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6 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
7 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
8 Plaintiff-Appellee,
9 v. NO. 27,758
10 LISA MELENDEZ,
11 Defendant-Appellant.
12 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOÑA ANA COUNTY
13 Mike Murphy, District Judge
14 Gary King, Attorney General
15 Andrea Sassa, Assistant Attorney General
16 Santa Fe, NM
17 for Appellee
18 Hugh W. Dangler, Chief Public Defender
19 Eleanor Brogan, Assistant Appellate Defender
20 Santa Fe, NM
21 for Appellant
22 MEMORANDUM OPINION
23 VANZI, Judge.
1 Defendant appeals her conviction of violating NMSA 1978, Section 66-8-
2 102(B) (2004) (amended 2008), driving while under the influence of drugs.
3 Defendant contends that the arresting officer at the DWI checkpoint lacked reasonable
4 suspicion to refer her to a secondary inspection area for further investigation. Further,
5 Defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence underlying her conviction for
6 violating Section 66-8-102(B) and argues that the district court abused its discretion
7 in requiring her to install an ignition interlock device on her vehicle. We affirm on
8 all grounds.
9 BACKGROUND
10 On December 1, 2006, at approximately 2:00 a.m., Defendant drove up to a
11 sobriety checkpoint on Interstate 10 near Anthony, New Mexico. After Defendant
12 brought her vehicle to a stop, New Mexico State Police officer Daniel Bardé
13 approached and stood beside her driver’s side door. The windows on Defendant’s
14 vehicle were rolled up as it was a cold night. Despite the fact that Officer Bardé was
15 wearing reflective safety equipment, Defendant did not appear to immediately see
16 him. Officer Bardé waited five seconds and knocked on the driver’s window of
17 Defendant’s vehicle. When Defendant lowered her window, Officer Bardé informed
18 Defendant that he was a New Mexico State Police officer and that she had arrived at
19 a DWI sobriety checkpoint.
2
1 At that point, Officer Bardé believed that Defendant might be impaired because
2 Defendant did not look at him while he addressed her, instead she looked straight
3 ahead, and he detected the smell of alcohol emanating from inside the vehicle. Officer
4 Bardé asked Defendant if she had consumed any alcohol that evening. Defendant
5 responded that she had not. Nevertheless, Officer Bardé instructed Defendant to move
6 her vehicle to the secondary inspection area for further investigation.
7 At the secondary inspection area, Officer Bardé asked Defendant for her
8 license, registration, and insurance. Defendant initially provided only her license.
9 After asking Defendant a second time for her registration and insurance, Defendant
10 provided those documents. Throughout this interaction, Officer Bardé observed that
11 Defendant’s response time seemed delayed. Officer Bardé then asked Defendant to
12 step out of her vehicle to perform the standard field sobriety tests. After Officer Bardé
13 demonstrated the tests to Defendant, she told him that she had recently injured her
14 right ankle. Officer Bardé testified at length about Defendant’s performance on the
15 standard field sobriety tests.
16 On direct examination, the State did not ask Officer Bardé any questions about
17 Defendant’s performance on the horizontal gaze nystagmus test, stating instead that
18 “we’ll skip the . . . horizontal gaze nystagmus.” The State, however, elicited the
19 following testimony from Officer Bardé about Defendant’s performance on the
20 remaining standard field sobriety tests. During the walk and turn test, Defendant
3
1 initiated the walk on the wrong foot, failed to take small steps, turned right rather than
2 the left, and failed to “maintain a position” while being instructed by Officer Bardé
3 how to perform the test. During the one-leg stand, Defendant could maintain her
4 balance on one leg for only fifteen rather than thirty seconds, and she raised her arms
5 for balance rather than keeping them at her side as instructed. Officer Bardé
6 acknowledged that he disregarded Defendant’s complaints about her ankle injury and
7 thus neither made any attempt to accommodate her injury during the one-leg stand nor
8 documented which leg Defendant stood on. Officer Bardé explained that he dismissed
9 Defendant’s claimed injury because he did not observe any swelling in either of
10 Defendant’s ankles, Defendant had informed him that she was an exotic dancer and
11 was coming from work, and Defendant did not exhibit any sign of pain or discomfort.
12 After the standard field sobriety tests were completed, Officer Bardé concluded
13 that Defendant was impaired because her performance on both the walk and turn and
14 one-leg stand suggested as much. Officer Bardé again asked Defendant whether she
15 had been drinking. This time, Defendant responded that she had consumed a vodka
16 and tonic earlier in the evening and had also taken the antidepressants she was
17 prescribed for her bi-polar condition. Officer Bardé then asked Defendant if she
18 would submit to a voluntary breath analysis test. Defendant agreed. For reasons that
19 are unclear, Defendant did not provide a breath sample sufficient to permit the breath
20 analysis machine to produce a blood alcohol assessment. Officer Bardé believed that
4
1 Defendant was being purposefully noncompliant. Accordingly, Officer Bardé arrested
2 Defendant and transported her to Memorial Medical Center in Las Cruces, New
3 Mexico where blood samples could be drawn from Defendant.
4 Defendant’s blood was subjected to a series of tests which were described and
5 interpreted at Defendant’s trial by Ginger Baker, a toxicologist and an expert witness
6 for the State. When asked whether any trace of alcohol was found in Defendant’s
7 blood, Ms. Baker testified that no trace was found. When asked whether any drugs
8 were found in Defendant’s blood (and specifically which ones), Ms. Baker stated that
9 she discovered the following drugs in Defendant’s blood samples: benzoylecgonine
10 (a metabolite of cocaine), cocaethylene (an active central nervous system depressant
11 found in the body when cocaine and alcohol are consumed simultaneously), cocaine
12 (an active central nervous system stimulant), and carboxy THC (the inactive
13 metabolite of marijuana).
14 Ms. Baker testified that the inactive metabolite of THC would not have affected
15 Defendant in any way. Furthermore, she was incapable of rendering any conclusion
16 as to whether Defendant was impaired based on the mere fact that cocaethylene,
17 benzoylecgonine, and cocaine were found in Defendant’s blood. Ms. Baker explained
18 that these chemicals do not cause uniformly predictable effects. Rather, they have
19 distinct and potentially disparate effects on each unique person. The degree of
20 impairment an individual with these chemicals in their blood might experience would
5
1 vary based on the manner in which a person’s body might react to the chemicals and
2 the manner in which the chemicals are metabolized by that person’s body.
3 Despite finding that the mere presence of the chemicals in Defendant’s blood
4 did not prove Defendant was impaired, Ms. Baker concluded that Defendant was
5 impaired to such a degree that she was incapable of safe driving. Ms. Baker explained
6 her reasoning in the following manner: Generally, when she is unable to draw
7 conclusions regarding the degree to which an individual might be impaired as a result
8 of illicit drug use based solely on the results of toxicology tests, Ms. Baker considers
9 the arresting officer’s observations regarding impaired driving and the results of field
10 sobriety tests. In Defendant’s case, Ms. Baker reviewed the arrest/booking report, the
11 DWI field report, Officer Bardé’s statement of probable cause, and the criminal
12 complaint. In those reports, Ms. Baker observed that Officer Bardé indicated that
13 Defendant did not immediately respond to him when he initially approached her
14 vehicle; Defendant failed to turn over her registration and insurance when asked to do
15 so and needed to be reminded to provide those documents; and Defendant performed
16 unsatisfactorily on both the walk and turn and one-leg stand field sobriety tests. Ms.
17 Baker opined that the behaviors reported by Officer Bardé indicated signs of
18 diminished cognitive functions, including diminished coordination, divided attention,
19 and problems with judgment, perception, tracking, and reaction time. This type of
20 behavior, according to Ms. Baker, is consistent with the type of behavior exhibited by
6
1 individuals under the influence of central nervous system depressants. Two active
2 central nervous system depressants were identified in Defendant’s blood: cocaine1
3 and cocaethylene. According to Ms. Baker, coordination, attentiveness, sound
4 judgment, clear perception, an ability to “track,” and a capacity to react quickly are
5 all essential attributes for safe driving. Based on the foregoing, it was Ms. Baker’s
6 opinion that Defendant was under the influence of drugs, was impaired by those
7 drugs, and was impaired to such a degree that she was incapable of safely driving.
8 Officer Bardé and Ms. Baker were the only witnesses to testify at trial. At the
9 end of the trial, the district court noted that under Section 66-8-102(B), Defendant
10 could be convicted only if the court found, under the totality of the circumstances, that
11 Defendant was under the influence of drugs and was impaired by those drugs to such
12 a degree that she was incapable of safely driving a vehicle. The district court then
13 summarized the totality of the circumstances in Defendant’s case. The district court
14 noted that Defendant “didn’t do very well on the field sobriety test” and was
15 “inattentive to instructions.” The court did not regard Defendant’s failure to
16 immediately respond to Officer Bardé when he approached her vehicle as clear
17 evidence of impairment. The district court indicated that it seemed equally plausible
1
18 Ms. Baker acknowledged that cocaine is technically categorized as a central
19 nervous system stimulant. However, Ms. Baker explained that cocaine has both
20 stimulant and (as the body processes the drug) depressant effects.
7
1 that Defendant’s delay in opening her vehicle window to address Officer Bardé could
2 simply be an “attitude.” Similarly, because Officer Bardé failed to consider
3 Defendant’s claimed ankle injury when he asked her to perform the one-leg stand and
4 failed to record which leg she was asked to stand on during that test, the district court
5 expressed uncertainty regarding what to make of the fact that Defendant failed that
6 particular field sobriety test. Finally, the district court noted that there was no ethanol
7 (alcohol) found in Defendant’s blood. The blood tests did indicate, however, the
8 presence of cocaethylene and carboxy THC. In conclusion, the district court found
9 that the totality of the circumstances supported the following: Defendant was under
10 the influence of a drug, this caused her to be impaired, and her impairment was to such
11 a degree that she was incapable of safely operating a motor vehicle. Defendant was
12 found guilty of violating Section 66-8-102(B).
13 After issuing his findings and verdict, the district court moved to sentencing.
14 After hearing recommendations from the parties, the district court deferred
15 Defendant’s sentence and instead placed her on probation for one year. In addition,
16 despite the fact that the district court had reservations about requiring an individual
17 convicted of driving under the influence of drugs to install an ignition interlock device
18 on their vehicle (this seemed “nonsensical” to the district court), the district court
19 noted the mandatory nature of Section 66-8-102(N) and required Defendant to comply
20 with the penalties of this provision as a condition of probation.
8
1 DISCUSSION
2 Defendant raises three issues on appeal. First, pursuant to State v. Franklin, 78
3 N.M. 127, 428 P.2d 982 (1967), and State v. Boyer, 103 N.M. 655, 712 P.2d 1 (Ct.
4 App. 1985), Defendant contends that Officer Bardé lacked reasonable suspicion to
5 order her to the secondary inspection area. Second, also pursuant to Franklin and
6 Boyer, Defendant submits that there was insufficient evidence to support her
7 conviction for violating Section 66-8-102(B). Finally, Defendant argues that the
8 district court abused its discretion when the court ordered Defendant, as a condition
9 of probation, to have an ignition interlock device installed on her vehicle. We address
10 these arguments in turn.
11 REASONABLE SUSPICION
12 The State does not dispute that reasonable suspicion is required to justify
13 Officer Bardé’s decision to order Defendant to the secondary inspection area. See
14 State v. Guzman, 118 N.M. 113, 115, 879 P.2d 114, 116 (Ct. App. 1994) (reviewing
15 whether the detention of the defendant at the secondary inspection area of a
16 checkpoint was supported by reasonable suspicion). Whether there is reasonable
17 suspicion to detain an individual is a mixed question of fact and law. State v. Robbs,
18 2006-NMCA-061, ¶¶ 8-9, 139 N.M. 569, 136 P.3d 570. We review the district court’s
19 factual determinations for substantial evidence and review the application of those
9
1 factual determinations to the law de novo. State v. Templeton, 2007-NMCA-108, ¶
2 8, 142 N.M. 369, 165 P.3d 1145.
3 The district court appears to have found that Officer Bardé possessed
4 reasonable suspicion to order Defendant to the secondary inspection area but provided
5 no specific findings for that conclusion. We are persuaded that the record supports
6 the district court’s finding. Officer Bardé offered three reasons for his decision to
7 order Defendant to the secondary inspection area: (1) Defendant appeared not to see
8 him when he initially approached her vehicle despite the fact that he was wearing
9 reflective safety equipment; (2) Defendant avoided eye contact with him when she
10 eventually opened her window to address him; and (3) when Defendant opened her
11 window, he smelled the odor of alcohol emanating from Defendant’s vehicle. These
12 three reasons support the district court’s finding that reasonable suspicion existed to
13 justify Officer Bardé’s decision to refer Defendant to the secondary inspection area.
14 See State v. Walters, 1997-NMCA-013, ¶¶ 6, 26, 123 N.M. 88, 934 P.2d 282 (holding
15 that once an officer “spoke to [the d]efendant and detected the odor of alcohol, he had
16 reasonable suspicion to investigate further[,]” which included the administration of
17 field sobriety tests).
18 Defendant argues that the sole basis for Officer Bardé’s decision to refer her to
19 the secondary inspection area was his detection of the odor of alcohol, and this was
20 insufficient for a finding of reasonable suspicion. Defendant’s assertion is not
10
1 supported by the record. As we have noted above, Officer Bardé gave three reasons
2 for ordering Defendant to the secondary inspection area. Even if it was the sole basis,
3 however, Walters makes clear that detection of the odor of alcohol alone can lead to
4 reasonable suspicion to investigate further. Id. We are equally unpersuaded by
5 Defendant’s contention that because the blood tests later revealed that her blood
6 alcohol concentration was zero, Officer Bardé’s claim that he smelled alcohol
7 emanating from Defendant’s vehicle was insufficient to establish reasonable suspicion
8 to order her to the secondary inspection area. First, we may reject this contention
9 because Defendant cited no authority for this proposition. See State v. Ryan,
10 2006-NMCA-044, ¶ 3, 139 N.M. 354, 132 P.3d 1040 (holding that arguments not
11 supported by authority will not be considered by the court). Second, we understand
12 Defendant to be arguing that Officer Bardé’s testimony that he smelled alcohol was
13 untrue given the results of the blood tests. However, Defendant admitted to Officer
14 Bardé that she consumed an alcoholic beverage roughly an hour before arriving at the
15 checkpoint, and she had cocaethylene (which is produced when alcohol and cocaine
16 are consumed simultaneously) in her blood. The totality of the circumstances known
17 to Officer Bardé was sufficient for him to have reasonable suspicion that Defendant
18 was driving under the influence and to order Defendant to the second stop for further
19 investigation.
20 SUFFICIENCY OF EVIDENCE
11
1 Defendant’s second argument on appeal is her assertion that there was
2 insufficient evidence to convict her of violating Section 66-8-102(B). “Whether there
3 is sufficient evidence to support a conviction is a question of law which we review de
4 novo.” State v. Neal, 2008-NMCA-008, ¶ 20, 143 N.M. 341, 176 P.3d 330. “In
5 reviewing a claim of insufficient evidence, we must determine whether there is
6 substantial evidence of either a direct or a circumstantial nature to support a verdict
7 of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt with respect to every element essential to
8 conviction.” Id. ¶ 19. “[W]e do not reweigh the evidence or substitute our judgment
9 for that of the factfinder.” Id. ¶ 20 (alteration omitted) (internal quotation marks and
10 citation omitted). “We review the evidence in the light most favorable to the State,
11 resolving all conflicts and indulging all permissible inferences to uphold a verdict of
12 conviction.” Id. ¶ 19. “Substantial evidence is that which is acceptable to a
13 reasonable mind as adequate support for a conclusion.” Id. “The test is not whether
14 substantial evidence would support an acquittal, but whether substantial evidence
15 supports the verdict actually rendered.” Id.
16 Defendant was convicted of violating Section 66-8-102(B) which provides: “It
17 is unlawful for a person who is under the influence of any drug to a degree that
18 renders him incapable of safely driving a vehicle to drive a vehicle within this state.”
19 Defendant argues that the evidence submitted by the State was insufficient to convict
20 her under Section 66-8-102(B) for the following reasons: (1) the field sobriety tests
12
1 were irrelevant to any conclusions regarding impairment because they measure blood
2 alcohol concentrations and Defendant’s blood contained no alcohol; and (2) the
3 State’s toxicology expert could not definitively state that the drugs in Defendant’s
4 system caused any impairment. We are not persuaded.
5 We note at the outset that Defendant does not challenge either the statute under
6 which Defendant was convicted or the qualifications of the State’s toxicology expert.
7 Further, Defendant cites no authority in support of her first argument—that any
8 conclusions about impairment based on the field sobriety tests are irrelevant because
9 Defendant’s blood contained no alcohol. See In re Adoption of Doe, 100 N.M. 764,
10 765, 676 P.2d 1329, 1330 (1984) (holding that an appellate court will not consider an
11 issue if no authority is cited in support of the issue). We turn then to Defendant’s
12 argument that there was insufficient evidence to support a finding that the drugs in her
13 system caused any impairment in violation of Section 66-8-102(B).
14 The plain language of Section 66-8-102(B) and the corresponding UJI contain
15 nearly identical language. Thus, in order to convict Defendant of violating Section
16 66-8-102(B), the State had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that:
17 1. The defendant operated a motor vehicle;
18 2. At that time, the defendant was under the influence of drugs to such
19 a degree that the defendant was incapable of safely driving a vehicle;
20 3. This happened in New Mexico[.]
13
1 UJI 14-4502 NMRA. There is no question that elements one and three are clear and
2 that Defendant committed those portions of the offense; she operated a motor vehicle
3 in New Mexico. We must determine then whether substantial evidence existed to
4 establish that Defendant was under the influence of drugs to such a degree that she
5 was incapable of safely driving a vehicle. Defendant does not challenge Ms. Baker’s
6 testimony that drugs—carboxy THC (a metabolite of marijuana), cocaine,
7 benzoylecgonine (a metabolite of cocaine), and cocaethylene (which is found in the
8 body when cocaine and alcohol are consumed simultaneously)—were found in
9 Defendant’s blood. Having determined that Defendant was under the influence of
10 drugs, we turn to whether Defendant was impaired to a degree that she could not
11 operate her vehicle safely.
12 Ms. Baker testified that although cocaethylene and carboxy THC were found
13 in Defendant’s blood samples, this alone did not demonstrate that Defendant was
14 impaired. Ms. Baker also testified that the metabolite carboxy THC would have had
15 no effect on Defendant. Accordingly, the presence of carboxy THC in Defendant’s
16 blood could not be sufficient evidence by itself that Defendant was under the influence
17 of drugs such that she was incapable of safe driving. Further, Ms. Baker testified that
18 it was impossible for her to reach any conclusion concerning whether Defendant was
19 impaired in any way based solely on the results of the blood samples. Thus,
20 Defendant argues that the presence of drugs in Defendant’s blood alone is an
14
1 insufficient basis upon which the district court could have based its verdict. Although
2 Ms. Baker’s testimony in this regard may appear problematic, we are nevertheless
3 persuaded that substantial evidence was presented at Defendant’s trial to support the
4 verdict.
5 As we have previously noted, upon reviewing the behavioral evidence reported
6 by Officer Bardé in conjunction with the results of her toxicology tests, Ms. Baker
7 concluded that Defendant was under the influence of drugs, was impaired by those
8 drugs, and was impaired to such a degree that she was incapable of safe driving. Ms.
9 Baker testified that two central nervous system depressants (cocaine and
10 cocaethylene) were found in Defendant’s blood. Ms. Baker further testified that,
11 given Officer Bardé’s observations of Defendant’s behavior, Defendant was under the
12 influence of these central nervous system depressants. She opined that central nervous
13 system depressants diminish cognitive functions, including diminished coordination,
14 divided attention, and problems with judgment, perception, tracking, and reaction
15 time. Finally, and most critically, she testified that the cognitive functions central
16 nervous system depressants diminish are those specifically necessary for safe driving.
17 Defendant’s responses, observed behaviors, and performance on the field sobriety
18 tests were, according to Ms. Baker, “consistent with somebody on a central nervous
19 system depressant.” We are satisfied that Ms. Baker’s uncontroverted testimony
20 coupled with that of Officer Bardé was sufficient for the district court to find beyond
15
1 a reasonable doubt that Defendant was under the influence of drugs to such a degree
2 that she was incapable of safe driving.
3 CONDITION OF PROBATION
4 Defendant’s final argument on appeal is that the district court abused its
5 discretion by requiring her, as a condition of probation, to comply with Subsection N
6 of Section 66-8-102. Section 66-8-102(N) provides: “Upon a conviction pursuant to
7 this section, an offender shall be required to obtain an ignition interlock license and
8 have an ignition interlock device installed and operating on all motor vehicles driven
9 by the offender, pursuant to rules adopted by the bureau.” Defendant argues that
10 because she was convicted of driving under the influence of drugs, requiring her to
11 install an ignition interlock device on her vehicle bears no relation to the offense she
12 committed and would not necessarily deter her from driving under the influence of
13 drugs in the future. See State v. Williams, 2006-NMCA-092, ¶ 3, 140 N.M. 194, 141
14 P.3d 538 (holding that probationary conditions will be set aside only if they “(1) have
15 no reasonable relationship to the offense for which [the] defendant was convicted, (2)
16 relate to activity which is not itself criminal in nature and (3) require or forbid conduct
17 which is not reasonably related to deterring future criminality” (alteration in original)
18 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). We reject this argument.
19 The plain language of Section 66-8-102(N) denotes that it is a mandatory
20 provision and applies to all persons convicted under any subsection of 66-8-102.
16
1 Accordingly, it was not within the district court’s discretion to decide whether or not
2 this provision was applicable to Defendant. Defendant’s citation to the standards
3 articulated in Williams are thus unavailing. Those standards are pertinent only when
4 we are asked to review whether a district court’s exercise of discretion in setting a
5 condition of probation was an abuse of that discretion. As noted, Section 66-8-102(N)
6 is mandatory, and the district court had no discretion in deciding whether to enforce
7 the provision.
8 We are equally unpersuaded by Defendant’s assertion, which the district court
9 seemed to accept, that it is illogical or nonsensical to require individuals convicted of
10 driving under the influence of drugs to submit to the requirements of Section 66-8-
11 102(N). Although the Legislature may well have concluded that individuals convicted
12 of driving under the influence of drugs may also have a proclivity for driving under
13 the influence of alcohol, we need not reach that argument here. Defendant in this case
14 only challenges the district court’s alleged discretionary decision to apply the
15 penalties set forth in that statute as a condition to her probation. As the district court
16 was mandated to apply the penalties set forth in the statute and had no discretion in
17 that regard, Defendant’s argument fails.
18 CONCLUSION
19 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
20 IT IS SO ORDERED.
17
1 ___________________________
2 LINDA M. VANZI, Judge
3 WE CONCUR:
4 ______________________________________
5 MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge
6 ______________________________________
7 MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge
18