State v. Victor H. Franco

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 14, 2005
Docket04-04-00072-CR
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Victor H. Franco (State v. Victor H. Franco) 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
State v. Victor H. Franco, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION



Nos. 04-04-00071-CR and 04-04-00072-CR


The STATE of Texas,

Appellant


v.


Victor FRANCO,

Appellee


From the 227th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas

Trial Court Nos. 2003-CR-4272 & 2003-CR-4273

Honorable Pat Priest, Judge Presiding

Opinion by:    Sarah B. Duncan, Justice

Sitting:            Alma L. López, Chief Justice

Catherine Stone, Justice

Sarah B. Duncan, Justice

Delivered and Filed:   September 14, 2005


AFFIRMED

            The State of Texas appeals the trial court’s orders suppressing Victor Franco’s blood alcohol test results and related testimony. We affirm.


Factual and Procedural Background

            On Friday, January 3, 2003, at approximately 7:58 p.m., Officer Pete Knutson of the San Antonio Police Department arrived at the scene of an accident. The accident occurred at approximately 7:50 p.m., when Franco ran a stop sign, causing his pickup to collide with another vehicle. Both the driver of the other vehicle, Jovita Reyes, and her passenger and son, Joseph, were killed. When Knutson confronted Franco, he smelled an odor of an alcoholic beverage and asked Franco if he had been drinking. Franco responded that he left work, consumed one Bud Light beer, and was on his way to his girlfriend’s house. Franco explained that he did not see the stop sign. After Franco’s performance on standardized field sobriety tests showed signs that he was impaired, and a portable breath test, conducted about an hour after the accident, indicated his blood alcohol level was .09, he was arrested for driving while intoxicated and read his rights. Franco refused a request for a blood sample and was then taken to a hospital for treatment of his injuries and a mandatory blood withdrawal. The first blood sample, withdrawn at 10:05 p.m., yielded a blood alcohol level of .07. A second blood sample, withdrawn at 11:55 p.m., yielded a blood alcohol level of .02. Franco’s medical records at the hospital establish that he sustained only minor injuries in the accident. At the time of the accident, Franco was twenty years old, 5'6" tall, with a weight of 130 pounds and no known drug allergies; at the hospital, he appeared “alert and oriented,” with “warm and dry” skin.

            Alleging both the per se intoxication and impairment theories of intoxication, the State charged Franco with the manslaughter and intoxication manslaughter of Jovita and Joseph Reyes. Before trial in each case, Franco moved to suppress the blood test results and related testimony. At the ensuing suppression hearing, the State called the chief toxicologist for the Bexar County Medical Examiner’s Office, Dr. Gary Kunsman.

            Kunsman holds a bachelor of science degree from Virginia Tech in chemistry and a doctorate from Louisiana State University Medical Center in pharmacology and forensic toxicology. While obtaining his doctorate, and thereafter as a postdoctoral fellow at LSU, Kunsman researched how alcohol alone or in combination with a commonly-used sleeping pill affect human performance and specifically driving. Kunsman’s postdoctoral work also involved developing a device to measure “upper body sway”– which he explained as “the lower part of your body basically staying in one place but the upper part of your body is sort of moving around”– and correlating upper body sway to the amount of alcohol a subject consumed. He found that “most people swayed more as their blood-alcohol level would rise.” Kunsman also performed a study in which he determined there is a very close correlation between the results of blood alcohol tests and portable breath tests.

            After concluding his fellowship, Kunsman went to work for the State of Oklahoma at its Chief Medical Examiner’s Office as the assistant to the chief forensic toxicologist. He then went to the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, where he worked approximately five years in the forensic toxicology division as part of the Office of the Armed Forces Medical Examiner, a laboratory of which he ultimately became the co-director. Among the responsibilities of that office is to act as the scientific advisor of the breath testing programs of the United States Park Police and the United States Capitol Police and to act as a consultant to the Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Police.

            Kunsman left his position in D.C. to become the Bexar County Medical Examiner’s chief toxicologist. In this role, Kunsman is responsible for the day-to-day operations of, and supervision of all of the analytical procedures performed by, a full service forensic toxicology laboratory serving law enforcement in Bexar, Kerr, Kendall, and occasionally Webb Counties. When testing for blood alcohol concentration, Kunsman’s office performs two tests. The first procedure is a gas chromatographic technique, which is considered the “gold standard.” The second is a “confirmation test,” which uses an enzymatic method in which a blood sample is subjected to an ultraviolet light to measure the blood alcohol concentration. During his career, Kunsman has authored around twenty-five peer-reviewed articles, as well as three book chapters; but none of these deal with retrograde extrapolation. He has also been an instructor for police officers in drug recognizance expert training and is currently a clinical instructor in the master’s toxicology program at the University of Texas Health Science Center.

            The greatest percentage of cases in which Kunsman has been called to testify have involved alcohol and retrograde extrapolations. Kunsman thus explained in great detail the process by which alcohol is absorbed by and later eliminated from the human body, the generally accepted elimination rate for social drinkers (between .015 and .02 grams per deciliter per hour), and specifically how retrograde extrapolation could determine from a single measurement of blood alcohol what the blood alcohol level was at an earlier time with scientific reliability if certain assumptions were made and variables known. The most important variables are whether the person is in generally good health, was in a social drinking situation before being stopped, drinks no more alcohol between the time of the stop and the time the blood sample is taken, and is in the post-absorptive phase by the time of the stop or accident. Kunsman testified that multiple tests with decreasing alcohol concentrations provide a stronger foundation to conclude that a subject is in the post-absorptive phase and to perform a retrograde extrapolation.

            Kunsman was asked whether he could estimate the blood alcohol concentration of a person at the time of an accident that occurred at approximately 7:50 p.m.

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Related

State v. Mechler
153 S.W.3d 435 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2005)
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129 S.W.3d 93 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2004)
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46 S.W.3d 902 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2001)

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State v. Victor H. Franco, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-victor-h-franco-texapp-2005.