Untitled California Attorney General Opinion ( 1989 )


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  •                             OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    State of California
    JOHN K. VAN DE KAMP
    Attorney General
    ______________________________________
    OPINION            :
    :          No. 88-1102
    of                :
    :
    JOHN K. VAN DE KAMP           :          OCTOBER 26, 1989
    Attorney General         :
    :
    JACK R. WINKLER            :
    Assistant Attorney General    :
    :
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    THE HONORABLE MAURICE J. HANNIGAN, COMMISSIONER,
    DEPARTMENT OF THE CALIFORNIA HIGHWAY PATROL, has requested an opinion on the
    following question:
    May a California peace officer lawfully use a preliminary breath testing device to
    enforce laws prohibiting drunk driving?
    CONCLUSIONS
    A California peace officer may not lawfully use breath testing devices which
    determine the concentration of ethyl alcohol in the subject's blood prior to the subject's arrest unless
    the equipment and procedures used comply with the regulations of the State Department of Health
    Services. A California peace officer may lawfully use a breath testing device which determines the
    existence but not the concentration of ethyl alcohol in a person's blood in making preliminary
    determinations of sobriety prior to an arrest in the enforcement of drunk driving laws.
    Asking a driver stopped on reasonable suspicion that he has violated drunk driving
    laws to take a preliminary breath test ("PBT") and the administration of such a test would meet
    federal and state constitutional requirements. Use of a passive PBT with minimal intrusion on the
    driver's time and liberty may be constitutionally employed in the screening process of a sobriety
    checkpoint and an active or passive PBT may be used as a field sobriety test for drivers found to
    have symptoms of impairment during the screening process of a sobriety checkpoint.
    ANALYSIS
    Development and Use of Breath Testing Devices
    Devices developed to test a person's breath for alcohol are not new. The Harger
    Drunkometer was first developed in 1931 and the scientific bases for its operation was described and
    its reliability and accuracy were approved in People v. Kovacik (1954) 
    128 N.Y.S.2d 492
    . Other
    breath testing devices, including the "Intoxilyzer", "Intoximeter", "Sober-Meter" and "Breathalyzer
    have been used in California. (See e.g., Intoximeters, Inc. v. Younger (1975) 
    53 Cal. App. 3d 262
    .)
    1.                                           88-1102
    The November 16, 1988 Conforming Products List of Evidential Breath Testing Devices of the
    National Highway Traffic Safety Administration lists 56 approved devices (50 of them mobile)
    which test a person's breath for alcohol.
    The request for this opinion indicates that the Department is seeking innovative
    approaches in combating the problem of intoxicated drivers. The use of Preliminary Breath Testing
    (PBT) devices is being explored. The request is not limited to any specific breath testing device.
    As the name implies a PBT device tests a sample of a person's breath for alcohol as a means of
    determining whether he or she is under the influence of an alcoholic beverage. We understand the
    word "preliminary" to indicate that the device is used before the driver is arrested to assist the officer
    in determining whether to arrest the driver. It is to be distinguished from the chemical testing of a
    driver's blood, breath or urine contemplated by the implied consent law (Veh. Code, § 23157) which
    is administered after the driver is arrested, sometimes referred to as "evidentiary" testing.
    Whether a particular device is a PBT device depends more on the method and
    purpose of its use than upon the nature of the device itself. Conceivably, any breath testing device
    could be used as a PBT if the necessary equipment and personnel to operate it are made available
    to the peace officer before an arrest is made. Practical constraints make the more portable and
    automatic devices more adaptable for use as PBT devices.
    Three basic methods are used to obtain the breath samples which are used for alcohol
    testing. In some the person blows into a balloon which is then attached to the breath testing device
    to measure its alcohol content. In others the person exhales into a tube which is directly attached
    to the measuring device. The third method takes a sample of the breath of the person after it has
    been exhaled and to some extent mixed with the surrounding air from a point in front of the mouth
    and nose of the person.
    The several PBT devices available today are further classified as being either active
    or passive in operation. From the materials provided with the opinion request we understand an
    active PBT device to be one which requires the active cooperation and participation of the person
    being tested to perform the test, such as by blowing through a tube for a sustained period or by
    blowing up a balloon. A passive PBT device differs from an active device in that it does not require
    the cooperation of the person being tested other than normally exhaling in the general direction of
    the device.1 We understand that some passive PBT devices simply indicate the presence or absence
    1
    A passive PBT device was given a field test in a sobriety checkpoint conducted in
    Charlottesville, Virginia. A report of that field test entitled "Detection of Alcohol-Impaired Drivers
    Using a Passive Alcohol Sensor" dated May, 1985 was made by Ian S. Jones and Adrian K. Lund.
    Appendix 1 of that report describes the device as follows:
    "The Breath Alcohol Passive Sensor is a noninvasive device for detecting
    alcohol in a motorist's breath. It analyses the air expelled from the lungs when held
    a few inches away from the subject and indicates the alcohol level on a digital
    display.
    "The instrument is based on the well-established Lion Alcolmeter electronic
    screening instruments and incorporates an electrochemical fuel cell sensor together
    with a pump that draws the expelled breath over the sensor. The sensor and pump
    have been ingeniously incorporated into the instrument's flashlight design, which
    allows a police officer to carry out night-time checks quickly and easily, without
    causing inconvenience or embarrassment to sober motorists. While shining the torch
    2.                                           88-1102
    of alcohol in the breath sample without any indication of its concentration. Other passive PBT
    devices give an indication whether the concentration of alcohol in the breath sample is above or
    below a certain level. Still others give a numerical readout of the concentration of alcohol in the
    breath sample.
    inside the vehicle, the alcohol content in the expired breath is analyzed and the result
    displayed in seconds. . . ."
    Other passive devices are similar in operation. These include the PBA 200 and the Lion Alcolmeter
    VAS, both without the flashlight feature, and the Passive Alcohol Sensor, with the flashlight sensor.
    3.                                           88-1102
    California Statutes and Administrative Regulations
    The "implied consent law" (now Veh. Code, § 23157)2 was enacted in 1966. (Ch.
    138, Stats. 1966, 1st Ext. Session, adding § 13353 to the Veh. Code.) That law provides that once
    a peace officer arrests a driver for drunk driving, the driver shall be deemed to have consented to
    a chemical test of his or her blood, breath or urine for the purpose of determining the alcoholic
    content of his or her blood. This test is administered after the lawful arrest of the driver for violation
    of Vehicle Code section 23152 or 23153. The arrested driver is given the choice whether the test
    will be of blood, breath or urine. The driver's failure to take or complete the test results in an
    automatic suspension of his or her driving privilege. The purpose of the implied consent law "is to
    obtain the best evidence of blood alcohol content at the time of the arrest of a person reasonably
    believed to be driving while intoxicated." (Kesler v. Dept. of Motor Vehicles (1969) 
    1 Cal. 3d 74
    ,
    77.)
    2
    The relevant portions of Vehicle Code section 23157 provide:
    "(a)(1) Any person who drives a motor vehicle is deemed to have given his
    or her consent to chemical testing of his or her blood, breath, or urine for the purpose
    of determining the alcoholic content of his or her blood, . . . [re testing blood or urine
    for drugs], if lawfully arrested for any offense allegedly committed in violation of
    Section 23152 or 23153. The testing shall be incidental to a lawful arrest and
    administered at the direction of a peace officer having reasonable cause to believe
    the person was driving a motor vehicle in violation of Section 23152 or 23153. The
    person shall be told that his or her failure to submit to, or the failure to complete, the
    required chemical testing will result in a fine and (A) . . . [mandatory imprisonment
    on conviction], (B) the suspension of the person's privilege to operate a motor
    vehicle for a period of six months, . . .
    "(2)(A) If the person is lawfully arrested for driving under the influence of
    an alcoholic beverage, the person has the choice of whether the test shall be of his
    or her blood, breath, or urine, and the officer shall advise the person that he or she
    has that choice. If the person arrested either is incapable, or states that he or she is
    incapable, of completing any chosen test, the person shall submit to the person's
    choice of the remaining tests or test, and the officer shall advise the person that the
    person has that choice.
    ". . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
    "(4) The officer shall also advise the person that he or she does not have the
    right to have an attorney present before stating whether he or she will submit to a test
    or tests, before deciding which test or tests to take, or during administration of the
    test or tests chosen, and that, in the event of refusal to submit to a test or tests, the
    refusal may be used against him or her in a court of law.
    ". . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
    "(d) A person lawfully arrested for any offense allegedly committed while the
    person was driving a motor vehicle in violation of Section 23152 or 23153 may
    request the arresting officer to have a chemical test made of the arrested person's
    blood, breath, or urine for the purpose of determining the alcoholic content of that
    persons's blood, and, if so requested, the arresting officer shall have the test
    performed."
    4.                            88-1102
    Since the implied consent law is expressly limited to tests made after the driver's
    arrest that law does not limit or affect the tests which may be made before such an arrest. Breath
    tests for alcohol content were admissible by decisional law before the implied consent law was
    enacted in 1966. The courts have uniformly held that the enactment of the implied consent law does
    not affect the admissibility of tests under earlier established case law. (People v. Adams (1976) 
    59 Cal. App. 3d 559
    , 562.)
    Health and Safety Code section 436.52, first enacted in 1969 (ch. 1421, Stats. 1969),
    now provides:
    "The testing of breath samples by or for law enforcement agencies for
    purposes of determining the concentration of ethyl alcohol in the blood of persons
    involved in traffic accidents or in traffic violations shall be performed in accordance
    with regulations adopted by the State Department of Health Services.
    "The rules and regulations shall establish the procedures to be used by law
    enforcement agencies in administering breath tests for the purpose of determining the
    concentration of ethyl alcohol in a person's blood. The rules and regulations shall
    be adopted and published in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section
    11340) of Part l of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code."
    The regulations adopted pursuant to this statute are set forth in title 17, section 1215 et seq. in the
    California Code of Regulations. Those relevant to this opinion are set forth in the Appendix. These
    are referred to as "Regulation" followed by the section number in the Code of Regulations.
    The regulations prescribe the standards which instruments for breath alcohol analysis
    must meet. Regulation 1221.2 adopts by reference the Model Specifications for Evidential Breath
    Testing Devices of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration of the United States
    Department of Transportation as published in the Federal Register, volume 49, No. 242, December
    14, 1984. Regulation 1221.2(b) provides that the ability of instruments to conform to the standards
    shall be tested by the U.S. Department of Transportation. Regulation 1221.3 then provides that only
    those instruments named in the Conforming Products List published in the Federal Register "shall
    be used for breath alcohol analysis in this State."3 Regulations 1219.3, 1221.1 and 1221.4 establish
    the procedures which must be followed in administering breath tests for the purposes of determining
    the concentration of ethyl alcohol in a person's blood.
    The Model Specifications for Evidential Breath Testing Devices published December
    14, 1984 in the Federal Register, volume 49, No. 242 have not been changed. These Model
    Specifications were adopted as the standard in California by section 1221.2 of title 17 in the
    3
    We perceive no unconstitutional delegation of legislative power in these regulations. In Health
    and Safety Code section 436.52 the Legislature determined the fundamental issue of the need for
    regulation of the equipment and procedures to be used for breath tests to determine the concentration
    of alcohol in the blood by law enforcement in California. It could properly delegate to the
    Department of Health Services the determination of the equipment and procedures to be used to
    implement the Legislature's policy expressed in section 436.52. The department could adopt an
    existing standard for the equipment to be used by reference which it did by reference to model
    specifications in the Federal Register. (See Kugler v. Yocum (1968) 
    69 Cal. 2d 371
    ; 63
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 566, 571.)
    5.                                          88-1102
    California Code of Regulations. The Conforming Product List published as an appendix to the 1984
    federal regulation has been changed from time to time since 1984.
    The first paragraph of Health and Safety Code Section 436.52 requires the testing of
    breath samples by law enforcement agencies for the purpose of determining the concentration of
    ethyl alcohol in the blood of persons involved in traffic violations to be performed in accordance
    with the regulations of the Department of Health Services. The statute states that such testing "shall
    be performed" in accordance with the regulations. The word "shall" is to be construed as mandatory.
    (See Health & Saf. Code, §§ 5 & 16; People v. 
    Adams, supra
    , 59 Cal.App.3d at 562.) The plain
    wording of Health and Safety Code section 436.52 requires such breath testing by law enforcement
    agencies to conform to the regulations. The only exception to the equipment and procedure
    requirements of the regulations for law enforcement use of breath tests are tests which do not
    determine the concentration of ethyl alcohol in the blood. A PBT device which only indicates the
    presence of ethyl alcohol without giving any indication of the concentration of alcohol in the sample
    would not be subject to the statute or regulations. However, if a PBT device does give an indication
    of the concentration of alcohol in the blood by numerical readout, lights or otherwise, its use by law
    enforcement must, in so far as the reading for concentration is concerned, conform to the
    regulations.
    It has been suggested that the use of breath testing devices before an arrest is made
    would not be subject to the regulations required by Health and Safety Code section 436.52. The
    suggestion is that section 436.52 was enacted to govern the chemical testing of drivers contemplated
    by the implied consent law after the driver's arrest. However, nothing in the wording of section
    436.52 suggests that it is limited to post arrest testing. In 1971 Assemblyman John Stull, the author
    of AB 789 which was enacted in 1969 adding section 436.52 to the Health and Safety Code
    requested an opinion from the Legislative Counsel asking whether the new law required licensing
    of peace officers who conducted breath tests in the field. In Opinion No. 5746 dated May 6, 1971
    the Legislative Counsel replied that such licensing was not required relying upon the administrative
    interpretation given the licensing requirement by the Department of Public Health. The Legislative
    Counsel's opinion stated as follows:
    "It should be pointed out, however, that Section 436.52, which is part of
    Chapter 5, requires the board to adopt rules and regulations establishing the
    procedures to be used by law enforcement agencies in administering breath tests for
    the purposes of determining the concentration of ethyl alcohol in a person's blood.
    Such rules and regulations, which are contained in Article 7 (commencing with
    Section 1221) of Group 8 of Chapter 2 of Title 17 of the California Administrative
    Code, set forth the standards of procedures for breath alcohol analysis, but do not
    require the licensing of peace officers who conduct breath test in the field."
    (Emphasis added.)
    This opinion indicates that the regulations have been interpreted since their inception to apply to
    breath testing procedures used by peace officers in the field. Nothing in that opinion suggests that
    the regulations would be limited to post arrest field tests.
    Accordingly we reject the suggestion that the regulations required by Health and Safety Code
    section 436.52 are applicable only to tests conducted after the arrest of the subject.
    It is apparent that the regulations were designed to regulate the gathering of evidence
    of the concentration of alcohol in the defendant's blood for use at his or her trial on drunk driving
    charges and did not contemplate the use of breath testing for such preliminary purposes as providing
    a peace officer with probable cause to believe a driver was under the influence of an alcoholic
    beverage which would justify the driver's arrest for drunk driving. The requirement in Regulation
    6.                                         88-1102
    1219.3 that "the subject has been under continuous observation for at least fifteen minutes prior to
    collection of the breath sample" would make breath testing impractical for most preliminary
    purposes.
    The authority granted to the State Department of Health Services by section 436.52
    is broad enough to provide for preliminary breath testing should the department decide to amend its
    regulations. The regulations could authorize the use of different equipment and procedures on
    breath testing for preliminary purposes.4 But unless and until such regulations are adopted, Health
    and Safety Code section 436.52 prohibits the use of breath tests by law enforcement to determine
    concentration of alcohol in the blood which does not use the equipment and procedures required by
    the regulations.
    We conclude that California law enforcement officers may use a breath testing device
    for the purpose of determining the existence but not the concentration of ethyl alcohol in a person's
    blood in making preliminary determinations of sobriety prior to an arrest in the enforcement of
    drunk driving laws. However, they may not lawfully use breath testing devices for the purpose of
    determining the concentration of ethyl alcohol in the blood using equipment or procedures which
    do not comply with the regulations of the State Department of Health Services in making such
    preliminary determinations.
    Constitutionality of Use of Breath Testing Devices
    While we have concluded that law enforcement use of PBT devices in California is
    limited by statute and regulations California courts have held that the evidence produced by breath
    tests which do not comply with those statutes and regulations is not excluded on that account but
    may be admitted in evidence if the tests meets other statutory and constitutional requirements.
    (People v. 
    Adams, supra
    , 
    59 Cal. App. 3d 559
    .) Furthermore, those statutes and regulations may be
    amended. However, the use of PBT devices by California peace officers in the enforcement of
    drunk driving laws is subject to the search and seizure requirements of the Fourth Amendment of
    the United States Constitution and of article I, section 13 of the California Constitution. We
    therefore consider how these constitutional requirements will affect the use of PBT devices in
    enforcing drunk driving laws in common traffic law enforcement situations.
    Since the question is concerned with the enforcement of laws against drunk driving
    we must consider the methods used by California peace officers to enforce those laws. There are
    two basic law enforcement methods in current use which must be distinguished. These may be
    called the investigative stop and the sobriety checkpoint. The question further limits our concern
    to the use of breath testing devices before an arrest is made. We therefore do not address the use
    of such devices after an arrest is made or pursuant to the implied consent law.
    4
    Several states have enacted statutes which expressly authorize the use of breath tests for
    preliminary purposes under prescribed circumstances. A number of these statutes limit the uses
    which may be made of these preliminary tests, such as to assist the officer in determining whether
    there is probable cause for arrest. Some also prohibit the use of such preliminary test results in
    court. A summary of these statutes is set forth in a paper entitled The Legal Aspects of the Use of
    Passive Alcohol Screening Devices as Law Enforcement Tools for DWI Enforcement by James P.
    Manak, BA, JD, LLM, Senior Counsel of The Traffic Institute, Northwestern University, Evanston,
    Illinois dated December, 1984.
    7.                                         88-1102
    Investigative Stops
    The traditional method of enforcing drunk driving laws is the observation by a peace
    officer on patrol of conduct by a motorist indicative of driving under the influence and stopping the
    vehicle for investigation of that offense. It is settled that circumstances short of probable cause to
    make an arrest may justify a peace officer stopping and briefly detaining a person for questioning
    or other limited investigation. (People v. Mickelson (1963) 
    59 Cal. 2d 448
    , 450; In re Tony C. (1978)
    
    21 Cal. 3d 888
    , 892.) Such a stop constitutes an invasion of a person's personal security protected
    by the Fourth Amendment and by article I, section 13 of the California Constitution. The guiding
    principle which governs the constitutionality of the investigative stop under the search and seizure
    provisions of both constitutions is the reasonableness in all the circumstances of the particular
    governmental invasion of a citizen's personal security. (Terry v. Ohio (1968) 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 19; In re
    Tony 
    C., supra
    .)
    The test of the reasonableness of an investigative stop was spelled out by the
    California Supreme Court in In re Tony 
    C., supra
    , 21 Cal.3d at 893 as follows. In order to justify
    an investigative stop or detention the circumstances known or apparent to the officer must include
    specific and articulable facts causing the officer to suspect that (1) some activity relating to crime
    has taken place or is occurring or about to occur, and (2) the person the officer intends to stop or
    detain is involved in that activity. Not only must the officer subjectively entertain such a suspicion,
    but it must be objectively reasonable for the officer to do so: the facts must be such as would cause
    any reasonable peace officer in a like position, drawing when appropriate on his training and
    experience, to suspect the same criminal activity and the same involvement by the person in
    question. The corollary to this rule is than an investigative stop or detention predicated on mere
    curiosity, rumor, or hunch is unconstitutional, even though the officer may be acting in complete
    good faith.5
    Drunk Driving Stops
    Our task is to apply the In re Tony C. test of reasonableness to the use of PBT devices
    in an investigation conducted by a California peace officer who has stopped a vehicle to investigate
    5
    The court amplified its reasonable suspicion test for an investigative stop in In re Tony 
    C., supra
    ,
    at 894 as follows:
    "... [A] reasonable suspicion of involvement in criminal activity will justify
    a temporary stop or detention. Under that standard, if the circumstances are
    `consistent with criminal activity,' they permit - even demand - an investigation: the
    public rightfully expects a police officer to inquire into such circumstances `in the
    proper discharge of the officer's duties.' [citation] No reason appears for a contrary
    result simply because the circumstances are also `consistent with lawful activity,' as
    may often be the case. The possibility of an innocent explanation does not deprive
    the officer of the capacity to entertain a reasonable suspicion of criminal conduct.
    Indeed, the principal function of his investigation is to resolve that very ambiguity
    and establish whether the activity is in fact legal or illegal - to `enable the police to
    quickly determine whether they should allow the suspect to go about his business or
    hold him to answer charges.' [citation] The citizen's undoubted interest in freedom
    from abuse of this procedure is protected - so far as it is within the law's power to do
    so - by the correlative rule that no stop or detention is permissible when the
    circumstances are not reasonably `consistent with criminal activity' and the
    investigation is therefor based on mere curiosity, rumor, or hunch."
    8.                                           88-1102
    a criminal violation. As that test indicates the circumstances known or apparent to the officer must
    include specific and articulable facts causing the officer to suspect that some activity relating to
    crime has occurred and that the person stopped is involved in that activity to make the stop
    reasonable. Those facts could include information which gives the officer a reasonable suspicion
    that the driver of a vehicle is violating the drunk driving laws which would justify stopping the
    vehicle under the In re Tony C. test. The following facts have been held to provide the officer with
    a reasonable suspicion that the driver had been drinking which justified stopping the vehicle for
    investigation of drunk driving:
    (a) Observing the driver staggering before he got into the vehicle. (People v. Beal
    (1974) 
    44 Cal. App. 3d 216
    ; People v. Zafiropoulos (1983) 
    145 Cal. App. Supp. 3d 35
    .)
    (b) Observing vehicle weaving from one lane to another. (People v. Tennessee
    (1970) 
    4 Cal. App. 3d 788
    .)
    (c) Observing vehicle weaving back and forth in the same lane. (People v. Perez
    (1985) 
    175 Cal. App. Supp. 3d 8
    . 11.)
    Once the officer stops a vehicle on a reasonable suspicion that the driver had been
    drinking the officer may then make a reasonable investigation to determine if the driver had violated
    the drunk driving laws. This would include asking the driver to submit to field sobriety tests and
    conducting such tests. (People v. Superior Court (Meyer) (1981) 
    118 Cal. App. 3d 579
    , 585; People
    v. Bennett (1983) 
    139 Cal. App. 3d 767
    .)6
    In our view a PBT is simply another form of field sobriety testing. Asking the driver
    to blow into the PBT would appear to be no more intrusive than to ask him or her to walk a straight
    line or perform other physical and verbal coordination tests. A PBT would also provide a more
    reliable method of determining the existence of alcohol in the driver's blood. As the supreme court
    observed in People v. Sudduth (1966) 
    65 Cal. 2d 543
    , 546:
    "We note that the physical and psychological disturbance of the individual
    involved in obtaining a breath sample is apt to be significantly less than that involved
    in extracting a blood sample, an evidence-gathering technique recently approved in
    Schmerber v. California (1966) 
    384 U.S. 757
    , . . . The value of such objective
    scientific data of intoxication to supplement the fallible observation by humans of
    behavior seemingly symptomatic of intoxication cannot be disputed. (People v.
    Duroncelay (1957) 
    48 Cal. 2d 766
    , 772.) In a day when excessive loss of life and
    property is caused by inebriated drivers, an imperative need exists for a fair,
    efficient, and accurate system of detection, enforcement and, hence, prevention."
    The courts of other states have considered the constitutional validity of the use of
    PBT devices in drunk driving cases. In State v. 
    Anderson, supra
    , 
    359 N.W.2d 887
    the South Dakota
    Supreme Court held that a preliminary breath test of a driver stopped on reasonable suspicion of
    drunk driving short of probable cause to arrest was constitutional.
    6
    The courts in other states have approved field sobriety tests of a driver stopped on a reasonable
    suspicion of violating drunk driving laws. (State v. Anderson (S.D. 1984) 
    359 N.W.2d 887
    ; State
    v. Purdie (Mont. 1984) 
    680 P.2d 576
    ; State v. Wyatt (Hawaii 1984) 
    687 P.2d 544
    ; State v. Little
    (Me. 1983) 
    468 A.2d 615
    .) Cf. People v. Carlson (Colo. 1984) 
    677 P.2d 310
    holding that short of
    probable cause the defendant was driving while intoxicated, he may not be subjected to a roadside
    sobriety test.
    9.                                           88-1102
    We conclude that California courts would hold that asking a driver stopped on
    reasonable suspicion that he has violated drunk driving laws to take a PBT and the administration
    of such a test would be held to be reasonable under the search and seizure requirements of the state
    and federal constitutions.
    Stops for Other Offenses
    When a motorist is stopped on a reasonable suspicion that he or she has committed
    an offense other than drunk driving the officer may make a reasonable investigation of that offense.
    However, an investigatory detention exceeds constitutional bounds when extended beyond what is
    reasonably necessary under the circumstances which made its initiation permissible. (People v.
    McGaughran (1979) 
    25 Cal. 3d 577
    , 586.) Since the circumstance which made the stop permissible
    was a reasonable suspicion that the driver had committed some offense other than drunk driving, the
    grounds for the stop would not justify an investigation of drunk driving. However, once a vehicle
    has been legitimately stopped for an infraction, the officer may stop the vehicle and detain it and its
    occupants for such period of time as is necessary to issue a citation, to determine whether the driver
    has a valid driver's license and to investigate the vehicle registration. (People v. 
    McGaughran, supra
    , 25 Cal.3d at 584; Veh. Code, §§ 4462(a) & 12951(b).)7 Should the officer learn new facts
    during the course of this investigation which gives him a reasonable suspicion the driver had been
    drinking (such as smelling an alcoholic beverage on the breath of the driver) this independent
    reasonable suspicion (see Williams v. Superior Court (1985) 
    168 Cal. App. 3d 349
    , 358) would justify
    extending the detention for a reasonable investigation for drunk driving, including roadside sobriety
    tests.
    Refusal of Testing
    In People v. 
    Sudduth, supra
    , 
    65 Cal. 2d 543
    the defendant was arrested for drunk
    driving and refused to perform field sobriety tests or take a breathalyzer test. The court held that
    the defendant's refusal to take the tests and the prosecutor's comment thereon to the jury were
    constitutionally admissable citing the reasoning in People v. Ellis (1966) 
    65 Cal. 2d 529
    decided the
    same day. In the Ellis case a rape victim identified the defendant as her assailant at a lineup and
    indicated she could also identify the assailant's voice. The defendant refused to speak for purposes
    of voice identification. The court said that while it was impermissible to penalize an individual for
    exercising his constitutional right against self incrimination by allowing comment on his failure to
    testify such a rule is not applicable when, as in that case, the defendant has no constitutional right
    to refuse to speak solely for purposes of voice identification. The Ellis court added (at pp. 536-537)
    that the defendant's refusal to "display his voice" was not itself a testimonial communication
    protected by the Fifth Amendment but it was "circumstantial evidence of consciousness of guilt, and
    like similar evidence, such as escape from custody [citation], false alibi [citation], flight [citation],
    suppression of evidence [citation], and failure to respond to accusatory statements when not in police
    custody [citation], its admission does not violate the privilege."
    The Ellis court made these observations concerning the evidentiary use of a refusal
    to take a test: "A guilty party may prefer not to find himself in a situation where consciousness of
    7
    The court in McGaughran added that "although not specifically compelled by law, certain other
    steps customarily taken as matters of good police practice are no less intimately related to the
    citation process: for example, the officer will usually discuss the violation with the motorist and
    listen to any explanation the latter may wish to offer; and if the vehicles of either are exposed to
    danger, the officer may require the driver to proceed to a safer location before the investigation
    continues."
    10.                                          88-1102
    guilt may be inferred from his conduct, but it can scarcely be contended that the police, who seek
    evidence from the test itself, will tend to coerce parties into refusing to take tests in order to produce
    this evidence. [¶] Although conduct indicating consciousness of guilt is often described as an
    `admission by conduct,' such nomenclature should not obscure the fact that guilty conduct is not a
    testimonial statement of guilt. It is therefore not protected by the Fifth Amendment. By acting like
    a guilty person, a man does not testify to his guilt but merely exposes himself to the drawing of
    inferences from circumstantial evidence of his state of mind."
    If the driver who is lawfully stopped in an investigative stop by an officer who has
    a reasonable suspicion the driver has been drinking refuses the officer's request to perform roadside
    sobriety tests the officer may infer from that refusal that the driver thinks he would fail such test and
    this inference of consciousness of guilt on the part of the driver is circumstantial evidence that the
    driver had consumed enough alcohol that he or she would fail the tests. We think this evidence
    when added to the officer's reasonable suspicion that the driver had been drinking, in the absence
    of exculpatory circumstances, may well provide the officer with probable cause to believe the driver
    was under the influence of alcohol which would justify the driver's arrest for drunk driving.
    Other Constitutional Provisions
    The above analysis has focused on the reasonableness of subjecting a driver to PBTs
    for screening and field sobriety tests under the Fourth Amendment. Objections to field sobriety tests
    have also been made on other constitutional grounds. Failure to give a Miranda warning before
    asking a motorist stopped on a reasonable belief he or she had violated drunk driving laws to submit
    to a balancing test did not violate the Fifth Amendment right against self incrimination. (Berkemer
    v. McCarty (1984) 
    468 U.S. 420
    .) In Whalen v. Municipal Court (1969) 
    274 Cal. App. 2d 809
    the
    court held that subjecting a driver to a field sobriety test (without the presence of counsel) did not
    violate the Fifth Amendment privilege against self incrimination or the Sixth Amendment right to
    counsel. Failure to collect and retain breath samples for independent testing does not violate the due
    process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. (California v. Trombetta (1983) 
    467 U.S. 479
    .)
    People v. Mills (1985) 
    164 Cal. App. 3d 652
    held that there is no constitutional requirement that a
    person arrested for drunk driving be notified that a breath sample would not be preserved for
    independent testing if the person chose a breath test as the method of testing under Vehicle Code
    section 23157.
    Persons reasonably suspected of driving while under the influence of alcohol have
    no constitutional right to refuse a test designed to produce physical evidence in the form of a breath
    sample provided the taking of the sample is not done in a manner which shocks the conscience or
    offends one's sense of justice. (People v. Sarkissian (1978) 
    81 Cal. App. 3d 660
    , 663; People v.
    
    Sudduth, supra
    , 65 Cal.2d at 546; Rochin v. California (1952) 
    342 U.S. 165
    .) Thus there is no
    requirement that the suspect be advised of such a right. However, advising the suspect that he or
    she has no right to refuse such testing will strengthen the inference of consciousness of guilt arising
    from a refusal to perform the test by eliminating the suspects claim that he or she thought there was
    a right to refuse such testing.
    Sobriety Checkpoints
    The sobriety checkpoint is a more recent method of enforcement of the laws against
    drunk driving approved in Ingersoll v. Palmer (1987) 
    43 Cal. 3d 1321
    . In Ingersoll the court held
    11.                                          88-1102
    that sobriety checkpoints conducted with prescribed safeguards8 complied with the Fourth
    Amendment though it involved the stopping of motorists without any individualized suspicion of
    wrongdoing. At p. 1327 of the Ingersoll opinion the court described the sobriety checkpoint
    operation as follows:
    "On the night of the checkpoint operation, every fifth car was stopped and directed
    to a screening officer. The screening officer gave the driver a brief prescribed oral
    explanation of the checkpoint, and handed him or her an information flyer and a
    postage paid opinion survey card. During the contact, the screening officer observed
    the driver for bloodshot eyes, alcohol on the breath, and any other signs of
    impairment. The officer also shined a flashlight into the vehicle, looking for any
    open containers or other evidence of alcohol consumption. If no symptoms of
    impairment were observed, the driver was directed to continue into the northbound
    traffic lanes. If signs of impairment were observed, the driver was directed to a
    secondary testing area, where another officer would administer a field sobriety
    test. . . ."
    The Ingersoll court stated that the individualized suspicion test of In re Tony C. was not applicable
    because the primary purpose of sobriety checkpoints was not to discover or preserve evidence of
    8
    The Ingersoll court listed the following safeguards necessary to establish the reasonableness of
    sobriety checkpoints under the Fourth Amendment:
    A. The decision to establish a sobriety checkpoint, the selection of the site and procedures
    for the checkpoint operation must be established by supervisory law enforcement personnel and not
    by an officer in the field.
    B. A neutral formula must be used to determine which vehicles are to be stopped, such as
    every third, fifth or tenth driver so that who is stopped is not left to the unbridled discretion of the
    officer in the field.
    C. Primary consideration must be given to maintaining safety for motorists and officers with
    proper lighting, warning signs and clearly identifiable official vehicles and personnel.
    D. The location of a checkpoint should be determined by policy-making officials rather than
    by officers in the field with sites chosen which have a high incidence of alcohol related accidents
    and/or arrests consistent with safety considerations.
    E. The time of day and the duration of checkpoints must be carefully considered with
    effectiveness, safety and motorists concerns kept in mind.
    F. The checkpoint must be established with high visibility displaying its official nature by
    sign, lights and uniformed officers to reassure motorists the stop is duly authorized.
    G. Each motorist stopped should be detained only long enough for the officer to question the
    driver briefly and to look for signs of intoxication, such as alcohol on the breath, slurred speech, and
    glassy or bloodshot eyes. If the driver does not display signs of impairment, he or she should be
    permitted to drive on without further delay.
    H. Advance publicity must be given a sobriety checkpoint to reduce its intrusiveness and
    increase its deterrent effect.
    12.                                          88-1102
    crime or arrest lawbreakers, but was "primarily for the regulatory purpose of keeping intoxicated
    drivers off the highways to the end of enhancing public safety." (Ingersoll v. 
    Palmer, supra
    , at p.
    1335)
    As the court observed in Ingersoll (as quoted above) when the screening officer at
    a sobriety checkpoint observes symptoms of impairment the driver is directed to a secondary testing
    area, where another officer administers a field sobriety test. We have already indicated our view that
    a PBT may be utilized as a field sobriety test. We believe that a PBT, using appropriate equipment
    and procedures, as "a" method of field sobriety testing at sobriety checkpoints would comply with
    constitutional requirements as set forth in Ingersoll.
    If a PBT device were employed in the screening process of a sobriety checkpoint the
    standards enumerated in the Ingersoll case (See footnote 8) would have to be met for its use to
    comply with constitutional search and seizure guarantees. As the Ingersoll court discusses at p.
    1338 the reasonableness of a search or seizure is measured by a balancing test, weighing the gravity
    of the governmental interest or public concern served and the degree to which the program advances
    that concern against the intrusiveness of the interference with individual liberty. Of the several
    safeguards which the court considered significant in this weighing process the only one which
    appears to be affected by the use of a PBT in screening the drivers stopped would be the length and
    nature of the detention. At p. 1346 the Ingersoll court stated:
    "Minimizing the average time each motorist is detained is critical both to
    reducing the intrusiveness of the stop on the individual driver and to maintaining
    safety by avoiding traffic tie-ups. As occurred in the Burlingame and CHP
    checkpoints, each motorist stopped should be detained only long enough for the
    officer to question the driver briefly and to look for signs of intoxication, such as
    alcohol on the breath, slurred speech, and glassy or bloodshot eyes. If the driver
    does not display signs of impairment, he or she should be permitted to drive on
    without further delay. If the officer does observe symptoms of impairment, the
    driver may be directed to a separate area for a roadside sobriety test. At that point,
    further investigation would of course be based on probable cause, and general
    principles of detention and arrest would apply."
    The time the administration of a preliminary breath test would take and intrusion it
    would make upon a driver's liberty will vary depending upon the PBT device used and the
    procedures which are followed in its use. Many of the active PBT devices require the subject to
    blow into a balloon or tube for a sustained period in order to test the breath from the lower part of
    the lungs. This might well take more time and be more intrusive upon the driver's liberty than is
    constitutionally permissible under the standards announced in Ingersoll. However, we believe the
    courts would hold that the use of a passive breath testing device used in the manner described in
    footnote 1 in the screening process of a sobriety checkpoint would comply with the Ingersoll
    standards. We conclude that a passive preliminary breath testing device which is operated with
    minimal intrusion on the driver's time and liberty may constitutionally be employed to ascertain
    whether there is a reasonable suspicion the driver has been drinking during the screening process
    of a sobriety checkpoint. If technology develops to the point where the administration of an active
    breath test would involve no more time than the brief questioning and observation authorized in
    Ingersoll, and required no more intrusion upon the driver's liberty than answering the questions
    authorized by Ingersoll, active devices to determine the presence of alcohol could also
    constitutionally be employed.
    We conclude that use of a passive PBT with minimal intrusion on the driver's time
    and liberty may be constitutionally employed in the screening process of a sobriety checkpoint and
    13.                                         88-1102
    that use of an active or passive PBT as a field sobriety test for drivers found to have symptoms of
    impairment during the screening process of a sobriety checkpoint would be constitutional.
    Evidentiary Value of Preliminary Breath Tests
    The forgoing analysis has discussed the legality of using preliminary breath testing
    by peace officers in the field. The request for this opinion also sought our views on the evidentiary
    value of preliminary breath testing. Since no precise evidentiary question was submitted we will
    simply discuss briefly some of the more significant constitutional and statutory evidence questions
    which might arise in the prosecution of a drunk driving case concerning the use of a preliminary
    breath test.
    The "exclusionary rule" bars use by the prosecution of evidence which was obtained
    by law enforcement officers in violation of the defendant's constitutional rights. (People v. Cahan
    (1955) 
    44 Cal. 2d 434
    ; Mapp v. Ohio (1961) 
    367 U.S. 643
    .)9 While use of a PBT may violate Health
    and Safety Code section 436.52 (supra at pp. 5-8) we have already concluded that a PBT may be
    used in stated circumstances without violating constitutional guarantees. We therefore conclude that
    such PBT tests results would not be inadmissible under the exclusionary rule.
    One use of PBT evidence is to establish probable cause for the arrest of the defendant
    when the validity of the arrest has become an issue in the case. Knowledge of the results of a PBT
    taken before arrest would be important evidence on the issue of probable cause for the arrest.
    Another use of PBT evidence is to establish reasonable suspicion that a driver had
    been drinking so as to authorize a more extended detention for further investigation. As we have
    previously discussed an officer's authority to request a driver to submit to a roadside sobriety test
    depends upon the officer having a reasonable suspicion that the driver has been drinking under the
    test announced in In re Tony 
    C., supra
    . That suspicion may arise from observations of the
    defendants driving or other conduct, a smell of alcohol on the defendant's breath, the defendant's
    bloodshot eyes or slurred speech. It could also arise from a passive PBT conducted by the officer
    which indicates alcohol in the breath of the driver. Such a passive PBT result would be important
    evidence on the issue of the officer's reasonable suspicion the driver had been drinking upon which
    the validity of a roadside sobriety test, including further breath testing, could depend.
    The most obvious use of a PBT would be as indirect evidence that the defendant was
    under the influence of an alcoholic beverage when he or she was driving a vehicle, the principal fact
    to be proved in any drunk driving prosecution. Evidence of the results of a breath test taken within
    a short time of such driving showing the presence of alcohol would be relevant evidence of that fact.
    Evidence Code section 351 provides that "[e]xcept as otherwise provided by statute, all relevant
    evidence is admissible." Evidence Code section 210 provides: "`Relevant evidence' means
    evidence, including evidence relevant to the credibility of a witness or hearsay declarant, having any
    tendency in reason to prove or disprove any disputed fact that is of consequence to the determination
    of the action."
    9
    Article I, section 28(d) of the California Constitution (the "truth in evidence" provision in the
    so-called Victim's Bill of Rights) has limited the scope of the exclusionary rule generally in
    California to bar only that relevant evidence whose exclusion is compelled by the United States
    Constitution.
    14.                                         88-1102
    Issues of reliability will arise in the evidentiary context. The development of passive
    PBT devices has occurred within the last decade and we are not aware of any California appellate
    court decisions which have considered the reliability of any passive PBT device or the admissibility
    of test results utilizing these devices. In People v. Kelly (1976) 
    17 Cal. 3d 24
    the California Supreme
    Court articulated the general principles of admissibility of evidence based on the application of a
    new scientific technique. In what has become known as the "Kelly/Frye" rule the court stated that
    the technique must be "sufficiently established to have gained general acceptance in the particular
    field to which it belongs." Once the admissability of evidence based on a new scientific technique
    is affirmed in a final appellate court decision which is published, "appellate endorsement of a
    technique ends the need for case-by-case adjudication." (People v. Brown (1985) 
    40 Cal. 3d 512
    ,
    530.) Until a new technique has appellate endorsement the reliability of the technique must be
    proved by the testimony of qualified experts. (People v. Kelly, supra, p. 30.)
    Evidence Code section 352 provides that "[t]he court in its discretion may exclude
    evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the probability that its admission will
    (a) necessitate undue consumption of time or (b) create substantial danger of undue prejudice, of
    confusing the issues, or of misleading the jury." Any ruling on admissibility would be subject to the
    rather broad discretion of the trial judge to exclude evidence on one of these statutory grounds. A
    trial judge might consider PBT evidence admissable on the issues of reasonable suspicion to stop
    and detain or probable cause to arrest but confusing on the issue of the concentration of alcohol in
    the blood when there is an evidentiary test of blood, breath or urine taken after the arrest which
    complies with regulations of the Department of Health Services and on that basis refuse to admit it
    in evidence for consideration by the jury on the issue of guilt.
    Of course the use of PBT evidence is not restricted to the prosecution. It is
    conceivable that evidence of a PBT of the defendant would indicate a lower concentration of alcohol
    than the evidentiary test taken after the defendant's arrest. In fact the test results from a passive PBT
    would likely indicate a lower concentration of alcohol that an active PBT because the breath sample
    will be diluted somewhat by air which did not come from the lungs of the subject. If the test meets
    the legal requirements for reliability and is not excluded on Evidence Code section 352 grounds it
    might be offered by the defense to impeach the evidentiary test.10
    APPENDIX
    Regulations relevant to breath alcohol analysis in title 17, section 1215 et seq. of the
    California Code of Regulations:
    "1219. General. Samples taken for forensic alcohol analysis and breath
    alcohol analysis shall be collected and handled in a manner approved by the
    Department. The identity and integrity of the samples shall be maintained through
    collection to analysis and reporting."
    10
    The use of PBTs is controlled by statute in several states including Florida, Indiana, Maine,
    Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, South Dakota,
    Vermont, Virginia and Wisconsin. Some of these statutes provide that PBT evidence is admissable
    on some issues such as probable cause to arrest, or reasonable suspicion the driver had been
    drinking, but is not admissible on other issues such as the guilt of the driver. (Report on a National
    Study of Preliminary Breath Test (PBT) and Illegal per se Laws by Donald Macdonald and Marvin
    Wagner issued by the U. S. Department of Transportation in August, 1981 [DOT HS-806-048])
    15.                                          88-1102
    "1219.3. Breath Collection. A breath sample shall be expired breath which
    is essentially alveolar in composition. The quantity of the breath sample shall be
    established by direct volumetric measurement. The breath sample shall be collected
    only after the subject has been under continuous observation for at least fifteen
    minutes prior to collection of the breath sample, during which time the subject must
    not have ingested alcoholic beverages or other fluids, regurgitated, vomited, eaten,
    or smoked."
    Article 7. Requirements for Breath Alcohol Analysis
    "1221. General. Breath alcohol analysis shall be performed in accordance
    with standards set forth in this Article."
    "1221.1. Authorized Procedures.
    "(a) Breath alcohol analysis shall be performed only with instruments and
    related accessories which meet the standards of performance set forth in these
    regulations.
    "(b) Such instruments may be used for the analysis of breath samples in
    places other than licensed forensic alcohol laboratories and by persons other than
    forensic alcohol supervisors, forensic alcohol analysts and forensic alcohol analyst
    trainees only if such places and persons are under the direct jurisdiction of a
    governmental agency or licensed forensic alcohol laboratory.
    "(1) Breath alcohol analysis by persons other than forensic alcohol
    supervisors, forensic alcohol analysts and forensic alcohol analyst trainees shall be
    restricted to the immediate analysis of breath samples collected by direct expiration
    by the subject into the instrument in which the measurement of alcohol concentration
    is performed.
    "(2) Except for the requirements of Section 1220.4 [governing how analytical
    results are to be expressed], such immediate analysis shall not be subject to the
    requirements of Article 6 [governing the laboratory methods of forensic alcohol
    analysis]."
    "1221.2. Standard of Performance.
    "(a) Instruments for breath alcohol analysis shall meet the following standard:
    "(1) The instrument and any related accessories shall be capable of
    conforming to the `Model Specifications for Evidential Breath Testing Devices' of
    the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration of the U.S. Department of
    Transportation, which were published in the Federal Register, Vol. 49, No. 242,
    Pages 48854-48872, December 14, 1984, and are hereby adopted and incorporated.
    "(b) The ability of instruments and any related accessories to conform to the
    standard of performance set forth in this section shall be tested by the U.S.
    Department of Transportation."
    "1221.3. Approved Instruments.
    16.                                          88-1102
    "(a) Only such types and models of instruments and related accessories as are
    named in the `Conforming Products List' published in the Federal Register by the
    National Highway Traffic and Safety Administration of the U.S. Department of
    Transportation shall be used for breath alcohol analysis in this State."
    "1221.4. Standards of Procedure.
    "(a) Procedures for breath alcohol analysis shall meet the following
    standards:
    "(1) For each person tested, breath alcohol analysis shall include analysis of
    2 separate breath samples which result in determinations of blood alcohol
    concentrations which do not differ from each other by more than 0.02 grams per 100
    milliliters.
    "(2) The accuracy of instruments shall be determined.
    "(A) Such determination of accuracy shall consist, at a minimum, of periodic
    analysis of a reference sample of known alcohol concentration within accuracy and
    precision limits of plus or minus 0.01 grams % of the true value; these limits shall
    be applied to alcohol concentrations from 0.10 to 0.30 grams %. The reference
    sample shall be provided by a forensic alcohol laboratory.
    "1. Such analysis shall be performed by an operator as defined in Section
    1221.4 (a)(5), and the results shall be used by a forensic alcohol laboratory to
    determine if the instrument continues to meet the accuracy set forth in Section
    1221.4 (a)(2)(A).
    "(B) For the purposes of such determinations of accuracy, `periodic' means
    either a period of time not exceeding 10 days or following the testing of every 150
    subjects, whichever comes sooner.
    "(3) Breath alcohol analysis shall be performed only with instruments for
    which the operators have received training, such training to include at minimum the
    following schedule of subjects:
    "(A) Theory of operation;
    "(B) Detailed procedure of operation;
    "(C) Practical experience;
    "(D) Precautionary checklist;
    "(E) Written and/or practical examination.
    "(4) Training in the procedures of breath alcohol analysis shall be under the
    supervision of persons who qualify as forensic alcohol supervisors, forensic alcohol
    analysts or forensic alcohol analyst trainees in a licensed forensic alcohol laboratory.
    17.                                          88-1102
    "(A) After approval as set forth in Section 1218, the forensic alcohol
    laboratory is responsible for the training and qualifying of its instructors.
    "(5) An operator shall be a forensic alcohol supervisor, forensic alcohol
    analyst, forensic alcohol analyst trainee or a person who has completed successfully
    the training described under Section 1221.4 (a)(3) and who may be called upon to
    operate a breath testing instrument in the performance of his duties.
    "(6) Records shall be kept for each instrument to show the frequency of
    determination of accuracy and the identity of the person performing the
    determination of accuracy.
    "(A) Records shall be kept for each instrument at a licensed forensic alcohol
    laboratory showing compliance with this Section."
    "1221.5. Expression of Analytical Results.
    "Results of breath alcohol analysis shall be expressed as set forth in Section
    1220.4." [Section 1220.4 provides that all analytical results shall be expressed in
    terms of the alcohol concentration in blood, based on the number of grams of alcohol
    per 100 milliliters of blood.]
    18.                                         88-1102