Go | New | Find | Notify | Tools | Reply |
Member |
Surprise court ruling threatens to nullify results of DUI tests By PAUL QUINLAN paul.quinlan@heraldtribune.com VENICE -- In a decision that could throw out the use of alcohol-breath test results in Sarasota County drunken-driving cases, a panel of judges ruled that defendants are entitled to inspect the source code of the breath-testing machine's software, though the manufacturer has refused to divulge it. Three Sarasota County judges surprised prosecutors Wednesday when they sided with Venice defense attorney Robert Harrison by giving the state 15 days to produce the machine's source code for the defense. The catch: the Kentucky-based manufacturer, CMI Inc., has refused to turn over the code -- the electronic instructions that drive the machine -- calling it a trade secret. Prosecutors, who are considering an appeal, say the company's refusal leaves their hands tied in the 157 DUI cases for which the order now applies and whose attorneys received copies of the Wednesday motion. The order, prosecutors say, threatens to nullify breath test results from the Intoxilyzer 5000, which police statewide use to measure whether a driver's blood-alcohol content exceeds the .08 legal limit. Those results can often be one of the most damning pieces of evidence introduced in a DUI case. "We're disappointed with the result. It seems to be an effective suppression of all the breath tests," said assistant state attorney Jason Miller, who fought the motion. "We don't have the information that the court has ordered us to get. We can't get the information that the court has ordered us to get. If we did, we would comply with the judge immediately." Attorneys close to the case expect the state's attorney to appeal. In the meantime, police will continue to the use the test despite the deadlock over source code. The decision also reverberated across the Internet on forums and techie Web sites, whose users hailed it as an important step forward in the legal crusade to open up the inner workings of other government computers, such as voting machines. By 8 a.m. Thursday, 12 hours after posting a link to the court order, a local blog, veniceflorida.com, logged a record 13,000 hits. The ruling isn't the first of its kind in Florida. Last November, judges in Seminole and Orange counties decided to exclude Intoxilyzer 5000 breath-test results from hundreds of cases. But judges in two other Florida counties have ruled otherwise, upholding prosecutors' arguments that they can't turn over something they do not possess and that the code itself is immaterial to the DUI cases. CMI, the manufacturer, has "been consistent in defense of their trade secret," said assistant state attorney Miller. "We're really unable to provide a secret of theirs." The order would allow the company to turn over the machine's source code under a protective order that would keep the information from the public record. CMI refused to comment Thursday. In the court's 11-page order, the judges cite a Florida law that requires that someone who is tested by a machine be granted "full information" about the test upon request. The ruling represented a broader interpretation of a phrase that has, in the past, applied primarily to manuals and electronic schematics. "Full information should include the software that runs the instrument," reads the order, signed by county judges David Denkin, Kimberly Bonner and Judy Goldman. "Unless the defense can see how the breathalyzer works and verify it is an approved machine, it remains .... nothing more than a 'mystical machine' used to establish an accused's guilt." The judges ruled that a look at the source code was material to the case, based on photographic evidence that showed visible differences in the arrangement and number of erasable and programmable memory chips inside Intoxylizers now in use throughout Sarasota County. An expert witness testified that without the source code, he would be unable to determine whether any changes or modifications had occurred. "It may be something innocuous," Harrison said. "It may be something nefarious." Other nuances within the code, such as how and when the machine rounds numbers, could provide fodder for the defense of accused drunken drivers who test on or near the legal limit. "When you do a case-by-case analysis, there will be certain cases where the loss of a breath test isn't a big deal," Harrison said. "There's other cases, where, if you take out the breath test, they've got nothing." Prosecutors have 15 days to appeal the ruling or produce the machine's source code. Attorneys close to the case expect an appeal, which could go before 12th District Circuit Judges within the county or to the state's 2nd District Court of Appeal in Lakeland. It would have little direct effect on cases outside of Sarasota County, though a Manatee County judge joined the three Sarasota judges in hearing the arguments. http://www.heraldtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20051104/NEWS/51 1040558/-1/GOOGLE01&Page=2 | ||
|
Powered by Social Strata |
Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |
© TDCAA, 2001. All Rights Reserved.