State v. Felicity Kathleen Haynes ( 2015 )


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  •                   IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    Docket No. 41924-2014
    STATE OF IDAHO,                                        )
    )      Coeur d’Alene, April 2015 Term
    Plaintiff-Respondent,                          )
    )      2015 Opinion No. 80
    v.                                                     )
    )      Filed: August 20, 2015
    FELICITY KATHLEEN HAYNES,                              )
    )      Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
    Defendant-Appellant.                           )
    )
    Appeal from the District Court of the First Judicial District of the State of Idaho,
    in and for Kootenai County. Hon. Rich Christensen, District Judge, and Hon.
    Scott L. Wayman, Magistrate Judge.
    The order of the district court is affirmed.
    Jay W. Logsdon, Kootenai County public defender, Coeur d’Alene, argued for appellant.
    Lori Fleming, Deputy Attorney General, Boise, argued for respondent.
    EISMANN, Justice.
    This is an appeal out of Kootenai County from an order of the district court affirming on
    appeal the orders of the magistrate court in a prosecution for driving under the influence of
    alcohol. The challenged orders were: (a) the granting of a continuance to the State due to the
    unavailability of a witness; (b) the refusal to appoint a separate judge to hear a request for funds
    for the defense; (c) the denial of a motion in limine to exclude the results of a breath test on the
    ground that procedures for administering the test had not been properly adopted by the Idaho
    State Police; and (d) the defendant’s consent to the breath test was invalid because it was
    obtained by the threat of a monetary penalty and loss of her driver’s license for one year. We
    affirm the order of the district court.
    I.
    Factual Background.
    On February 23, 2013, at about 2:00 a.m., Felicity K. Haynes was arrested by a state
    trooper for driving while under the influence of alcohol. The trooper placed her in the back seat
    of his patrol car, where he intended to have her submit to an evidentiary test for concentration of
    alcohol in her breath by using a hand-held Lifeloc breath testing device. Prior to asking her to do
    so, the officer played an audio recording that informed her of the consequences of refusing to
    submit to the test, as required by Idaho Code section 18-8002(3). Those consequences included
    that she would be subject to a civil penalty of $250 and would have her driver’s license
    absolutely suspended for a period of one year. After playing the recording, the trooper asked
    Ms. Haynes to submit to the breath test, and she did so. The testing of two breath samples
    showed an alcohol concentration of 0.161 and 0.158, both of which exceeded the statutory limit
    of 0.08. Based upon those results, she was charged with the offense of driving while under the
    influence of alcohol.
    On March 9, 2013, defense counsel filed a motion asking the magistrate court to suppress
    the results of the breath test on the ground that the Idaho State Police had not adopted rules
    pursuant to the Idaho Administrative Procedures Act establishing procedures for the maintenance
    and operation of breath testing devices, but had instead done so merely by issuing written
    standard operating procedures. In the motion, he requested oral argument but did not specify a
    date for the argument. Defense counsel filed an amended motion in limine on April 15, 2013,
    but the amended motion in limine did not give notice of a hearing date. It requested oral
    argument and an opportunity to present evidence. On April 16, 2013, defense counsel filed a
    motion to suppress in which he contended that the trooper’s warrantless stop and arrest of Ms.
    Haynes were unconstitutional. In that motion, he requested that the motion be set for oral
    argument and/or an evidentiary hearing.
    On April 17, 2013, the magistrate court held a pretrial conference.               During the
    conference, defense counsel requested a continuance of the trial, and Ms. Haynes stated on the
    record that she waived her right to a speedy trial. The court granted the continuance.
    On May 30, 2013, defense counsel filed an amended memorandum in support of the
    motion to suppress the results of the breath test. In that memorandum, he raised the issue that
    Ms. Haynes’s consent to the breath test was invalid.
    2
    On June 4, 2013, the magistrate court held a pretrial conference, during which the
    amended motion in limine and the motion to suppress were to be heard. At the commencement
    of the hearing, the prosecutor asked for a continuance of the motion to suppress because the state
    trooper “has a child uh, issue as far as having to be with the—babysitting a child this morning.”
    The prosecutor also stated that defense counsel had just filed the amended memorandum raising
    the issue of whether her consent to the breath test was invalid, that he had been out of state, and
    that he had only returned the previous day. Defense counsel objected to the continuance, stating,
    “We think that it would impune [sic] the neutrality of the court to give them a continuance on the
    basis of something that the officer is claiming last second.” Defense counsel said that the state
    trooper was necessary to testify regarding the recently raised issue of the validity of Ms.
    Haynes’s consent to perform the breath test and that he would not object to continuing that
    motion, but he objected to continuing the motion to suppress. Defense counsel also stated, “We
    don’t think that the State has provided any lawful reason for their witness not being here.”
    Defense counsel did not assert that his client would be prejudiced by the continuance. The
    magistrate court granted the motion for a continuance. On June 5, 2013, defense counsel filed a
    motion seeking an appointment of another magistrate judge to hear an ex parte application for
    funds to assist the defense.
    The defense motions were heard on July 18, 2013. The motion for appointment of
    another judge to hear an ex parte motion for additional funds was argued first, and at the
    conclusion of the argument the magistrate court announced that it denied the motion.
    The motion to suppress based upon the alleged illegality of the stop was heard next. The
    prosecutor called the state trooper who testified to the reason for stopping the vehicle that Ms.
    Haynes was driving. The court found the trooper to be credible and ruled that “the State has met
    their [sic] burden of proof of establishing a reasonable and articulable suspicion that the vehicle
    was being driven in violation of the traffic laws and was legitimately stopped.”
    Prior to the hearing, the defense stipulated that the state trooper had the required
    reasonable suspicion to request that Ms. Haynes submit to a test for alcohol concentration, that
    he gave her the required information before doing so, and that she “consented to the breath test.”
    The court ruled that her consent was not involuntary.
    3
    Finally, defense counsel did not present any oral argument on the amended motion in
    limine, but chose to rely upon the briefs he had filed. The magistrate court orally denied the
    motion.
    On July 22, 2013, Ms. Haynes pled guilty to the charge of driving while under the
    influence of alcohol. Pursuant to Rule 11(a)(2) of the Idaho Criminal Rules, the prosecutor, the
    defense counsel, and Ms. Haynes agreed that the plea was conditional; that she reserved the right
    to appeal the orders of June 4, 2013, and July 18, 2013; and that if she prevailed on appeal she
    would withdraw her guilty plea.       The magistrate court accepted the plea agreement and
    sentenced Ms. Haynes. She then appealed to the district court. After briefing and argument, the
    district court affirmed the magistrate court’s rulings. Ms. Haynes then appealed to this Court.
    II.
    Did the District Court Err in Holding that the Magistrate Court Did Not Abuse Its
    Discretion in Granting a Continuance of the Hearing on the Motion to Suppress?
    “The decision to grant or deny a motion for continuance is within the discretion of the
    judge.” State v. Payne, 
    146 Idaho 548
    , 567, 
    199 P.3d 123
    , 142 (2008). “In addition, the denial
    of a motion for continuance will not be an abuse of discretion unless it can be shown that the
    substantial rights of the defendant have been prejudiced.” State v. Wood, 
    132 Idaho 88
    , 106, 
    967 P.2d 702
    , 720 (1998); accord I.C.R 52.
    The only issues that the defense raised before the magistrate court regarding the granting
    of the continuance was that granting the continuance “would impune [sic] the neutrality of the
    court to give them a continuance on the basis of something that the officer is claiming last
    second” and that the prosecutor had not “provided any lawful reason for their witness not being
    here.” The defense did not contend that the continuance would prejudice Ms. Haynes. In
    holding that the magistrate court did not abuse its discretion in granting the continuance, the
    district court stated that Ms. Haynes did not suffer any prejudice by the continuance.
    On appeal to this Court, Ms. Haynes seeks to raise other issues that were not presented to
    the magistrate court. “It is well settled that an issue not raised before the trial court cannot be
    raised for the first time on appeal.” State v. Howard, 
    150 Idaho 471
    , 476, 
    248 P.3d 722
    , 727
    (2011). Because no prejudice was shown before the magistrate court, the district court did not
    err in upholding the granting of the motion for a continuance.
    4
    III.
    Did the District Court Err in Upholding the Magistrate Court’s Denial of the Request for
    the Appointment of Another Judge to Hear an Ex Parte Motion for Additional Funds?
    Idaho Criminal Rule 12.2(b) provides that a defendant’s motion seeking public funds to
    pay for investigative, expert, or other services that the defense believes to be necessary, shall
    include:
    (1) The scope and details of the services requested.
    (2) The reasons the requested services are relevant and necessary to the defense
    based upon the specific facts of the case.
    (3) The name and location of the proposed providers of the services.
    (4) The qualifications of the proposed providers of the services.
    (5) An estimate of the total cost of the services being requested, including the
    hourly rate or other charges of the providers of the services, and any additional
    expenses, such as travel costs, that will be incurred.
    (6) If the proposed providers of the services are located outside of the judicial
    district or the state of Idaho, an explanation of why the proposed providers should
    be utilized and what efforts have been made to locate providers of the requested
    services in the judicial district or in the state of Idaho.
    The rule also provides that if the defendant is represented by a public defender, as in this
    case, the motion shall be submitted to the court ex parte and the court shall decide the motion
    based upon the information provided by the defendant and the court record. I.C.R. 12.2(d). The
    rule further provides that the court may, in its discretion, ask the administrative district judge to
    appoint another judge to decide the motion. I.C.R. 12.2(e).
    The defense did not comply with Rule 12.2(b) in making its motion in that it did not
    provide any of the information required by that rule. Rather, the defense merely asked the
    magistrate court “to appoint a magistrate judge to hear Defendant’s ex parte applications for
    funds to assist in the preparation of the defense.” The magistrate court denied the motion to
    appoint another judge because the defense did not make a sufficient showing to require such
    appointment; the defense did not show what the expert would do or how much the expert would
    cost; the defense did not show that making an ex parte showing to the magistrate court would
    require disclosure of the defense strategy or theories; and the defense did not show that the
    public defender’s office had not received sums for experts as part of its budget request. The
    district court held that the magistrate court did not abuse its discretion in denying the request for
    appointment of another judge to hear the request for additional funds.
    5
    On appeal to this Court, Ms. Haynes contends that the Due Process Clause requires the
    granting of a motion to appoint another judge to hear a motion for additional funds without any
    preliminary showing. That argument was not made to the magistrate court. Therefore, we will
    not consider it on appeal. “It is well settled that an issue not raised before the trial court cannot
    be raised for the first time on appeal.” 
    Howard, 150 Idaho at 476
    , 248 P.3d at 727.
    IV.
    Did the District Court Err in Upholding the Magistrate Court’s Denial of the
    Motion in Limine?
    The defense asked the magistrate court to exclude from evidence the results of the breath
    test on the ground that the Idaho State Police had failed to create procedures that would establish
    the reliability of breath testing. The State Police had adopted administrative rules setting forth
    requirements for breath alcohol testing. Those rules were as follows:
    014. REQUIREMENTS FOR PERFORMING BREATH ALCOHOL
    TESTING.
    01.     Instruments. Each breath testing instrument model shall be
    approved by the department and shall be listed in the “Conforming Products List
    of Evidential Breath Measurement Devices” published in the Federal Register by
    the United States Department of Transportation as incorporated by reference in
    Section 004 of this rule.                                            (4-7-11)
    02.    Report. Each direct breath testing instrument shall report alcohol
    concentration as grams of alcohol per two hundred ten (210) liters of breath.
    (7-1-93)
    03.    Administration. Breath tests shall be administered in conformity
    with standards established by the department. Standards shall be developed for
    each type of breath testing instrument used in Idaho, and such standards shall be
    issued in the form of analytical methods and standard operating procedures.
    (4-7-11)
    04.     Training. Each individual operator shall demonstrate that he has
    sufficient training to operate the instrument correctly. This shall be accomplished
    by successfully completing a training course approved by the department.
    Officers must retrain periodically as required by the department.          (7-1-93)
    05.    Checks. Each breath testing instrument shall be checked on a
    schedule established by the Department for accuracy with a simulator solution
    6
    provided by or approved by the department. These checks shall be performed
    according to a procedure established by the department.           (4-7-11)
    06.     Records. All records regarding maintenance and results shall be
    retained for three (3) years.                                        (3-19-99)
    07.   Deficiencies. Failure to meet any of the conditions listed in
    Sections 013 and 014. Any laboratory or breath testing instrument may be
    disapproved for failure to meet one (1) or more of the requirements listed in
    Sections 013 and 014, and approval may be withheld until the deficiency is
    corrected.                                                          (4-7-11)
    IDAPA 11.03.01.14 (2013).
    Pursuant to the rules, breath tests are to be administered in conformity with standards
    “issued in the form of analytical methods and standard operating procedures.”               IDAPA
    11.03.01.14.03 (2013).    Ms. Haynes contended that two changes in the standard operating
    procedures (SOPs) would result in unreliable breath testing results. The SOPs that are relevant
    to her argument are: Idaho State Police, Standard Operating Procedure Breath Alcohol Testing
    (Jan. 15, 2009) (“2009 SOPs”), and Idaho State Police, 6.0 Idaho Standard Operating Procedure
    Breath Alcohol Testing (January 16, 2013) (“2013 SOPs”).
    The first change she mentioned was changing the word “must” in section 2.2.11 of the
    2009 SOPs to “should” in section 5.2.10 in the 2013 SOPs. The 2009 SOPs stated, “The BTS
    [breath testing specialists] must set the correct acceptable range limits and reference solution lot
    number in the instrument before proceeding with subject testing.”           2009 SOPs, § 2.2.11
    (emphasis added).     The corresponding provision of the 2013 SOPs stated, “The correct
    acceptable range limits and performance verification standard lot number should be set in the
    instrument before proceeding with evidentiary testing.” 2013 SOPs, § 5.2.10 (emphasis added).
    Ms. Haynes contends that the change from “must” in 2009 to “should” in 2013 rendered the
    procedure incapable of producing an accurate breath test.
    Section 2.2.11 in the 2009 SOPs and section 5.2.10 in the 2013 SOPs were applicable to
    performing calibration checks on Intoxilyzer 5000/EN instruments. The instrument used to test
    Ms. Haynes’s breath was a Lifeloc FC20, which has a different procedure for performing
    calibration checks. 2009 SOPs § 2.1, 2013 SOPs § 5.1. Ms. Haynes has not shown how the
    change in the procedures for performing a calibration check on Intoxilyzer 5000/EN instruments
    7
    would affect the reliability of the results of a breath test performed using a Lifeloc FC20
    instrument.
    The second change mentioned by Ms. Haynes related to the monitoring of the subject
    prior to performing the breath test. The relevant provisions of the 2009 SOPs stated:
    3.1 Prior to evidential breath alcohol testing, the subject must be
    monitored for fifteen (15) minutes.
    ....
    3.1.5 During the monitoring period, the operator must be alert for any
    event that might influence the accuracy of the breath test.
    3.1.5.1 The operator must be aware of the possible presence of mouth
    alcohol as indicated by the testing instrument. If mouth alcohol is suspected or
    indicated, the operator should begin another l5-minute waiting period before
    repeating the testing sequence.
    3.1.5.2 If, during the 15-minute waiting period, the subject vomits or is
    otherwise suspected of regurgitating material from the stomach, the 15-minute
    waiting period must begin again.
    2009 SOPs §§ 3.1, 3.1.5, 3.1.5.1, 3.1.5.2 (emphases added).
    The corresponding provisions in the 2013 SOPs changed the word “must” to “should,” as
    shown below:
    6.1 Prior to evidentiary breath alcohol testing, the subject/individual
    should be monitored for at least fifteen (15) minutes.               Any foreign
    objects/materials which have the potential to enter the instrument/breath tube or
    may present a choking hazard should be removed prior to the start of the 15
    minute waiting period. During the monitoring period the subject/individual
    should not be allowed to smoke, drink, eat, or belch/vomit/regurgitate.
    ....
    6.1.4 During the monitoring period, the Operator should be alert for any
    event that might influence the accuracy of the breath alcohol test.
    6.1.4.1 The Operator should be aware of the possible presence of mouth
    alcohol as indicated by the testing instrument. If mouth alcohol is suspected or
    indicated, the Operator should begin another 15-minute waiting period before
    repeating the testing sequence.
    6.1.4.2 If during the 15-minute waiting period, the subject/individual
    vomits or regurgitates material from the stomach into the subject/individual’s
    breath pathway, the 15-minute waiting period should begin again.
    2013 SOPs, §§ 6.1, 6.1.4, 6.1.4.1, 6.1.4.2 (emphases added).
    In the motion in limine, Ms. Haynes had the burden of establishing that the State could
    not lay a sufficient foundation for the admission of the test results. Todd v. Sullivan Constr.
    LLC, 
    146 Idaho 118
    , 121, 
    191 P.3d 196
    , 199 (2008). In support of her motion in limine, Ms.
    8
    Haynes did not offer any evidence as to how the state trooper conducted the breath test or
    whether the testing instrument was properly calibrated. Therefore, she failed to show that the
    State could not lay a sufficient foundation for the admissibility of the test results.
    “When presented with a motion in limine, a trial court has the authority to deny the
    motion and wait until trial to determine if the evidence should or should not be excluded.” Kirk
    v. Ford Motor Co., 
    141 Idaho 697
    , 701, 
    116 P.3d 27
    , 31 (2005). The magistrate court denied the
    motion in limine, but stated, “The evidence that comes in at the trial is still gonna have to
    establish that it is an accurate test.” Because Ms. Haynes pled guilty before the magistrate court
    made any ruling regarding the admissibility of the test, she did not preserve that issue for appeal.
    State v. Manzanares, 
    152 Idaho 410
    , 420, 
    272 P.3d 382
    , 392 (2012).
    Ms. Haynes also argues on appeal that the 2013 SOPs are void because they were not
    adopted pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act. That issue was raised in State v. Besaw,
    
    155 Idaho 134
    , 
    306 P.3d 219
    (Ct. App. 2013). The magistrate court quoted the following from
    that opinion, “Although Besaw has exposed some troubling information about the manner in
    which the SOPs for breath testing have been developed or amended, we are not persuaded that he
    has demonstrated that the SOP procedures are incapable of yielding accurate tests.” 
    Id. at 144,
    306 P.3d at 229. The magistrate then held:
    And so I’m going to deny the motion in limine based on the changing in
    this—of the rules or the adoption of the standard operating procedures. The
    evidence that comes in at the trial is still gonna have to establish that it is an
    accurate test. And the evidence that comes in at trial, assuming the test comes in,
    is not necessarily uh—well, it is still subject to challenge as far as the accuracy is
    concerned.
    The district court affirmed, again based upon the decision in Besaw.
    The State argues on appeal that the State Police is not required to adopt rules pursuant to
    Idaho Code section 67-5231(1), which states, “Rules may be promulgated by an agency only
    when specifically authorized by statute.” The State contends that Idaho Code section 18-8004
    does not expressly authorize the State Police to promulgate rules regarding evidentiary testing.
    Idaho Code section 67-2901(1) states that the State Police is an executive department of
    the State government. The director of the State Police has the authority for the State Police to
    “[f]ormulate and place in effect such rules for the Idaho state police as from time to time appear
    to him advisable.” I.C. § 67-2901(12)(c). The State Police rules governing alcohol testing
    9
    stated, “The Director of the Idaho State Police has general rulemaking authority to prescribe
    rules and regulations for alcohol testing, pursuant to Section 67-2901, Idaho Code.” IDAPA
    11.03.01.000 (2013).
    “[E]ach state . . . department or officer authorized by law to make rules” is an “agency”
    under the Administrative Procedure Act. I.C. § 67-5201(2).
    Idaho Code section 18-8004(4) states:
    Analysis of blood, urine or breath for the purpose of determining the alcohol
    concentration shall be performed by a laboratory operated by the Idaho state
    police or by a laboratory approved by the Idaho state police under the provisions
    of approval and certification standards to be set by that department, or by any
    other method approved by the Idaho state police. . . . .
    The statute requires that analysis of blood or urine “shall be performed by a laboratory
    operated by the Idaho state police or by a laboratory approved by the Idaho state police under the
    provisions of approval and certification standards to be set by that department.” A “laboratory”
    is defined as “the place at which specialized devices, instruments and methods are used by
    trained personnel to measure the concentration of alcohol in samples of blood or urine for law
    enforcement purposes.” IDAPA 11.03.01.010.05 (2013). Thus, it is mandatory that the State
    Police establish approval and certification standards for those laboratories.
    A “rule” under the Administrative Procedure Act is “the whole or a part of an agency
    statement of general applicability that has been promulgated in compliance with the provisions
    of this chapter and that implements, interprets, or prescribes: (a) Law or policy; or (b) The
    procedure or practice requirements of an agency.” I.C. § 67-5201(19). The approval and
    certification standards would constitute a rule under the Act.         If they are not adopted in
    compliance with the Act, they are “voidable unless adopted in substantial compliance with the
    requirements of this chapter,” I.C. § 67-5231(1).
    With respect to breath testing, Idaho Code section 18-8004(4) provides that “[a]nalysis of
    . . . breath for the purpose of determining the alcohol concentration shall be performed . . . by
    any other method approved by the Idaho state police.” The “any other method” would be a
    method other than in a laboratory operated or approved by the State Police. The 2013 SOPs set
    forth procedures to implement breath testing under section 18-8004(4). In Asarco Inc. v. State,
    
    138 Idaho 719
    , 
    69 P.3d 139
    (2003), we further clarified what constitutes a rule under the
    Administrative Procedure Act.
    10
    [I]n order to provide further guidance in determining when agency action requires
    rulemaking, this Court adopts the reasoning of the district court and considers the
    following characteristics of agency action indicative of a rule: (1) wide coverage,
    (2) applied generally and uniformly, (3) operates only in future cases, (4)
    prescribes a legal standard or directive not otherwise provided by the enabling
    statute, (5) expresses agency policy not previously expressed, and (6) is an
    interpretation of law or general policy.
    
    Id. at 723,
    69 P.3 at 143.
    Under Asarco, the 2013 SOPs would constitute rules.            They have wide coverage,
    governing the testing for breath alcohol concentration throughout the state. They are to be
    applied generally and uniformly, which is the purpose for adopting standards and procedures.
    They operate only in future cases. They prescribe a legal standard not provided by the enabling
    legislation. Idaho Code section 18-8004(4) did not set forth any standards relating to testing for
    alcohol concentration other than the formulas to be used for testing the alcohol concentration in
    blood, urine, and breath. Although the 2013 SOPs do not express agency policy not previously
    expressed, they express agency policy not previously set forth in rules adopted pursuant to the
    Administrative Procedure Act. The SOPs are not an interpretation of law or general policy, but
    the absence of that characteristic is not determinative. Therefore, they constitute rules which
    must be adopted in substantial compliance with the Act. I.C. § 67-5231(1). The State does not
    contend that the 2013 SOPs were adopted in substantial compliance with the Act. Therefore,
    they are void.
    However, “[s]howing that the test was administered in conformity with applicable test
    procedures or expert testimony may suffice to establish an adequate foundation.” Dachlet v.
    State, 
    136 Idaho 752
    , 757, 
    40 P.3d 110
    , 115 (2002). Therefore, the fact that the 2013 SOPs are
    void would not have prevented the State from establishing an adequate foundation for the
    admissibility of the test results. As stated above, the magistrate court ruled that the State would
    have to establish that the test was accurate. That could be done by expert testimony. Because
    Ms. Haynes pled guilty prior to trial, the magistrate court never had to determine whether the
    State could present sufficient evidence to establish that foundation. The district court did not err
    in holding that the magistrate did not err in denying the motion in limine.
    11
    V.
    Did the District Court Err in Affirming the Magistrate Court’s Ruling that Ms. Haynes
    Consented to the Breath Test?
    If Ms. Haynes had refused to consent to the breath test, she would have been subject to a
    civil penalty of $250 and a one-year loss of her driving privileges. I.C. § 18-8002(4). After
    being advised of that consequence, she consented to the test. She contended in the magistrate
    court that the threat of this consequence vitiated her consent. The magistrate disagreed, and the
    district court upheld that ruling. We affirm on a different ground.
    The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States recognizes “[t]he right of
    the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable
    searches and seizures.” U.S. Const. amend IV. The Constitution of the State of Idaho similarly
    protects “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against
    unreasonable searches and seizures.” Idaho Const. art. I, § 17. Both provisions only protect
    against unreasonable searches; they do not prohibit reasonable searches. Thus, the issue is
    whether a request by a peace officer that a person submit to a breath test constitutes an
    unreasonable search where the officer had reasonable grounds to believe that the person was
    operating or in actual control of a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol. We hold
    that it does not.
    First, the person has a diminished expectation of privacy because the person has already
    consented to the search. By operating or being in actual physical control of a motor vehicle, the
    person has given consent to evidentiary testing of alcohol concentration based upon the analysis
    of the person’s breath, blood, or urine if such testing is administered by a peace officer having
    reasonable grounds to believe that the person is under the influence of alcohol, drugs, or other
    intoxicating substances. I.C. § 18-8002(1). Although the person can later withdraw that consent,
    State v. Halseth, 
    157 Idaho 643
    , 646, 
    339 P.3d 368
    , 371 (2014), the implied consent is relevant
    to the expectation of privacy.
    Second, the intrusion is minimal. The breath test only requires that the person blow air
    into a machine or other device for the purpose of measuring the alcohol concentration in the
    person’s exhaled breath. The breath test is not invasive, and there is no contention that it could
    put the person at risk of injury. The person is not required to undress or expose any portion of
    his or her body that is normally covered.        The test is only intended to determine alcohol
    12
    concentration in the person’s breath, not to determine the state of the person’s body or the
    person’s possible medical conditions.        Thus, it would not reveal confidential medical
    information.
    Third, the state has a compelling interest in deterring intoxicated persons from operating
    motor vehicles on the roads and highways of this state. “The carnage caused by drunk drivers is
    well documented . . . .” South Dakota v. Neville, 
    459 U.S. 553
    , 558 (1983).
    Finally, the breath test cannot be completed by the use of force. It can only be completed
    if the person blows into the testing instrument.
    For the above reasons, we hold that requiring a breath test in this circumstance was not an
    unreasonable search. Because consent is an exception to the warrant requirement, Halen v. State,
    
    136 Idaho 829
    , 833, 
    41 P.3d 257
    , 261 (2002), it does not apply where the search was reasonable
    and a warrant was therefore not required.
    VI.
    Conclusion.
    We affirm the order of the district court.
    Chief Justice J. JONES, Justices BURDICK and HORTON CONCUR.
    W. JONES, Justice, concurring,
    The majority holds herein that the administration of the breath test did not violate Ms.
    Haynes’ rights because the Idaho Constitution only protects against unreasonable searches and
    breath tests are reasonable. I feel that such a ruling improperly abrogates the warrant
    requirement in lieu of a general reasonableness standard. The proper approach to this issue is to
    look to whether a previously established exception to the warrant requirement properly applies
    (in this case consent). Indeed, while a reasonableness analysis is necessary in this case to
    determine the constitutionality of the administrative penalty scheme, such analysis should take
    place within the greater context of the consent exception to the warrant requirement. For the
    reasons outlined below, the consent exception to the warrant requirement is applicable and
    Haynes’ consent was voluntary.
    13
    Idaho Code section 18-8002 provides that a person gives “implied consent” to evidentiary
    testing when that person drives on Idaho roads and that these tests can be administered when a
    police officer has “reasonable grounds to believe that [a] person has been driving or in actual
    physical control of a motor vehicle in violation of [Idaho’s DUI statute].” I.C. § 18-8002(1). This
    statutorily implied consent to evidentiary testing includes consent to breathalyzer tests and blood
    tests. I.C. § 18-8002(9)–(10). In the blood draw context, this Court has already held that
    warrantless searches for the presence of alcohol cannot, as a matter of course, be justified by
    implied consent. See State v. Arrotta, 
    157 Idaho 773
    , ___, 
    339 P.3d 1177
    , 1178 (2014); State v.
    Halseth, 
    157 Idaho 643
    , ___, 
    339 P.3d 368
    , 371 (2014); State v. Wulff, 
    157 Idaho 416
    , ___, 
    337 P.3d 575
    , 582 (2014). While McNeely centered on the exigency exception to the warrant
    requirement and did not squarely address implied consent, based on McNeely’s rationale, dicta,
    and progeny, the Court determined that implied consent cannot act as a per se exception to the
    warrant requirement. Wulff, 157 Idaho at ___, 337 P.3d at 581 (“[I]rrevocable implied consent
    operates as a per se rule that cannot fit under the consent exception because it does not always
    analyze the voluntariness of that consent.”). For this reason, “this Court has held that a suspect
    can withdraw his or her statutorily implied consent to a test for the presence of alcohol.” 
    Arrotta, 157 Idaho at 774
    , 339 P.3d at 1178. Although these cases were decided in the blood draw
    context, the impact of these holdings on Idaho’s implied consent statute applies equally in the
    breath test context.
    The opinions in Wulff, Halseth, and Arrotta were released shortly after the briefing for
    this appeal was submitted. These cases, which establish that statutorily implied consent must be
    capable of being withdrawn, dispense with one of the grounds heavily relied upon by the State in
    arguing for the constitutionality of ISP’s warrantless breath search of Haynes. These cases also
    nullify Haynes’s argument that McNeely invalidated Idaho’s implied consent statute. For this
    reason, the bifurcated approach adopted in the briefing, wherein the parties analyze statutorily
    implied consent separately from actual consent, is antiquated because this distinction, at least as
    briefed with no recognition of the ability to withdraw that consent, is no longer viable. Because
    implied consent is capable of being revoked, a party’s actual consent becomes relevant and
    implied consent is just one of many factors to be considered or folded into the larger consent
    analysis, a totality of the circumstances inquiry.
    14
    Given these recent developments, the issue presented in this appeal is whether Haynes’s
    consent to the breath alcohol test was truly voluntary. This inquiry requires this Court to
    determine whether the administrative penalty scheme laid out in Idaho Code sections 18-8002
    and 18-8002A is constitutional.
    “The Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and article I, section 17 of the Idaho
    Constitution each forbid unreasonable searches and seizures.” State v. Hansen, 
    151 Idaho 342
    ,
    346, 
    256 P.3d 750
    , 754 (2011); U.S. CONST. amend. IV; IDAHO CONST. art. I, § 17. The United
    States Supreme Court has recognized that the Fourth Amendment applies to a breathalyzer test.
    Maryland v. King, ___ U.S. ___, 
    133 S. Ct. 1958
    , 1969 (2013); Skinner v. Ry. Labor Execs.’
    Ass’n, 
    489 U.S. 602
    , 616, 
    109 S. Ct. 1402
    , 1414 (1989). For a search to be reasonable, a warrant
    is presumptively required unless one of several judicially recognized exceptions to the warrant
    requirement applies. 
    Hansen, 151 Idaho at 346
    , 256 P.3d at 754. One such exception is
    “[c]onsent voluntarily given by someone with authority.” 
    Id. In such
    instances, “[t]he burden is
    on the State to show that the consent exception applies.” 
    Id. In this
    case, Haynes challenges the constitutionality of ISP’s warrantless breath alcohol
    test in connection with the State’s prosecution of her for the crime of DUI. Much of the case law
    that has been developed to date addressing the intersection of the Fourth Amendment, implied
    consent, and chemical testing for alcohol has involved blood alcohol testing. Out the outset, it is
    worth noting that blood draws differ in certain material respects from breath tests. For one, the
    level of intrusion and inconvenience is not the same. Whereas a breath test requires a test subject
    to merely exhale and reveals only information about alcohol concentration, a blood draw is more
    invasive because it involves the piercing of skin and is capable of revealing more information
    about the subject than just his or her blood alcohol concentration. Second, breath tests require
    some level of cooperation, as there cannot be forced breath tests in the same way there can be
    forced blood draws—subjects simply cannot be held down and forced to give breath. For these
    reasons, the constitutional analysis of blood and breath tests will not be identical.
    Returning to the facts of this case, because a breath test is a search and because ISP
    conducted Haynes’s test without a warrant, the State bears the burden of demonstrating that
    Haynes validly consented to the test. The State carried its burden in this case. “Idaho’s implied
    consent statute must jump two hurdles to qualify as voluntary: (1) drivers give their initial
    consent voluntarily and (2) drivers must continue to give voluntary consent. Drivers in Idaho
    15
    give their initial consent to evidentiary testing by driving on Idaho roads voluntarily.” Wulff, 157
    Idaho at ___, 337 P.3d at 582. In this case, Haynes initially consented by driving on Idaho roads
    and did not later object or take steps to withdraw her implied consent to the breath test after
    being placed under arrest. To the contrary, she admits that she agreed to take the test, but argues
    her consent was involuntary because it was obtained only after she was informed of the
    administrative penalties and license suspension consequences that would result if she refused the
    test. Haynes contends that these penalties are coercive and amount to an unconstitutional
    condition. For this reason alone, she asserts that her consent was invalid because it was coerced
    with the threat of penalties. This argument is unavailing.
    Law enforcement officers use the ALS Form to inform drivers suspected of DUI of their
    legal obligations with respect to evidentiary testing for alcohol concentration, as well as the
    administrative penalties for failing or refusing the same. 1 The first portion of the Form states:
    I have reasonable grounds to believe that you were driving or were in physical
    control of a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol, drugs, or other
    intoxicating substances. You are required by law to take one or more evidentiary
    test(s) to determine the concentration of alcohol or the presence of drugs or other
    intoxicating substances in your body. After submitting to the test(s), you may,
    when practical, at your own expense, have additional test(s) made by a person of
    your own choosing. You do not have the right to talk to a lawyer before taking
    any evidentiary test(s) to determine the alcohol concentration or presence of drugs
    or other intoxicating substances in your body.
    While this portion of the ALS Form informed Haynes of her legal obligation to submit to an
    evidentiary test, the second and third portions of the same form informed her of the
    consequences of refusing a test and failing a test respectively. The ALS Form tracks Idaho Code
    sections 18-8002 and 18-8002A, which establish a bifurcated administrative penalty scheme
    1
    Law enforcement officers routinely rely upon a form promulgated by the Idaho Department of
    Transportation entitled “Notice of Suspension for Failure of Evidentiary Testing (Advisory for
    Sections 18-8002 and 18-8002A, Idaho Code)” prior to administering blood or breath alcohol
    tests to subjects suspected of DUI. This is commonly referred to as an “ALS Form” or reading
    the “ALS advisories.” In this case the ISP trooper played an audio recording which the trooper
    stated, and the parties stipulated, was virtually identical to the contents of the ALS Form.
    Whereas the ALS Form states, “I have reasonable grounds to believe. . .”, the audio recording
    states, “The trooper has reasonable grounds to believe. . .”. This is the only difference between
    the recording that was played to Haynes and the ALS Form. When the audio recording is not
    used, the ALS Form is read verbatim to DUI suspects.
    16
    based on whether a DUI suspect refuses to take an evidentiary test or instead opts to take a test
    and fails.
    Pursuant to this scheme, Haynes was informed that should she refuse to take or complete
    a test, she would be subject to a civil penalty of $250, a one year license suspension for a first
    refusal, and a two year suspension for a second refusal within ten years. Haynes was further
    informed that should she take a test and fail, her license would be suspended for a certain period
    of time, contingent upon any prior failed tests. If this was her first failed test within the last five
    years, her license would be automatically suspended for 90 days with no driving privileges for
    the first 30 days, but with the option for restricted privileges for the remaining 60 days. If,
    however, Haynes had failed an evidentiary test within the last five years, she was informed that
    an additional failure would lead to one year suspension with no driving privileges of any kind.
    There is no dispute that Trooper Keys, through the playing of the audio ALS advisories,
    accurately informed Haynes both of her legal duty to submit to blood or breath alcohol testing as
    well as the statutory consequences for refusing or failing a test. Further, the record demonstrates
    that Keys actually gave Haynes the choice of consenting or refusing. This establishes that
    Haynes had the ability to withdraw her statutorily implied consent. On appeal, Haynes cites the
    following language in the ALS Form as support for her coercion argument: “You are required by
    law to take one or more evidentiary tests to determine the concentration of alcohol or the
    presence of drugs or other intoxicating substances in your body.” This argument, however,
    improperly takes this provision out of the larger context of the entire ALS Form. Although this
    language, on its own, would be problematic in so far as it conflicts with this Court’s precedent
    that implied consent must be capable of being withdrawn, the ALS Form goes on to advise a
    DUI suspect of the specific consequences for his or her refusal to submit to testing. This
    inherently affords a subject like Haynes the option of revoking or withdrawing his or her
    statutorily implied consent by refusing evidentiary testing.
    Haynes does not argue on appeal that Keys did not have reasonable grounds to believe
    that she was driving under the influence. Further, there is no allegation that the entire ALS
    recording was not played to her or that the ALS advisories inaccurately informed her of the
    administrative penalties she faced if she failed or refused to submit to testing. The record, in fact,
    reflects that the entire recording was played. Instead, Haynes challenges the constitutionality of
    the administrative penalty scheme, arguing this scheme and the reading of the ALS advisories
    17
    amounts to coercion rendering her consent involuntary. More precisely, Haynes asserts that “[a]
    state may not pass a law that visits penalties upon a citizen for exercising a constitutional right.”
    In response, the State argues that Haynes both impliedly and actually consented to the breath test
    and that these civil penalties do not amount to coercion or render her consent involuntary.
    Haynes’s consent was voluntary and not vitiated for two related reasons. First, consent to
    an evidentiary test can be voluntary even if given to avoid administrative penalties. Second, the
    administrative penalty scheme at issue here is a reasonable condition attached to the privilege of
    driving on Idaho roads and does not infringe upon the Fourth Amendment. Both grounds,
    however, involve a reasonableness analysis, given that reasonableness is the constitutional
    benchmark for government searches
    Idaho’s implied consent statute requires the State to prove that a driver gave his or her
    initial consent voluntarily and also gave voluntary consent at the time of the evidentiary test.
    Wulff, 157 Idaho at ___, 337 P.3d at 582. While the first prong is not disputed in this appeal, the
    second prong is at issue. In assessing the validity of Haynes’s consent at the time she was pulled
    over, arrested, and the breath test administered, it must be determined whether her consent was
    voluntarily given or instead the result of duress or coercion, direct or implied. Schneckloth v.
    Bustamonte, 
    412 U.S. 218
    , 221, 
    93 S. Ct. 2041
    , 2044 (1973); 
    Hansen, 138 Idaho at 796
    , 69 P.3d
    at 1057. Whether consent was granted voluntarily, or was instead a product of coercion, is a
    question of fact to be determined by assessing the totality of all the surrounding circumstances.
    State v. Varie, 
    135 Idaho 848
    , 852, 
    26 P.3d 31
    , 35 (2001); 
    Schneckloth, 412 U.S. at 229
    , 93 S.Ct.
    at 2048–49. This analysis specifically accounts for subtle coercive police tactics and questions,
    as well as the subjective state of the party granting consent to search. 
    Id. A voluntary
    decision is one that is “the product of an essentially free and unconstrained
    choice by its maker.” 
    Schneckloth, 412 U.S. at 225
    , 93 S. Ct. at 2047. An individual’s consent is
    involuntary, on the other hand, “if his will has been overborne and his capacity for self-
    determination critically impaired.” 
    Id. Nothing in
    the record indicates that Haynes’s will was
    overborne or her capacity for self-determination critically impaired by the playing of the ALS
    advisories. To the contrary, the administrative penalties for refusing an evidentiary test for
    alcohol concentration are less severe and exert much less pressure than circumstances or
    18
    scenarios where courts have held consent to be rendered involuntary. 2 Haynes does not outline or
    argue the presence of any of these traditional coercion factors—she does not challenge the
    manner in which Trooper Keys conducted the traffic stop or arrest, the location or conditions of
    her consent, or any of the other typical indicia of coercion. Instead, her sole contention on appeal
    is that the administrative penalty scheme amounts to an unconstitutional condition because it
    presents her with the unconstitutional choice of submitting to an evidentiary test in violation of
    her constitutional rights or facing administrative penalties. 3
    “The voluntariness of consent is not impaired simply because one is faced with two
    unpleasant choices,” assuming that both choices are constitutionally sound. State v. Garcia, 143
    2
    In finding consent to be vitiated or coerced, courts tend to consider whether there were
    numerous officers involved in the confrontation, Castellon v. United States, 
    864 A.2d 141
    , 155
    (D.C. 2004); United States v. Jones, 
    846 F.2d 358
    , 361 (6th Cir. 1988); the location and
    conditions of the consent, including whether it was at night, United States v. Mapp, 
    476 F.2d 67
    ,
    77–78 (2d Cir. 1973); whether the police retained the individual’s identification, United States v.
    Chemaly, 
    741 F.2d 1346
    , 1353 (11th Cir. 1984); whether the individual was free to leave, Ohio
    v. Robinette, 
    519 U.S. 33
    , 39–40, 
    117 S. Ct. 417
    , 421 (1996); 
    Chemaly, 741 F.2d at 1353
    ; State
    v. Gutierrez, 
    137 Idaho 647
    , 651, 
    51 P.3d 461
    , 465 (Ct. App. 2002); and, whether the individual
    knew of his right to refuse consent, 
    Schneckloth, 412 U.S. at 248
    –49, 93 S. Ct. at 2059; 
    Chemaly, 741 F.2d at 1353
    ; State v. Jones, 
    126 Idaho 791
    , 793, 
    890 P.2d 1214
    , 1216 (Ct. App. 1995).
    3
    Haynes relies upon a number of cases allegedly standing for the proposition that “[a] state may
    not pass a law that visits penalties upon a citizen for exercising its constitutional rights.” Without
    diving into the nuances of all of these cases so as to distinguish them from the facts presented in
    this appeal, all of the cases relied upon by Haynes involve municipal schemes attaching civil or
    criminal penalties for refusing otherwise warrantless searches of dwellings. These cases have no
    bearing on this appeal because, for one, the privacy interest in a dwelling is much greater than
    the privacy interest a person has in his or her alcohol concentration while driving on public
    roads, and two, unlike the plaintiffs in these cases, Haynes was arrested and in custody, and thus
    had a diminished expectation of privacy, at the time the warrantless search was conducted.
    As an illustration, one of the key cases Haynes relies upon for this proposition is Camara
    v. Municipal Court of San Francisco, 
    387 U.S. 523
    , 
    87 S. Ct. 1727
    (1967). Camara involved a
    property owner facing penalties and fines for refusing to allow a warrantless inspection of his
    property, as required under the municipal housing code. The Camara Court reasoned that
    administrative searches of private dwellings intrude upon the interests protected by the Fourth
    Amendment. 
    Id. at 534,
    87 S. Ct. at 1733. The Court held that the property owner had the right to
    insist on a warrant because there was no probable cause to believe that the property owner had
    violated any law and because there were no exigent circumstances preventing the government
    from obtaining a warrant. 
    Camara, 387 U.S. at 539
    , 87 S. Ct. at 1736. Haynes’ situation is not
    similar to the facts of Camara, as there was probable cause to believe that she had been driving
    under the influence of alcohol and she had already been arrested on that charge. Thus, Haynes’
    reliance on Camara, and the other related cases, is unavailing.
    
    19 Idaho 774
    , 779, 
    152 P.3d 645
    , 650 (Ct. App. 2006). In this instance, Haynes is arguing that the
    choices offered by Idaho Code sections 18-8002 and 18-8002A constitute an invalid
    infringement on her constitutional right against unreasonable government searches and seizures.
    Thus, the issue at the center of this appeal is whether the administrative penalty scheme is
    reasonable and constitutionally sound.
    “As the text of the Fourth Amendment indicates, the ultimate measure of the
    constitutionality of a government search is ‘reasonableness.’” Vernonia Sch. Dist. 47J v. Acton,
    
    515 U.S. 646
    , 652, 
    115 S. Ct. 2386
    , 2390 (1995). In a case like this, “where there was no clear
    practice, either approving or disapproving the type of search at issue, at the time the
    constitutional provision was enacted, whether a particular search meets the reasonableness
    standard is judged by balancing its intrusion on the individual’s Fourth Amendment interests
    against its promotion of legitimate governmental interests.” 
    Id. at 652–53,
    115 S. Ct. at 2390
    (quotations, citation, and footnote omitted). For the following reasons, the privacy intrusion
    imposed by breath alcohol searches under Idaho’s statutory scheme generally, and the manner in
    which Trooper Keys actually conducted Haynes’s traffic stop, DUI arrest, and breath alcohol
    test, is slight or quite limited. In the DUI context, the United States Supreme Court has
    determined that the privacy invasion effected by breath tests is minimal. 
    Skinner, 489 U.S. at 625
    , 109 S. Ct. at 1418. In so holding, the Skinner Court reasoned, “Unlike blood tests, breath
    tests do not require piercing the skin and may be conducted safely outside a hospital environment
    and with a minimum of inconvenience or embarrassment. Further, breath tests reveal [only] the
    level of alcohol in the [subject’s] bloodstream and nothing more.” 
    Id. In addition
    to the level of intrusion being slight or minimal, a driver like Haynes has a
    diminished expectation of privacy. At the time she was asked to submit to a breath test, Haynes
    had already been placed under arrest on probable cause of DUI. Such a driver has a diminished
    expectation of privacy because he or she is in custody. King, ___ U.S. ___, 133 S. Ct. at 1978.
    Further eroding Haynes’ expectation of privacy is the implied consent statute, which gives
    Haynes statutory notice that if reasonable grounds exist, “some reasonable police intrusion on
    [her] privacy is to be expected.” 
    Id. at 1969.
    For these reasons, the intrusion on Haynes’ personal
    privacy was slight or quite limited in this case.
    On the other side of the scale, a statutory scheme which encourages a driver reasonably
    suspected of DUI to submit to testing revealing the level of alcohol concentration in his or her
    20
    system promotes legitimate governmental interests. There is a compelling government interest in
    securing the safety of public roads, protecting lives, and deterring drivers from operating
    vehicles while intoxicated. Impaired drivers present an enormous threat to themselves and others,
    and the State has a strong interest in taking these drivers off the road. While drivers have a
    legitimate interest in avoiding the physical and privacy intrusions stemming from a breath
    alcohol test, this interest is far outweighed by the State’s public safety interest.
    In summary, the intrusion on Haynes was quite limited and her expectation of privacy
    was diminished. These privacy factors are far outweighed by strong and compelling government
    public safety interests. The breath test, if properly calibrated and administered, has proven
    minimally invasive, reliable, effective, and prompt. Furthermore, a breath test is narrowly
    targeted and reveals only the level of alcohol concentration in a subject’s system. Most
    importantly, a breath test can only be administered with a subject’s cooperation and only if there
    are reasonable grounds to believe that subject is driving or in physical control of a motor vehicle
    while under the influence. In this case, Haynes voluntarily consented to the test. The
    administrative penalty scheme does not vitiate this consent simply because it attaches a qualified
    evidentiary testing condition to the privilege of driving in Idaho, a condition which is
    constitutionally reasonable.
    The administrative penalty scheme enacted by the legislature was clearly intended to
    encourage drivers reasonably suspected of DUI to submit to evidentiary testing. Specifically, the
    administrative penalties for refusing a test are more severe than the administrative penalties for
    taking and failing a test. This incentive, on its own, is not constitutionally infirm. Furthermore,
    these penalties are civil or administrative in nature, separate and apart from the criminal
    consequences of a failed test. It is reasonable for the Legislature to encourage or incentivize this
    choice. Absent this type of framework, enforcement of DUI laws would be nearly impossible
    because a driver reasonably suspected of DUI would never rationally submit to an evidentiary
    test. Lastly, the ratios at issue here, specifically a one year license suspension for refusing a test
    as opposed to a 90 day suspension for a first failure, are not so out of proportion so as to render
    them unreasonable and unconstitutional.
    For all of the reasons outlined above, Idaho Code sections 18-8002 and 18-8002A do not
    attach an unconstitutional condition to driving and the privacy intrusions created by these
    statutory conditions are constitutionally justified and reasonable. Based on the totality of the
    21
    circumstances and the facts presented in this case, Haynes’s consent to the breath alcohol test
    was voluntary and not vitiated by the trooper advising her of the administrative penalties for
    refusing the test. Accordingly, I would affirm the district court’s conclusion that Hayne’s
    voluntary consent to the breath test provided an exception to the warrant requirement.
    22