Wiggins v. Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
Annotate this CaseSection 322.2615, Florida Statutes, authorizes a law enforcement officer to suspend driving privileges when a person is driving or in physical control of a vehicle and has a blood- or breath alcohol level of .08 or higher. An officer may also suspend the driving privilege of one who refuses to submit to a urine, breath, or blood-alcohol test. If the driver refuses to perform a lawfully requested test, the officer must notify the driver that his license will be suspended for a year, or 18 months if the driver has previously had his license suspended for failure to submit to such tests. Section 316.1932 provides that the requested tests “must be incidental to a lawful arrest” and that the officer must have “reasonable cause.” Once the license is suspended, the driver may request review by the Department of Motor Safety and Vehicles through an administrative hearing within 10 days after issuance of the notice of suspension; the review hearing essentially functions as a trial before the Department. The hearing officer’s authorization to determine the “lawfulness of the stop” is built into the provision of the essential element of whether probable cause existed; the decision may be reviewed by the circuit court. The Supreme Court of Florida held that a circuit court, conducting review under Section 322.2615, must review video evidence and reject officer testimony as competent, substantial evidence when that testimony is contrary to video evidence.
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