Blog News -

State v Holt-50 minutes DUI investigative detention is not unreasonable

State v. Holt, A15A1483, Reversed, November 17, 2015. Jamie Sue Holt was arrested in Cherokee County, Georgia by the Georgia State Patrol after police spoke with her at a gas pump at a Kroger Gas Station while investigating another separate DUI incident.  On April 28, 2014, a Georgia State Trooper was dispatched to a Kroger […]

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Brown v State – more than 13 miles too far for independent test

Brown v. State, A15A1425, Affirmed (November 13, 2015). Raymond Brown was arrested for DUI in Lawrenceville, Georgia in Gwinnett County. Officer Long of the Lawrenceville Police Department stopped Brown after observing him driving erratically. Officer Long performed standardized field sobriety evaluations and arrested Brown for DUI. He read Brown’s statutory Georgia Implied Consent Breath Testing […]

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HARTZLER v STATE – Hospital records are not testimonial under Crawford

Hartzler v State, A15A0321, Affirmed, June 30, 2015. The Georgia Court of Appeals affirmed the felony vehicular homicide conviction of Colon Hartzler. Hartzler appealed alleging sufficiency of the evidence, a violation of the Confrontation Clause in the admission of his hospital blood tests, and charging the jury that negligence of the victim was irrelevant for […]

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It is about time to end race discrimination in Jury Selection

On November 2, 2015, the New York Times reported on the oral arguments in the United States Supreme Court case of Foster vs. Chatman, Case No. 14-8349. This is a Georgia Death penalty case where an all-white jury convicted Foster of capital murder and the death penalty.  After the normal appeals were exhausted, an open record request was […]

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Frost v State – Special Mens Rea means you have to stipulate stipulate stipulate

Frost v. State, __ GA ___, S14G1767, Reversed, Supreme Court of Georgia, June 15, 2015. In Frost v. State, the Georgia Supreme Court reversed the Georgia Court of Appeals finding in Frost that under OCGA 24-4-417 prior DUIs offered to establish knowledge of the Defendant were admissible even if the prior DUI convictions involved refusals and not […]

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Los Angeles v Patel – How long can OSAH ignore the exclusionary Rule

Georgia DUI cases have two legal tracks in two separate judicial bodies. First, the DUI is filed, plead, and/or contested in criminal courts, such as Local Municipal Courts, Recorders Courts, Probate Courts, State Courts, and Superior Courts. Criminal courts determine criminal guilt and criminal sanctions including jail time, fines, and probation conditions. The second lesser-known […]

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Bostic v State – Trial Court reversed on DUI Probable Cause Denial

Bostic v. State, A15A0600, Reversed, June 25th, 2015.  Perry Bostic appealed from the Trial Court’s denial of his motion to suppress his state-administered alcohol breath test from the Laurens County Superior Court wherein the Trial Court found that Police had “probable cause” to arrest him for DUI.  The Court of Appeals agreed with Bostic and […]

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Davis v State – Submitting to Authority is not Actually Consent

Davis v. State, A15A0324-Vac/Rem-June12 2015.  Cameron Davis was convicted after a bench trial of DUI less safe and DUI per se and reckless driving.  Davis contended that his consent to the chemical test of his blood was only based upon implied consent which is not equivalent to the actual consent required by the 4th Amendment […]

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Jones v State-Prior DUI comes into evidence to prove knowledge of voluntary driving when DUI

State v. Jones, S14G1061, June 1, 2015. The Georgia Supreme Court addressed the issue of whether under Rule 404(b) of Georgia’s New Evidence Code modeled after the Federal Rules of Evidence, a prior DUI conviction for DUI or “Other Acts Evidence” (Use of the term “Similar Transaction” is now officially discouraged) was admissible in a […]

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