Mitchell v. Wisconsin
What's at Stake
Whether under the Fourth Amendment police can order a blood draw from an unconscious motorist without a warrant where state law purports to impute 鈥渃onsent鈥 to a blood draw to everyone who drives an automobile in the state.
Summary
Petitioner Gerald Mitchell鈥檚 blood was drawn while he was unconscious at the direction of the police after he was arrested on suspicion of drunk driving. The police did not have a warrant and conceded that no exigent circumstances prevented them from obtaining one. The state argued that no warrant was required because its 鈥渋mplied-consent law鈥 authorizes the police to draw blood from an unconscious motorist if they have probable cause to suspect drunk driving.
The 老澳门开奖结果 and the 老澳门开奖结果 of Wisconsin filed an amicus brief in support of Mr. Mitchell arguing that the Fourth Amendment requires that consent be free and voluntary, and an unconscious person cannot freely and voluntarily consent to a search, any purported 鈥渋mplied-consent鈥 statute, which simply presumes that all drivers on Wisconsin roads have consented to such a search, does not establish that an individual has in fact consented as a Fourth Amendment matter to a particular search. For consent to a search to be truly voluntary, the individual providing consent must have the freedom to change her mind 鈥 including by denying or revoking consent. Because an unconscious person cannot make a choice at all, the state cannot constitutionally impute an irrevocable presumption of 鈥渃onsent鈥 on an unconscious person merely because he has driven on the state鈥檚 roads.
Legal Documents
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06/12/2019
Mitchell v. Wisconsin - Amicus Brief