ShaneEnochs
Member
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2011
- Messages
- 4,298
Shane, first of all let me offer my condolences for what must have been a really miserable night.
Here's my unsolicited two cents:
While Klamath's post (#20) is correct and sobriety checkpoints have been deemed (quasi) Constitutional by the Supreme Court (lousy verdict, IMHO) I am not at all sure that what happened to you fits the bill. Remember, the Supreme Court said the checkpoints must be "properly conducted" - their words - and I *THINK* that the cops are still required to have probable cause in order to ask you to take any sort of sobriety test. Even at a checkpoint, they're supposed to notice things like slurred speech, the smell of alcohol on the breath, impaired movement, erratic driving, etc BEFORE they're able to force you into blowing into a BAC machine.
I would highly recommend calling the ACLU if you intend to pursue this matter. They'll have the legal firepower to follow up. Otherwise you're looking at thousands, or even tens of thousands of dollars in attorney's fees.
I can't help but wonder if the reason you're not "in the system" is that the cops realized belatedly that they crossed the line when they started shoving BAC machines into random car windows with the instructions to "blow." I wouldn't be surprised if your booking info has mysteriously vanished, and no one at the cop shop has any recollection at all that you were ever there. No victim, no case.
Let us know what happens!
The more I think about it, the more I think that they were just "trying to get rid" of me this morning. They unlocked the cell, called my name, gave me my stuff and escorted me out. I asked if that was it, and the cop said "yep" and closed the door behind him. It was very, very quick. Then there's the thing of them removing my information from the jail website. Not to mention them "not having any record" of me being there. I think they probably realized they screwed up somewhere along the line and were trying to get rid of me and erase the evidence that I was there before they got into trouble.