D.N.M.: No voluntary consent to blood draw given by hallucinating man at AFB entrance

Defendant drove up to an entrance to Kirtland AFB one morning. When asked for his ID, he said he was being followed, he was filled with demons, his thoughts were being intercepted by others’ phone calls, and that he’d recently smoked meth. The guard at the gate had him stop. Others arrived and told him he had to consent to a blood draw. He was told there were criminal penalties associated with refusal, but that wasn’t true. The consent for the blood draw wasn’t voluntary and there were no exigent circumstances for it. United States v. Becenti, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61597 (D. N.M. April 24, 2017).*

Another Playpen warrant upheld. United States v. Taylor, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61417 (N.D. Ala. April 24, 2017).*

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