WI: McNeely retroactive and abrogates prior law, but GFE saves prior blood draws

McNeely applies retroactively in Wisconsin, but the state gets the benefit of a Davis-type good faith exception [without citing Davis]. The lead case is State v. Kennedy, 2014 WI 132, 2014 Wisc. LEXIS 954 (December 26, 2014), where a car ran down a pedestrian and dragged the victim, and the driver was at the scene when the officers talked to him. Defendant was .216 when tested two hours after the accident. Eight days after Kennedy’s conviction was affirmed by the court of appeals, McNeely was decided, and it effectively abrogated Wisconsin law on the blood test issue. The state couldn’t even argue that exigent circumstances existed on the totality. As for good faith, prior law was clear and the police committed no misconduct in relying on it. Therefore, while McNeely is retroactive and dissipation of alcohol alone isn’t enough for exigency, this blood test is not suppressed.

Also decided the same day were State v. Foster, 2014 WI 131, 2014 Wisc. LEXIS 952 (December 26, 2014) (a sixth offense DUI where the lack of a warrant issue was raised as an IAC claim before McNeely was decided; GFE applied) and State v. Tullberg, 2014 WI 134, 2014 Wisc. LEXIS 951 (December 26, 2014) (exigent circumstances found on the totality; death of passenger in single vehicle accident).

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