SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-0731-00T5
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
MARK CLEVERLEY,
Defendant-Appellant.
Submitted January 30, 2002 - Decided
February 27, 2002
Before Judges Conley, A. A. Rodríguez and
Lisa.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Ocean County, 43-2000.
Peter M. O'Mara, attorney for appellant.
Thomas F. Kelaher, Ocean County Prosecutor,
attorney for respondent (Thomas Cannavo,
Assistant Prosecutor, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
LISA, J.A.D.
We are called upon to determine in this case whether a
revision in the standard protocols for use by State Police
coordinators in testing breathalyzers affects the admissibility in
evidence in driving while intoxicated (DWI) prosecutions of the
Breath Test Inspectors' Inspection Certification (BTIIC) to
establish that the breathalyzer was in proper working order.
Defendant contends the BTIIC's should not have been admitted in his
trial because the State failed to present evidence to establish the
reliability of the revised protocol, which was utilized by the
coordinator in this case. We disagree and affirm defendant's
conviction of a per se violation of N.J.S.A. 39:4-50. We also
affirm defendant's conviction on the alternate ground of violating
N.J.S.A. 39:4-50 without regard to the breathalyzer reading.
At 11:26 p.m. on October 1, 1999, a police officer, standing
outside his vehicle, observed defendant driving without his
headlamps on. He gestured to defendant to turn on his lights but
to no avail. He got into his vehicle, followed defendant a short
distance, and pulled him over uneventfully. Defendant began to
exit his vehicle twice without authorization from the officer, who
instructed him each time to remain in the vehicle until directed
otherwise. After the officer completed his call-in of the stop, he
approached defendant and instructed him to exit his vehicle. The
officer immediately detected a strong odor of alcohol on
defendant's breath. The officer instructed defendant to walk to
the rear of his van. As he did so, the officer observed the
defendant was swaying as he walked. Suspecting defendant of being
intoxicated, the officer directed him to perform the leg raising
test. The area of the roadway was level and the weather was clear.
The officer first demonstrated the test. Defendant was unable to
successfully perform it, touching his raised foot to the ground
four times and touching his van for balance. Defendant was
slurring his speech. The officer informed defendant he believed he
was intoxicated and he was under arrest. Defendant became
argumentative and resistant. The initial officer and an assisting
officer obtained physical control of defendant, handcuffed him and
transported him to the station.
Defendant voluntarily submitted to a breathalyzer test, which
resulted in two readings of .17% blood alcohol content (BAC). At
trial, the parties stipulated that the breathalyzer operator was
properly qualified and that he administered the breathalyzer test
properly. Defendant objected to the admissibility of the before
and after BTIIC's, reflecting tests performed on August 5, 1999 and
October 5, 1999 on the breathalyzer used on defendant. The basis
of the objection was that in testing the breathalyzer, the
coordinator did not follow the protocol approved by our Supreme
Court in State v. Garthe,
145 N.J. 1 (1996), but instead followed
a revised protocol, effective October 1, 1997, and that the State
failed to produce evidence to establish the reliability of the
revised protocol.
The municipal court judge admitted the BTIIC's over
defendant's objection and found him guilty of a per se violation of
N.J.S.A. 39:4-50(a) because the breathalyzer readings established
he operated a vehicle with a BAC of .10% or more. The judge
alternatively found the evidence established defendant's guilt for
operating his vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating
liquor based upon the credible testimony by the arresting officer
of his observations of defendant, without regard to the
breathalyzer evidence. Defendant was sentenced as a second
offender to pay a $500 fine and all other mandatory monetary
assessments, two year loss of driving privileges, thirty days of
community service and forty-eight hours in the Intoxicated Driver
Resource Centers program.
On appeal to the Law Division, after a trial de novo, the Law
Division judge also rejected defendant's arguments that the BTIIC's
were inadmissible and again found defendant guilty of a per se
violation of N.J.S.A. 39:4-50(a) and also, alternatively, of
driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquors. The
same sentence was reimposed.
A breathalyzer test result is admissible in a DWI prosecution
only if it is first established that "the breathalyzer instrument
is in proper working order, is administered by a qualified operator
and is used in accordance with accepted procedures." Romano v.
Kimmelman,
96 N.J. 66, 82 (1984). The State bears the
responsibility for establishing all conditions of admissibility,
id. at 91, by clear and convincing proof. Id. at 90. Defendant
challenges only the first condition of admissibility. That
condition is typically satisfied by admission of the BTIIC as a
business record, N.J.R.E. 803(c)(6), or as a record, report or
finding by a public official, N.J.R.E. 803(c)(8), properly
authenticated, N.J.R.E. 901, and on proper advance notice to the
defendant of intent to offer it, N.J.R.E. 807. State v. McGeary,
129 N.J. Super. 219, 226-28 (App. Div. 1974).See footnote 11
Our Supreme Court has determined that the protocols
established by the State for testing breathalyzers must be designed
to ensure the machine will produce reliable results, State v.
Garthe, supra, 145 N.J. at 9, but that the adoption of those
protocols is more akin to a State Police intra-agency determination
than rulemaking. Id. at 7. Therefore, adoption or modification of
the protocols need not comply with the Administrative Procedure
Act. N.J.S.A. 52:14B-1 to -24. In Garthe, the Court appended to
its opinion a copy of the then-existing protocols, State v. Garthe,
supra, 145 N.J. at 15-23 (Appendix B), and determined that they
"meet the [State v. Matulewicz,
101 N.J. 27 (1985)] standards for
admissibility in terms of 'objectivity . . . regularity . . .
routine quality,' and absence of any 'motive to single out a
specific analysis for the purpose of rendering an untrustworthy
report.'" Id. at 13, (quoting State v. Matulewicz, 101 N.J. at
30). Because there was no evidence presented to establish that the
protocols are not scientifically reliable, BTIIC's prepared
pursuant to them would be admissible. Id. at 13-14. The Court
noted "there is nothing in the record that questions the
'circumstantial probability of [the BTIIC's] trustworthiness.'"
Id. at 12, (quoting State v. Matulewicz, supra, 101 N.J. at 29-30).
The Court considered it "fair to take judicial notice of the case
law that has described the substance of those test procedures that
lend objective reliability to the BTIIC's." Ibid.
After Garthe was decided, the Superintendent of State Police
amended the protocols contained in the Garthe appendix, effective
October 1, 1997. The change implicated here involves the use of an
atomizer rather than the coordinator's breath in testing the
breathalyzer. The previous protocols provided:
To insure proper temperature of the simulator
solution vapor sample (34 degrees Celsius,
plus or minus 0.2 degrees Celsius), atomizers
will not be used.
At each location, prior to performing the
first simulated breath test, breath will be
exhaled in a continuous, moderate flow through
the simulator for approximately five seconds
to eliminate head space air. Then the
instrument breath tube will be attached to the
simulator.
. . . .
A simulator solution vapor sample will be
introduced into the instrument by exhaling
breath in a continuous, moderate flow for
approximately ten seconds.
[Id. at 19 (Appendix B).]
At the trial in this case, defendant produced the amended
protocols, which contain the following modifications to the above
provisions:
At each location, prior to performing the
first simulated breath test, the atomizer will
be attached to the simulator input tube. Five
compressions of the atomizer will be
introduced to the simulator to eliminate head
space air. Then the instrument breath tube
will be attached to the simulator output port.
. . . .
A simulator solution vapor sample will be
introduced into the instrument by five (5)
compressions of the atomizer.
Defendant first contends that because the protocols "approved"
by the Court in Garthe have been modified, the State must produce
evidence in the trial of his case to establish the reliability of
the modified procedure. We disagree. Garthe does not stand for
the proposition that the protocols in existence at that time were
immutable. Indeed, because the court determined that the protocols
do not constitute rulemaking, but are an internal action of the
State Police, their periodic modification, without public notice
and comment, is unremarkable.
Defendant's remaining arguments are twofold. He contends he
was wrongfully denied discovery regarding experiments conducted by
the State Police in developing the modification. He further
contends the expert testimony he produced at trial sufficiently
undermines the purported reliability of the modified procedure to
defeat the State's burden of establishing the good working order of
the breathalyzer, tested under that procedure, by clear and
convincing proof.
Our analysis of both arguments begins with the reasons
expressed by the State Police for revising the protocols. The
endnotes to the revision state:
This Standard Procedure, which is the
Standard Procedure reviewed and accepted by
the New Jersey Supreme Court in its decision
in State v. Garthe,
145 N.J. 1 (1996),
rehearing den. ____ N.J. ____ (1996), and
reflected in Appendix B of that decision, Id.
at 15-23, is being revised to reflect changes
deemed appropriate by the Chief Forensic
Scientist of the Division of State Police, and
which are consistent with appropriate and
accepted scientific procedures.
The endnotes further state:
The specific changes in the standard
procedure for the use of 0.10 Percent Breath
Alcohol Simulator Solution as traceable
control testing standard for a simulated
breath test are:
I. Instead of a Breath Test Coordinator
blowing air into the breath test instrument
through a Simulator, a rubber bulb pump
(referenced in the Standard Procedure as an
"atomizer") will be used to introduce
approximately 200ml - 300ml of air through a
Simulator into the breath test instrument
being inspected and tested. This reduces the
depletion of alcohol per simulated breath test
by a factor of 4 to 6 times. Earlier concerns
about the need to either use breath or preheat
the air passed into the Simulator were
adequately addressed in "Evaluation of
Commercial Breath-Alcohol Simulators Further
Studies," K.M. Dubowski and N.A. Essary,
Journal of Analytical Toxicology, 15 (1991)
272. An earlier paper by Dr. Dubowski,
"Breath-Alcohol Simulators: Scientific Basis
and Actual Performance," K.M. Dubowski,
Journal of Analytical Toxicology, 3 (1979)
177, provides a theoretical basis and an
experimental verification of the relationship
of air volume, number of tests, and depletion
of Breath Alcohol Simulator Solution as a
testing standard.
II. The number of times a Breath Test
Coordinator will use a particular bottle of
0.10 Percent Breath Test Simulator Solution is
reduced from 50 to 30. This will reduce
depletion by 40%.
III. The combination of reduced volume per
simulated breath test and reduced number of
simulated breath tests reduces the depletion
during the use of the 0.10 Percent Breath Test
Simulator Solution to under 1%, thus producing
a maximum change from this source of 0.001%
BAC.
It is apparent that the purpose of these changes was to reduce
the potential depletion of the simulator solution used in testing
breathalyzers, thereby enhancing the accuracy and reliability of
the test. A fair reading of these comments reveals that depletion
will be reduced in two ways: by controlling and limiting the
volume of air used in each test, by using five compressions of an
atomizer, rather than utilizing a "moderate" exhale of human breath
for an approximate number of seconds, and by reducing from fifty to
thirty the maximum number of tests for which each container of
simulator solution may be used.
The latter provision is consistent with concerns expressed in
State v. Slinger,
281 N.J. Super. 538 (App. Div. 1995). Defendant
does not challenge this. The former provision, use of the
atomizer, is based on scientific studies of Dr. Dubowski, who has
been recognized by our courts as "a leading authority on the
scientific reliability of the breathalyzer." State v. Downie,
117 N.J. 450, 461, cert. denied,
498 U.S. 819, 1
115 S. Ct. 63,
112 L.
Ed.2d 38 (1990) . It is this provision that defendant challenges.
Defendant produced Dr. Richard Saferstein, former chief
forensic scientist for the New Jersey State Police. Dr. Saferstein
emphasized that he takes no exception to the use of an atomizer,
and acknowledged that the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration has adopted a protocol using a similar device, an
air pump, in place of human breath. He expressed the concern,
however, that because the vapor generated by the simulator solution
is temperature-dependent, the use of room temperature air through
an atomizer instead of human breath could affect the accuracy of
the breathalyzer test reading. He explained that the vapor is
generated by heating the simulator solution to thirty-four degrees
Celsius, which is approximately equal to the temperature of human
breath, ninety-eight degrees Fahrenheit. Use of room temperature
air, approximately seventy-two degrees Fahrenheit, could have the
effect of reducing the alcohol content in the vapor entering the
breathalyzer, which could then result in a false reading of the
instrument within the acceptable range. He also questioned whether
five compressions of the atomizer is sufficient to achieve
temperature equilibrium.
Dr. Safferstein opined that in the absence of in-house testing
by the State Police to validate the reliability of test results
utilizing the atomizer, the use of the atomizer is scientifically
unreliable. He produced no results of any experiments performed by
him or anyone else nor any scientific publications that discredit
the use of the atomizer. He acknowledged that both the
manufacturer of the breathalyzer and simulator devices, Draeger
Safety, Inc. and Guth Laboratories, have issued written approvals
of the use of the atomizer in lieu of human breath.
Finally, Dr. Saferstein acknowledged that the order of
magnitude of the breathalyzer reading deviation he might expect
under the new procedure would be in the .01 to .015 range. He thus
conceded that "certainly the error that I'm talking about would not
have been anywhere near the magnitude that would have caused
[defendant's .17] reading to be less than .10 percent." Yet he
insists the asserted error could result in a false "acceptable"
reading in the test. If, for example, .08 was actually entering
the machine, and the machine recorded a reading of .09 (which is
within the acceptable range of .09 to .105), "on the surface it
would look like everything was all right but in fact the instrument
would be reading slightly high because the true reading should have
been .08." Thus, he concludes, that machine should not have passed
the test and should not have been certified to be in good working
order.
The coordinator who tested the breathalyzer used in this case
testified that he has performed thousands of tests under the old
protocols (using his breath) and thousands more under the new
protocols (using the atomizer). He has observed no difference
"with the testing with the new procedure and the old one, all the
results have been within the acceptable tolerance and there has
been no changes in actual readings."
The coordinator also testified that he and other coordinators
had gone to the State Police laboratory in West Trenton to conduct
a "volume check" in the use of the atomizer. Presumably this was
done in conjunction with the issuance of the revised protocols. He
squeezed the atomizer five times, forcing air into a measuring
device. He performed this test four times and "pumped 250 cc's on
[all] four occasions." This, of course, is consistent with the
endnote goal "to introduce approximately 200ml - 300ml of air
through a Simulator into the breath test instrument being inspected
and tested." The coordinator was not aware whether the results of
this procedure were recorded.
Prior to trial, defendant made a discovery motion seeking the
results of any tests or experiments conducted by the State Police
in conjunction with the new protocols. The municipal prosecutor
took the position that he was unaware of any such materials and
thus could not produce them. The municipal judge agreed, declined
to issue a discovery order, and suggested that defendant subpoena
any such records, if they exist. Defendant apparently did not do
so, asserting, instead, that the State is required to produce
evidence of in-house testing establishing the reliability of the
new procedure to meet its burden of proof on the first Romano
prong.
We are satisfied from our review of the record that the State
has met its burden. "Absent any such evidence that the test
protocols established by the Division and State are not
scientifically reliable to establish that breathalyzer machines are
in proper operating order," BTIIC's shall be admissible in DWI
trials. State v. Garthe, supra, 145 N.J. at 13-14. Dr.
Saferstein's testimony was patently insufficient to undermine the
reliability of the revised testing procedure and amounted to no
more than speculation. The concerns he raised, the temperature
differential and air volume, were specifically addressed in the
endnotes, in reliance on published studies by Dr. Dubowski. The
new procedure accords with manufacturer recommendations, see id. at
7, and is generally consistent with a procedure adopted by the
National Highway Traffic Administration. The empirical results are
compelling. If the suspected error hypothesized by Dr. Saferstein
actually existed, surely readings outside the acceptable range
would have occurred in at least some of the thousands of tests
performed with the atomizer.
We therefore conclude that the BTIIC's were properly admitted
into evidence, and defendant's per se violation was established
with proper evidence.
We are also satisfied that the record contains substantial
credible evidence to support the finding by the Law Division judge
that defendant was driving while under the influence of
intoxicating liquors, without regard to the breathalyzer reading.
State v. Locurto,
157 N.J. 463, 470-71 (1999); State v. Johnson,
42 N.J. 146, 161-62 (1964). Defendant's driving at night without his
headlamps on and the observations of the officer were sufficient to
establish that defendant "imbibed to the extent that his physical
coordination or mental faculties [were] deleteriously affected."
Id. at 165.
Affirmed.
Footnote: 1 1 The corresponding evidence rules cited in McGeary are N.J. Evid. R. 63(13), 63(15), 67 and 64.