2019 IL App (2d) 180758
No. 2-18-0758
Opinion filed August 13, 2019
______________________________________________________________________________
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________
THE CITY OF McHENRY, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
) of McHenry County.
Plaintiff-Appellant, )
)
v. ) No. 17-DT-331
)
STUART A. KLEVEN, ) Honorable
) Joel D. Berg,
Defendant-Appellee. ) Judge, Presiding.
_____________________________________________________________________________
JUSTICE JORGENSEN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justices McLaren and Burke concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Defendant, Stuart A. Kleven, was charged with one count each of driving with a breath-
alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more (625 ILCS 5/11-501(a)(1) (West 2016)) and driving under
the influence of alcohol (id. § 11-501(a)(2)). He moved to suppress the result of the breath test
that he took at the police station. The trial court granted his motion. The City of McHenry,
which the McHenry County State’s Attorney authorized to prosecute the case (see id. § 16-102),
appeals. We reverse and remand.
¶2 Defendant’s motion relied on the following Illinois Administrative Code provision:
“(a) Prior to obtaining a breath analysis reading from a subject, the [operator] ***
shall continuously observe the subject for at least 20 minutes.
2019 IL App (2d) 180758
(1) During the 20 minute observation period the subject shall be deprived
of alcohol and foreign substances and shall not have vomited.
(2) If the subject vomits during the observation (deprivation) period, the
process shall be started over by having the individual rinse the oral cavity with
water.
(3) If the individual continues to vomit, alternative testing shall be
considered.” 20 Ill. Adm. Code 1286.310(a) (2004).
¶3 The motion to suppress alleged as follows. On May 17, 2017, police officers stopped
defendant’s vehicle and arrested him. In the police station’s booking room, an officer tested his
breath-alcohol concentration. However, during the 20-minute observation period, the officer
twice left the room. In these absences, defendant could have vomited or placed some substance
into his mouth. Because the officer had not conducted the test as required, the result should be
suppressed.
¶4 In response, plaintiff alleged as follows. Defendant was taken to the booking room by
Officer Matthew Schmitt. The room had equipment that recorded both images and sound.
According to the video of defendant’s detention, he was tested at 12:30:36 a.m. Thus, the
mandatory 20-minute observation period began at 12:10:36. During this period, the video
depicted Schmitt leaving the room twice, to go to his squad car in the sally port. The first trip
lasted from 12:23:48 until 12:26:21. At 12:26:26, Schmitt asked defendant whether he had
vomited, burped, or eaten anything in the past half hour; defendant responded, “no.” Schmitt’s
second absence lasted from 12:28:27 though 12:28:50. During this period, defendant sat with his
head up in full view of the camera. Plaintiff reasoned that, because the purpose of the rule
requiring a 20-minute observation period is to ensure that a person to be tested has not belched,
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vomited, smoked, or eaten anything in the period preceding the test, and because the video
showed that defendant had done none of these things between 12:10:36 and 12:30:36, Schmitt
had substantially complied with the 20-minute rule even though he had not directly observed
defendant continuously the whole time.
¶5 The trial court held a hearing on defendant’s motion. Defendant introduced the video
into evidence, and it was played in court. (We shall recount the video as necessary when we
explain our decision.) Defendant put on no further evidence.
¶6 Plaintiff moved for a directed finding, arguing that defendant had failed to present a
prima facie case that Schmitt had not substantially complied with the 20-minute rule. According
to plaintiff, the video showed that, during both of Schmitt’s absences, defendant had been in full
view of the camera and subject to the sound recording and had not belched, vomited, eaten, or
done anything else to call the breath-test result into question. Moreover, upon returning from his
first absence, Schmitt had asked defendant whether he had belched, vomited, or eaten in the past
half hour, and defendant had said no. Defendant contended that Schmitt had not observed him
continuously for 20 minutes and that the video could not substitute for such observation.
¶7 The trial court denied plaintiff’s motion. The court noted that, under People v. Ebert, 401
Ill. App. 3d 958, 960 (2010), the 20-minute rule requires only substantial, not strict, compliance.
Nevertheless, the court reasoned, Schmitt’s absences, for more than two minutes and then for
half a minute, failed even this standard. If asking a detainee whether he has belched, vomited, or
eaten during the 20-minute observation period and receiving the answer “no” could constitute
substantial compliance, the requirement of actually observing the detainee would be negated.
Moreover, relying on the self-report of a person who is presumably impaired is inherently
dubious. The court explained, “I honestly *** can’t even tell you sitting here—and I’m stone
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sober right now for the record—I can’t tell you whether I’ve belched or anything within the last
half hour.”
¶8 The trial court noted next that, although Ebert found substantial compliance based on the
defendant’s testimony that he had not done any disqualifying act during the observation period,
he had made this statement in court under oath, while he was presumably sober. Also, People v.
Chiaravalle, 2014 IL App (4th) 140445, ¶ 9, found substantial compliance even though the
officer had his back turned to the defendant “ ‘for minutes at a time.’ ” The trial court noted that
Chiaravalle held that mere hearing is acceptable observation, so that “theoretically, Ray Charles
could serve as the observer. How Ray Charles could ever tell us that the person did not put
something in their mouth is beyond me.” Noting that Chiaravalle was binding, the trial court
distinguished it; Schmitt could neither see nor hear defendant during his absences. In neither
Ebert nor Chiaravalle had the officer left the room altogether; Schmitt had done so twice.
¶9 Plaintiff called Schmitt. He testified as follows. The booking room had “a camera on the
back wall facing the entire booking room that [was] audio and visually recorded [sic].” The
recording was sometimes “jumpy with the audio,” which did not “exactly match the movement
of the video,” but nothing suggested that there were any jumps in the video.
¶ 10 Schmitt testified that, in the booking room, he sat on a stool at a desk with a booking
computer, and defendant sat on a stool in front of him and to his right. The room was about 10
feet by 15 feet, and the Breathalyzer was located 1 to 2 feet from defendant. Schmitt began the
20-minute observation period. While Schmitt was in the room, he was either working on the
computer or at the Breathalyzer. While sitting at the computer desk, Schmitt could see and hear
defendant. While working on the Breathalyzer, Schmitt had his back turned to defendant, but he
could hear him.
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¶ 11 Schmitt testified that, twice during the 20-minute observation period, he exited the room
and went to the sally port. Before his first departure, he did not see or hear defendant eat, drink,
vomit, or smoke. When Schmitt returned to the booking room, defendant was still sitting on the
stool. Schmitt noticed nothing about defendant that indicated that he vomited, ate, or drank
during Schmitt’s absence. Schmitt asked defendant whether he had vomited, burped, or eaten in
the preceding half hour; defendant said no.
¶ 12 Schmitt testified that, between returning the first time and leaving the second time, he
observed defendant continuously, although his back was turned a couple of times while he
worked on the Breathalyzer. During this period, Schmitt did not see or hear defendant vomit,
eat, or drink. On returning the second time, he saw that defendant was still sitting on the stool.
Nothing indicated that he vomited, smoked, ate, or drank during Schmitt’s absence.
¶ 13 Plaintiff rested. The court granted defendant’s motion, explaining as follows. Schmitt
had left the booking room twice, once for 2½ minutes and once for half a minute. Although only
substantial compliance was required, “leaving the room not once but twice for in total over three
minutes is nobody’s definition of substantial compliance.” The court continued:
“[T]he problem that we have is we are relying on self-reporting for someone who
was never told to pay attention to whether they burped, hiccuped [sic], or vomited *** or
did anything else, and I’m relying on a video that is not a straight on video of the guy’s
face. It’s a video from the top looking down. You can’t even see his mouth the vast
majority of the time. [So], I can’t even allow the video to substitute for the 20-minute
observation period because I can’t clearly see what’s happening with his mouth while the
officer is gone from the room.
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[The] 20-minute observation period means an officer, under all of the existing
case law, has to at least be in the room for the 20 minutes. That wasn’t done here. And
so the foundation has not been laid.”
¶ 14 In an offer of proof, Schmitt testified that the result of defendant’s breath test was 0.168,
above the legal limit. After the court granted defendant’s motion and barred the introduction of
the breath-test result, plaintiff timely appealed.
¶ 15 On appeal, plaintiff contends that the court erred in holding that Schmitt had not
substantially complied with the 20-minute-observation rule. Plaintiff acknowledges that the
video showed that Schmitt left the booking room twice and thus defendant was out of his sight
and hearing for a total of more than 2 of the 20 minutes. Plaintiff argues, however, that case law
establishes that Schmitt need not have had defendant under his direct observation for the entire
20-minute period and that the video provided satisfactory evidence that, in Schmitt’s absence,
defendant did not vomit or eat or drink anything. Plaintiff reasons that, because it demonstrated
that the purposes of the 20-minute rule were fulfilled, the breath-test result was not rendered
unreliable by any irregularities that the rule was intended to prevent. Therefore, plaintiff
concludes, it laid a sufficient foundation for the admission of the result of the breath test.
¶ 16 Defendant has not filed an appellee’s brief, but we may decide the merits of this appeal.
See First Capitol Mortgage Corp. v. Talandis Construction Corp., 63 Ill. 2d 128, 133 (1976).
¶ 17 Whether plaintiff laid a sufficient foundation for the breath-test result is a question of
law, which we review de novo. Ebert, 401 Ill. App. 3d at 960-61. The regulation at issue here
requires substantial, not strict, compliance. Id.
¶ 18 We turn to the case law applying the 20-minute rule. In People v. Bergman, 253 Ill. App.
3d 369 (1993), the officer twice left the room, for one minute or less each time, and moved
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around the room at other times. However, he kept the defendant within his hearing and his line
of sight the whole time. The appellate court agreed with the trial court that the officer had
substantially complied with the rule. Id. at 374. The court noted that in In re Summary
Suspension of Driver’s License of Ramos, 155 Ill. App. 3d 374, 376 (1987), the court held that
the officer substantially complied with the rule even though he had spent part of the period
working on the breath machine; the officer had kept the defendant within his peripheral vision
and had observed him directly from time to time. Bergman, 253 Ill. App. 3d at 373-74.
¶ 19 The Bergman court explained that “[t]he purpose of the 20-minute observation period is
to ensure that the defendant does not regurgitate, vomit, smoke, or ingest anything which will
render the breathalyzer test results unreliable.” Id. at 374. The officer had substantially
complied with the rule, because he had kept the defendant under observation sufficiently to know
that he had not done any of the problematic acts. Id. at 374-75.
¶ 20 In Ebert, the officer testified that, after an initial test that was discontinued because the
machine detected “ ‘mouth alcohol,’ ” the defendant rinsed his mouth and waited to retake the
test. Ebert, 401 Ill. App. 3d at 960. During the intervening period, the officer observed the
defendant. The officer testified that he did not see the defendant put anything into his mouth,
regurgitate, or vomit but that it was possible that the defendant belched. He did not recall
whether the defendant used the restroom, but he testified that when a defendant did so the door
was usually kept open, in order that he could still be observed. The defendant testified that
during the observation period he did not put anything into his mouth, regurgitate, vomit, or
belch. He also testified that he used the restroom and was not accompanied there. Id. The trial
court granted the defendant’s motion in limine to suppress the result of the second breath test.
Id. at 959-60.
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¶ 21 This court reversed and remanded. We explained that the purpose of the 20-minute rule
and the other regulations is to ensure that a breath test is conducted “in a manner that produces
reliable results.” Id. at 965. Thus, to ascertain whether there has been substantial compliance
with the 20-minute rule, a court must “determine whether *** the deviation compromised the
integrity of the testing process.” Id. We concluded that the answer in that case was no, because,
whatever the imperfections in the officer’s observation of the defendant, the defendant’s own
testimony established that he had done nothing to impair the test’s accuracy. Id. Thus, the
evidence at the hearing on the defendant’s motion in limine established that “the breath test result
was no less reliable than it would have been if [the officer] had observed [the] defendant not
doing those things.” Id.
¶ 22 In Chiaravalle, the officer testified that he initially instructed the defendant not to do
anything that could bring alcohol to his mouth, such as vomiting. The officer was with the
defendant for the whole 20-minute observation period but spent much of the time with his back
to him. Chiaravalle, 2014 IL App (4th) 140445, ¶¶ 7, 28. The trial court granted the defendant’s
motion in limine to exclude the result of the breath test, but the appellate court reversed. Id.
¶¶ 1-2.
¶ 23 The court explained that the requirement that the officer “ ‘continuously observe the
subject’ ” does not imply a requirement of “continuous visual observation,” as there are other
ways to monitor the defendant to ensure that he does not compromise the test. (Emphasis
omitted.) Id. ¶¶ 28-30; see 20 Ill. Adm. Code 1286.310(a) (2004). The court cautioned that the
officer “must still be in close enough proximity to use his other senses to detect whether the
defendant has ingested a foreign substance or vomited.” Chiaravalle, 2014 IL App (4th)
140445, ¶ 34.
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¶ 24 The court noted that, although the defendant was out of the officer’s line of sight for
much of the time, the officer had told the defendant not to bring alcohol to his mouth, belch, or
vomit; he had turned around from time to time to look at the defendant; and he had heard or seen
no evidence of vomiting or regurgitation. Moreover, after spending the first 10 minutes of the
observation period on his paperwork, the officer conversed with the defendant the rest of the
time. Id. ¶ 35. Thus, he had substantially complied with the 20-minute rule. Id. ¶ 36.
¶ 25 We return to the present case. Schmitt was completely absent from the booking room for
more than two minutes. During his absences, he could not see, hear, or otherwise observe
defendant. Although the audiovisual equipment recorded defendant during these absences,
Schmitt did not view or listen to any of the recording before he tested defendant’s breath. Thus,
it strains common usage to conclude that, during the 20-minute observation period, Schmitt
“continuously observe[d]” defendant. 20 Ill. Adm. Code 1286.310(a) (2004). Although
substantial compliance does not require uninterrupted visual observation, we cannot stretch the
rule’s language to cover the situation here. For more than two minutes, Schmitt failed to observe
defendant at all—visually, aurally, or otherwise. Schmitt was in the sally port, out of range of
defendant. Thus, to paraphrase the trial court, Schmitt did not meet even the “Ray Charles”
standard of Chiaravalle. Moreover, his complete inability to observe defendant in any way, for a
significant period, distinguishes this case from Bergman and Ramos.
¶ 26 Were we to rely solely on Schmitt’s conduct, we could not find that he substantially
complied with the 20-minute rule. However, under Ebert, a court may still find substantial
compliance even if an officer completely failed to observe the defendant for a significant period.
This depends on the existence of evidence that compensates for the officer’s inability to say
whether, in a given period, the defendant did something that the regulation recognizes as inimical
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to reliance on the breath-test result. In Ebert, such evidence came in the form of the defendant’s
testimony that, during the 20-minute observation period, he did not put anything into his mouth,
regurgitate, vomit, or belch. Ebert, 401 Ill. App. 3d at 960. Based on this evidence, we held that
the officer’s failure to observe the defendant for part of the 20-minute period was not crucial. 1
¶ 27 Although in Ebert we stated that the officer had substantially complied with the rule, it
would have been more precise to say that the lack of substantial compliance was harmless,
because evidence showed that the officer’s failure to keep the defendant under continuous
observation did not render the test result unreliable. We did not emphasize the degree of the
officer’s fidelity to the regulation’s requirements, but instead considered whether his deviation
affected “the integrity of the testing process.” Id. at 965. Clearly, we spoke not to compliance
but to prejudice. We held that the failure to adhere to the regulation did not affect the integrity of
1
We did not explicitly state that the officer had failed for part of the 20-minute period to
observe the defendant. However, in granting the defendant’s motion, the trial court credited the
defendant’s testimony that he used the restroom unaccompanied for part of the period, and it held
that the officer’s testimony about the customary practice when male defendants use the restroom
“was not sufficient evidence of compliance with the observation requirement.” Id. at 961. Thus,
the trial court found that the officer had failed to observe the defendant during the restroom
break, and we did not disturb that finding.
Further, as we shall note, although the defendant’s testimony that he did not put anything
into his mouth or vomit during the 20-minute period was crucial to our holding, his testimony
that he did not regurgitate or belch was not necessary. This was because, then as now, neither
belching nor regurgitating was listed in the regulation as an act that would affect the
admissibility of the test result.
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the testing process—which was tantamount to holding that the defendant suffered no prejudice.
The evidence proved that the test had not been rendered unreliable by the officer’s failure to
observe the defendant continuously; the defendant testified that he had not performed any act
that the regulation listed as endangering the reliability of the test. Id.
¶ 28 Here, the determinative question is whether the evidence compensated sufficiently for
Schmitt’s failure, for more than two minutes, to observe defendant in any way. Plaintiff argued
that the compensation was provided by (1) Schmitt’s testimony that, upon returning from his first
absence, he saw nothing to suggest that defendant vomited or ate or drank anything while
Schmitt had been away; (2) Schmitt’s testimony that, after returning from his first absence, he
asked defendant whether he had vomited, burped, or eaten in the preceding half hour; and (3),
most important, the video.
¶ 29 The trial court did not find this evidence sufficient. The court did not specifically discuss
the first factor, but we can infer that it did not conclude that Schmitt’s inference based on what
he saw was persuasive evidence of what defendant actually did. The court explicitly rejected the
second factor, noting that, when defendant responded to the question, he was not under oath and
was presumably impaired to some degree, given that he had failed field sobriety tests and had
concededly been validly arrested for intoxicated driving. Moreover, the court noted, even a
sober person doing his best to remember might have trouble saying with any certainty whether
he had belched in the preceding half hour.
¶ 30 The court also rejected the third factor, the video, on which plaintiff primarily relies on
appeal. The court explained at some length why it considered the video an inadequate post hoc
substitute for Schmitt’s actual observation (even in the mode of Ray Charles) of defendant. The
court noted that the video did not fully capture defendant’s face; it was “from the top looking
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down” and a viewer could not “even see his mouth the vast majority of the time.” Thus, the
court concluded, the viewer could not really say with any assurance what was “happening with
[defendant’s] mouth” while Schmitt was absent.
¶ 31 We cannot lightly dismiss the trial court’s concerns. Schmitt’s laxity created serious
problems. Without doubt, the better practice, at least to ensure the creation of a sufficient
foundation for the breath-test result, would have been to remain in the booking room with
defendant for the full 20-minute observation period. But, for whatever reason, Schmitt attended
to business elsewhere for a portion of that time. The issue is whether his failure to observe
defendant continuously was fatal to reliance on the result of the breath test.
¶ 32 We hold that it was not. We have viewed the video with care. Despite its limitations,
which the court noted, it compensated for Schmitt’s lapses. (We do not consider whether
Schmitt’s observations upon returning from his first absence, or defendant’s response to his
inquiry at that time, provided any additional support for admitting the test result.)
¶ 33 We note that the regulation states that during the 20-minute observation period “the
subject shall be deprived of alcohol and foreign substances and shall not have vomited.” 20 Ill.
Adm. Code 1286.310(a)(1) (2004). This language clearly categorizes drinking alcohol and
vomiting as actions that (as a legal matter) will render a test result unreliable. Also, the reference
to “foreign substances” is broad enough to comprehend eating, drinking, and smoking, as case
law has recognized. It is noteworthy, however, that although the trial court and the parties seem
to have assumed that the regulation also presumes that belching renders a test result unreliable,
the text of the regulation does not support this assumption. Belching is not mentioned. Indeed,
in People v. Bertsch, 183 Ill. App. 3d 23 (1989), we held that, because the regulation’s plain
language did not include belching as a disqualifying act, we would not read it into the regulation.
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Id. at 27. Thus, the lack of belching during the 20-minute period is not a foundational
requirement for the admission of a breath-test result. Id. We did hold that “ ‘belching’ [is] in the
nature of an affirmative defense” that a defendant may raise in order to establish the result’s
inaccuracy despite compliance with the foundational requirements for admission. Id. We then
affirmed the trial court’s grant of the defendant’s motion to exclude the result on the ground that
he had proved this defense. Id. To the extent that this defense remains viable, defendant here
did not raise it. Thus, Bertsch supports our conclusion that the possibility that defendant belched
during the 20-minute observation period does not affect whether the test result is admissible.
¶ 34 At this point, we must also note that the regulation does not include regurgitation as a
disqualifying act. The regulation formerly did state that the person to be tested “shall not have
regurgitated or vomited” during the 20-minute observation period and that “[i]f the subject
regurgitates or vomits,” the process shall begin again. (Emphases added.) 20 Ill. Adm. Code
1286.310(a), adopted at 25 Ill. Reg. 3023, 3042-43 (eff. Feb. 1, 2001). However, in 2004, the
regulation was amended to delete the language that we have just emphasized. 20 Ill. Adm. Code
1286.310(a), amended at 28 Ill. Reg. 10017, 10038 (eff. June 30, 2004). Therefore, regurgitation
also is not included as a disqualifying act. (Whether regurgitation might be raised as an
affirmative defense is not before us now, as it was not so raised here.) 2
2
We note that some postamendment opinions list regurgitation as a disqualifying factor.
See, e.g., People v. Caraballo, 2019 IL App (1st) 171993, ¶ 24; People v. Eagletail, 2014 IL
App (1st) 130252, ¶ 19; People v. Aleliunaite, 379 Ill. App. 3d 975, 980 (2008). In each of those
opinions, the statement was dicta and was based on People v. Orth, 124 Ill. 2d 326, 340 (1988),
which was decided when the regulation did list regurgitation as a disqualifying act. Evidently,
the courts that issued those opinions simply overlooked that the regulation had been amended
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after Orth was decided but before the defendants had been tested.
More complicated is our opinion in Ebert. There, we initially cited the regulation in its
applicable form, which, as now, did not list either belching or regurgitation as a foundational
disqualifier. Ebert, 401 Ill. App. 3d at 961. We then noted that, at the hearing on the
defendant’s motion in limine to exclude the test result, the State argued that the officer’s failure
to observe the defendant continuously for 20 minutes was not crucial, because the defendant’s
testimony that “he did not vomit, belch, regurgitate, or place a foreign substance in his mouth”
showed that the test result was reliable. Id. at 960. In holding that the test result was admissible,
we explained in part that “defendant’s own testimony establishe[d] that he did nothing to impair
the accuracy of the test—he did not vomit, belch, regurgitate, or place a foreign substance in his
mouth.” Id. at 965. Our inclusion of “belch” and “regurgitate” might be taken to imply that we
considered those two acts as disqualifying. That, of course, would have been inaccurate, since
the regulation had long since been amended to exclude belching and regurgitation as
disqualifying.
However, immediately after making this statement, we addressed the defendant’s
alternative argument that the test result was inadmissible because the first test indicated the
presence of mouth alcohol. In rejecting this argument, we noted that, according to the evidence
at the hearing, “a reading of mouth alcohol can be the result of vomiting, but can also be the
result of regurgitating, belching, or an exceptionally high blood alcohol level. Therefore, the
first Breathalyzer result does not establish that defendant vomited and it was not necessary to
have him rinse his mouth with water.” Id. This explanation showed that we recognized
vomiting as a disqualifying act under the regulation but recognized equally that belching and
regurgitation were not disqualifying acts. Thus, Ebert cannot properly be read as erroneously
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¶ 35 Thus, in evaluating the sufficiency of the video as compensation for Schmitt’s failure to
observe defendant for the full 20-minute period, we shall limit ourselves to the video as it relates
to establishing whether defendant did not vomit or place a foreign substance into his mouth.
¶ 36 We acknowledge that the angle of the video camera showed defendant from some height
instead of at his level as he sat on the stool. At times, defendant put his head down, obscuring
his mouth from the camera. Nonetheless, for the periods at issue, the video is sufficiently clear
for our purposes.
¶ 37 During Schmitt’s first absence, which lasts from 12:23:48 through 12:26:21 a.m.,
defendant remains seated on his stool. At almost all times, both hands are visible; either the left
hand rests on the right wrist or the hands are clasped. It is clear that defendant does not vomit or
put anything into his mouth. During the officer’s second absence, which lasts from 12:28:27
through 12:28:50 a.m., defendant sits on the stool with his hands clasped and his mouth visible to
the camera. It is clear that he does not vomit or put anything into his mouth.
¶ 38 The video thus demonstrates to our satisfaction that during Schmitt’s absences defendant
did not commit a disqualifying act. The trial court was concerned primarily that the camera did
not show defendant’s mouth. However, this limitation of the recording is of no consequence, as
Schmitt ascertained before leaving that defendant had no foreign substance in his mouth and the
video negates any possibility that he put anything into his mouth while Schmitt was gone.
Although the video does not foreclose the possibility that defendant belched or regurgitated
while Schmitt was absent, that possibility does not affect whether the video compensated for
Schmitt’s deviation from the continuous-observation requirement.
perpetuating the standards of the preamendment regulation.
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¶ 39 We hold that the trial court erred in granting defendant’s motion in limine to exclude the
breath-test result. We commend the court for its concern with the questionable practice in this
case, but we cannot accept its conclusion that the officer’s deviation from the prescribed
procedure warranted the exclusion of the evidence.
¶ 40 The judgment of the circuit court of McHenry County is reversed, and the cause is
remanded.
¶ 41 Reversed and remanded.
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