 a.m. to begin preparing a search warrant.

As he was getting ready to leave, Rodriguez learned that emergency medical responders were taking Garcia to nearby Del Sol Hospital. Rodriguez instructed Officer Steven Torres to accompany Garcia to the hospital. Rodriguez told Torres that "if they start to medicate him or put ... I.V.s or anything on him, let me know and ... I'll break from wherever I am and then I'll go out there and I'll assist you[.]" Rodriguez explained that, based on his training and experience, it was his understanding that some intravenous (I.V.) treatments can dilute a person's blood-alcohol concentration. Rodriguez arrived at the nearest police substation at 2:53 a.m. and immediately began preparing a warrant.

Torres and Garcia arrived at Del Sol at 3:01 a.m., and Garcia was admitted into the emergency room (E.R.) within minutes. When they entered the E.R., a nurse was "already near the curtain by [Garcia's] bed, waiting with equipment to begin" hooking Garcia up to an I.V. drip. Torres made contact with Officer Raul Lom, a recently retired El Paso policeman who was working security at Del Sol on the *146morning of the crash. Lom assisted Torres by relaying information by phone from the hospital to Rodriguez back at the station while Torres stayed near Garcia's hospital bed.

Shortly after Garcia arrived in the E.R., Dr. Gary Kavonian came to Garcia's bed to begin examining him. When Kavonian arrived, Garcia was already surrounded by medical personnel, including the nurse holding the I.V. equipment. Kavonian described Garcia as "uncooperative," and remembered Garcia combatively telling the nurses that "he didn't want to have an I.V." Kavonian ordered the medical staff not to place an I.V. on Garcia, and they complied. Ultimately, Garcia never received an I.V. while at Del Sol Hospital.

But Lom, who testified that he was standing too far from Kavonian to hear him cancel the I.V., was "very certain that [at] any moment" Garcia "would be injected with an I.V." From his vantage, Lom could see the nurse holding the I.V. bag in front of Garcia and Garcia shaking his head in the negative. Torres, standing "five to six feet" from Garcia, was close enough to the medical personnel to at least hear that they were having "[m]ultiple conversations" about him. But just like Lom, Torres claimed that he never heard Kavonian tell the nurse to hold off on the I.V. Torres also claimed that, at the time, he believed an I.V. was imminent. Accordingly, both Lom and Torres testified that they believed "exigent circumstances" justified their immediate, warrantless action. At 3:10 a.m., Lom called Rodriguez to relay his concerns about the I.V., and Rodriguez told Lom to get a sample of Garcia's blood without waiting for a warrant. Lom conveyed Rodriguez's orders to Torres, and together they sought out a phlebotomist to perform the blood draw.

Phlebotomist Adriana Gandara had been paged by hospital staff earlier that morning to report to Garcia's bed for the purpose of performing a medical blood draw. When Gandara got to Garcia's bed, Dr. Kavonian was already there, so she decided not to take any of Garcia's blood until she received an order from Kavonian to do so. As Gandara waited, Lom and Torres approached and told her that they needed her to draw Garcia's blood. Gandara testified that she intended to comply with the officers' request after Kavonian finished his examination, but the officers told her "that they didn't have the paperwork" yet, and asked her to wait "for them to get that." She waited with them for a few minutes, until finally the officers allowed her to return to her regular duties. Eventually, the officers paged Gandara back to the E.R., and at 3:17 a.m., she took two vials of Garcia's blood.

An analysis of Garcia's blood showed that he had a blood-alcohol concentration of 0.268 at the time of the draw. The analysis also detected the presence of "Benzoylecgonine," a cocaine metabolite, in Garcia's blood.

A. The Trial Judge's Findings

Garcia, charged with three counts of intoxication manslaughter, filed a motion to suppress the evidence gathered from the officers' warrantless blood draw. After an extensive hearing on Garcia's motion, the trial judge suppressed the blood evidence, making two sets of oral findings and conclusions and one written set of findings and conclusions. As relevant here, the trial judge found that the historical facts unfolded as follows.5 First, Garcia arrived at the hospital at 3:01 a.m. and was brought into the emergency room "a little shortly thereafter, about 3:05, 3:07 in the morning." Second, he was approached by multiple *147medical caregivers, including a nurse holding I.V. equipment. Third, Garcia refused treatment, and Dr. Kavonian ordered the medical staff to withhold the I.V. Fourth, as Kavonian and the medical staff were leaving the area, Officers Lom and Torres approached Gandara, the phlebotomist. The officers told Gandara that they needed her assistance drawing Garcia's blood, but that they needed to obtain some "paperwork" before that could happen. Fifth, as much as "10 to 20 minutes later," the officers contacted Gandara again and ordered her to draw Garcia's blood.

Without qualification, the trial judge found all of the medical and fire-department personnel credible in their accounts. He made several qualified statements about the credibility of the police officers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
569 S.W.3d 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-garcia-texcrimapp-2018.