Pacifica55 wrote:
As far as the breathalyzer, even in the US they have to be calibrated and certified on a regular basis. Are you saying that a person should not have the opportunity to challenge the validity of the test? Some unscrupulous cop could have a hayday with a "sensitive" breathalyzer.
That has been something I have worried about since the law was passed. The transitos have portable breathalyzers. No one has ever said, in any article I have read, if they are ever calibrated and therefore how accurate they are. In the U.S., in most states, a portable breathalyzer is used only to establish that it is possible the person is above the limit. They are then administered a either a blood alcohol test or tested with a full scale breathalyzer which are calibrated on a fixed time schedule. Recently in South Florida the test results were thrown out because a defense attorney introduced into evidence that the FHP technician who certified the calibration of some machines did not follow the proper procedure of using distilled water.
Orange wrote:
And the person cannot exercise their right to have a blood test because they are detained? I say let them out so they can drive to the nearest lab and have their blood drawn. Afterall, it's their right.
I suspect that is a tongue in cheek response because obviously the suspected intoxicated driver would be driven by the police to the point where further testing could be done as is done in the United States.
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