OR: Four-hour delay in getting BAC SW supported exigency

It would take about four hours to get a BAC search warrant, and the totality of circumstances supported a warrantless blood draw before the BAC dissipated too much more. State v. Sanchez, 344 Or. App. 85 (Oct. 8, 2025):

Taking into account the totality of the circumstances, then, the trial court correctly concluded that the state met its burden of establishing that exigent circumstances justified forgoing the warrant process to preserve BAC evidence that was dissipating over time. The trial court found that the warrant process would have taken about three hours. Even assuming that an officer was available to start the warrant process while another officer transported defendant to the hospital, obtaining a warrant would have delayed defendant’s blood draw by over two hours, resulting in a total delay of over four hours from the time that defendant was driving, a potentially significant difference. Thus, the trial court correctly concluded that there were exigent circumstances that justified obtaining the warrantless blood draw.

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