TN: Implied consent law doesn’t violate right to a warrant under religious liberty

Defendant’s sovereign citizen claim the state DUI implied consent violated his religious liberty without a warrant and right to travel is rejected. How does religion figure into it? State v. Simmons, 2018 Tenn. App. LEXIS 755 (Dec. 21, 2018).*

Sovereign citizen cases are interesting to see the arguments they’ve come up with that have no basis in law or fact. In this case, the religious liberty isn’t explained: is it the right not to be tested or the right to drive under the influence? My favorite is this video of a patient California police supervisor listening to a woman passenger in a car, after the driver was arrested, explaining to him that the 1787 Articles of Confederation (which were replaced by the Constitution in 1789 and added to by the Bill of Rights in 1791) makes everyone immune from arrest for anything.

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