People v. Super. Ct.
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
Date FiledMay 14, 2026
DocketH053051
StatusPublished
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Full Opinion
Filed 5/14/26
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
THE PEOPLE, H053051
(Santa Clara County
Petitioner, Super. Ct. No. F2200028)
v.
SANTA CLARA COUNTY
SUPERIOR COURT,
Respondent;
JOSEPH FEGHHI,
Real Party in Interest.
This original proceeding arises out of a prosecution for murder
following a fatal drunk driving incident. The question presented is whether
an officer’s failure in a search warrant application to inform the magistrate of
the defendant’s request for a breath test undermines the validity of the
warrant authorizing seizure of a blood sample to test the defendant’s blood
alcohol level. We conclude it does not.
Real party in interest Joseph Feghhi was arrested after his vehicle,
traveling nearly 130 miles per hour on Highway 101 in Gilroy, rear-ended a
vehicle driven by Vanessa Arellano, killing her. Officers obtained a warrant
to draw a blood sample from Feghhi after he initially refused—though later
consented—to submit to a chemical test. The blood sample, taken more than
three hours after the accident, revealed a blood alcohol concentration (BAC)
of 0.14 percent.
Feghhi was charged by information with murder, gross vehicular
manslaughter, and driving with a BAC over 0.08 percent and causing injury.
Feghhi moved to quash and traverse the search warrant authorizing
the seizure of his blood sample and to suppress the resulting evidence. He
asserted the warrant affiant misrepresented and/or omitted the
circumstances of Feghhi’s purported refusal to submit to a chemical test,
when, in fact, the transcript of the officer’s body-worn camera recording
shows Feghhi was willing to submit to a breath test. The district attorney
(hereafter, petitioner) opposed Feghhi’s motion, arguing that he had not met
his burden to justify a Franks 1 hearing because, even assuming the
magistrate was informed of Feghhi’s willingness to take a breath test, the
warrant was supported by probable cause.
The respondent superior court (trial court) granted the motion to quash
and traverse after concluding the magistrate would not have issued the
warrant if the affidavit had disclosed Feghhi’s consent to a breath test.
Petitioner filed a petition for a writ of mandate seeking reversal of the
trial court’s order traversing the search warrant and suppressing the
evidence of Feghhi’s BAC (petition). For the reasons explained herein, we
conclude that, even assuming deliberate omission of the defendant’s consent
to a breath test from the warrant affidavit, Feghhi has not demonstrated that
correcting the alleged omission would have changed the probable cause
analysis or rendered issuance of the warrant unreasonable under the Fourth
Amendment. We therefore direct that a peremptory writ of mandate issue
ordering the court to vacate its order granting the motion to traverse and
1 Franks v. Delaware (1978) 438 U.S. 154 (Franks).
2
quash search warrant and suppress evidence, and enter a new order denying
the motion.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. Unverified Response to Order To Show Cause
Before setting forth the facts and procedural background, we address a
preliminary issue related to the return on the order to show to cause.
As explained further in the procedural history post (pt. I.C.), after
transfer from the California Supreme Court, this court issued an order to
show cause and invited real party in interest to file a return in opposition to
the writ. Feghhi did so. However, the return in opposition to the writ
(return) filed by Feghhi is neither a verified answer nor return by demurrer,
as required by the applicable court rule. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule
8.487(b)(1); see also Code Civ. Proc., § 1089.) The return does not attempt to
respond to the formal allegations of the petition and primarily asserts legal
arguments on the reasonableness of procuring a warrant for a blood draw
when the defendant has consented to a noninvasive breath test.
Rule 8.487(b)(1) of the California Rules of Court provides, “If the court
issues an alternative writ or order to show cause, the respondent or any real
party in interest, separately or jointly, may serve and file a return by
demurrer, verified answer, or both.” Courts deem this requirement more
than a technicality; it is “an integral and critical step in the procedure for
determining the merit of a petition for extraordinary relief.” (Bank of
America, N.A. v. Superior Court (2013) 212 Cal.App.4th 1076, 1085 (Bank of
America).) The filing of a return “in the form of an unverified legal brief” is
therefore “improper.” (Agricultural Labor Relations Bd. v. Superior Court
(2016) 4 Cal.App.5th 675, 681 (Agricultural).)
3
The appropriate remedy for failure to file a verified answer or demurrer
is to treat the unverified return “as a return by demurrer, because a
demurrer admits the facts pleaded in a writ petition.” (Agricultural, supra, 4
Cal.App.5th at p. 682.) In other words, “[i]n the absence of a true return, all
well-pleaded and verified allegations of the writ petition are accepted as
true.” (Bank of America, supra, 212 Cal.App.4th at p. 1084.) Courts often
apply this remedy. (See, e.g., Dorsey v. Superior Court (2015) 241
Cal.App.4th 583, 589; Shaffer v. Superior Court (1995) 33 Cal.App.4th 993,
996, fn. 2.) Alternatively, the court may deem that “the unverified return
which is not a demurrer . . . be stricken in terms of the merits of the mandate
petition.” (Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Superior Court (2003) 110
Cal.App.4th 1273, 1287.)
In this case, we agree with petitioner’s proposal (in reply to the
unverified return) for the noncompliant response to be deemed a return by
demurrer and for the “well-pleaded and verified allegations of the writ
petition [to be] accepted as true.” (Bank of America, supra, 212 Cal.App.4th
at p. 1084.)
B. Facts
We accept the following, well-pleaded and verified allegations of the
petition as true for purposes of our review. Some facts are also drawn from
the motion pleadings and preliminary hearing transcript in the trial court,
which petitioner has attached and incorporated by reference in the petition.
On November 7, 2021, at approximately 2:52 a.m., Feghhi was driving
his vehicle at 129 miles per hour when he rear-ended the victim, Vanessa
Arellano, killing her. California Highway Patrol Officer Nile Stewart was the
lead investigating officer at the crash site. Officer Stewart observed Feghhi
displaying objective signs of alcohol impairment, including an odor of alcohol,
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red, watery eyes, and an unsteady gait. Feghhi told Officer Stewart that he
had had two drinks. Officer Stewart conducted a field sobriety test and
concluded from his investigation that Feghhi was impaired.
Feghhi refused a request by Officer Stewart to provide a breath sample
for the preliminary alcohol screening device. Upon Feghhi’s arrest at
approximately 3:50 a.m., Officer Stewart told Feghhi that he was obligated to
provide a breath or a blood sample, but Feghhi refused. Officer Stewart was
assisted by Officer Fernando Marquez, who took Feghhi to the station for
booking.
Officer Marquez applied for a search warrant to seize a sample of
Feghhi’s blood in a medically approved manner and submit it to a laboratory
for analysis. The search warrant application was accompanied by Officer
Marquez’s signed affidavit. The affidavit stated that Marquez responded to
the scene of the traffic crash with his partner, Officer Stewart. Stewart spoke
with Feghhi, who was standing at the side of his vehicle. The affidavit
described the objective signs and symptoms of alcohol intoxication that
Stewart observed and stated that Stewart “advised the arrestee of [i]mplied
[c]onsent per [Vehicle Code section 23612] verbatim,” and that Marquez “read
the arrestee the back of the DMV DS-367 form verbatim.” 2 The affidavit
further asserted, “Based on the foregoing, a sample of the blood of the
arrestee constitutes evidence that tends to show a violation of [s]ection
23140, 23152, or 23153 of the Vehicle Code and the person from whom the
2 Officer Stewart later clarified in testimony at the preliminary hearing
that he advised Feghhi of the requirement that Feghhi submit to either a
blood test or breath test, and Feghhi declined, at which point Stewart
instructed Officer Marquez to take Feghhi to the station and obtain a
warrant if necessary. Officer Stewart did not read Feghhi the complete
advisement (form DS-367) but left that step to Officer Marquez.
5
sample is being sought has refused an officer’s request to submit to, or has
failed to complete, a blood test as required by [s]ection 23612 of the Vehicle
Code.”
Judge Le Jaqueline Duong signed the warrant. At approximately 6:15
a.m., a registered nurse and certified phlebotomist technician withdrew a
sample of Feghhi’s blood in a medically approved manner pursuant to the
warrant. Laboratory testing revealed Feghhi’s BAC to be 0.14 percent at the
time the blood sample was taken (approximately three hours after the crash).
C. Procedural History
A magistrate held Feghhi to answer on the charges of murder, gross
vehicular manslaughter, driving under the influence of alcohol and causing
injury to another, and driving with a BAC of 0.08 percent or more and
causing injury to another. The magistrate also found the evidence sufficient
to support the allegations that Feghhi willfully refused a peace officer’s
request to submit to a chemical test and drove at excessive speed.
In March 2024, petitioner filed an information conforming to the
magistrate’s holding order and adding an allegation that Feghhi personally
inflicted great bodily injury. The information charged Feghhi as follows:
murder of Vanessa Arellano on or about November 7, 2021 (Pen. Code, 3
§ 187, subd. (a); count 1), gross vehicular manslaughter (§ 191.5, subd. (a);
count 2), driving under the influence of alcohol and causing injury to another
(Veh. Code, § 23153, subd. (a); count 3), and driving with a BAC of 0.08
percent or more and causing injury to another (Veh. Code, § 23153, subd. (b);
count 4). It further alleged, as to each count, that Feghhi personally inflicted
great bodily injury within the meaning of sections 667, 1192.7, subdivision
3 Unspecified statutory references are to the Penal Code.
6
(c)(8), 12022.7, subdivision (a), and 1203, subdivision (e)(3); that at the time
of Feghhi’s arrest for the charged offenses, as to counts 2, 3, and 4, he
willfully refused and failed to complete a chemical test pursuant to Vehicle
Code sections 23612 and 23157 (Veh. Code, § 23577, subd. (a)); and that he
was driving a vehicle 30 miles and more per hour over the maximum speed
limit on a freeway and in a manner prohibited by Vehicle Code section 23103
(Veh. Code, § 23582).
Feghhi filed a motion to quash and traverse the search warrant and to
suppress evidence pursuant to section 1538.5, subdivision (i) (motion to
traverse, or motion). In his motion, Feghhi argued that Officer Marquez
“intentionally misled the magistrate into a mistaken belief that [] Feghhi had
refused a chemical test so that police could obtain a blood sample, where none
was necessary given that [] Feghhi had repeatedly asserted his legal right to
choose a breath test.” Feghhi asserted that the transcript of the body-worn
camera footage of his arrest (attached as an exhibit to the motion) showed
that he had “immediately and unambiguously requested a breath test” after
being admonished that he had a right to choose a blood or breath test and
had “explicitly asserted his right to submit a voluntary evidentiary breath
test at least six times.” Feghhi requested an evidentiary hearing pursuant to
Franks to prove the deliberate falsity and reckless omission of statements in
the search warrant affidavit. Feghhi also filed a section 995 motion to
dismiss the information, arguing there was insufficient evidence to support
the implied malice murder charge and for the information to be refiled “to
charge the offense that was supported by the evidence.”
Petitioner opposed both motions. In opposition to the motion to
traverse, petitioner argued that Feghhi had not met his burden to justify a
Franks hearing by making a substantial showing of any misrepresentation or
7
material omission in the warrant affidavit, and furthermore that even if the
alleged misrepresentation and/or omission were corrected and included in the
affidavit, the warrant would still be supported by probable cause.
Petitioner challenged Feghhi’s characterization of the record and
reliance on only the last several minutes of the audio recording transcribed
from Officer Marquez’s body-worn camera, which failed to include Feghhi’s
initial refusal to submit to a chemical test when requested following the
admonition by Officer Stewart. Petitioner maintained that given Feghhi’s
initial refusal and failure to make a clear and unambiguous choice during his
recorded interaction with Officer Marquez, Marquez lacked clear consent to a
chemical test and reasonably described Feghhi’s conduct as a refusal to
submit to a chemical test. Moreover, petitioner argued that because the
incident involved a potential felony DUI and vehicular manslaughter, Officer
Marquez was authorized to seek a warrant for the blood draw.
Feghhi filed reply briefs in support of both the motion to traverse and
motion to dismiss. As to the motion to traverse, Feghhi argued that while he
initially declined a chemical test when asked by Officer Stewart, he told
Officer Marquez repeatedly that he wished to perform a breath test because
he was afraid of needles. Feghhi asserted that the affidavit’s omission of his
consent to a breath test was material to the probable cause inquiry because
“there would be no need for the magistrate to authorize the invasive blood
test if she knew [Feghhi] had consented to the breath test.”
The trial court held a hearing on both motions. 4 As to the motion to
traverse, the court relied on the preliminary hearing transcript and the
4 Because the magistrate who issued the search warrant was not
available to hear the motions, a different bench officer presided over the
hearing on the motions to traverse and to dismiss.
8
parties’ written motion and opposition papers. The court did not ask Officers
Stewart and Marquez (who were present in court pursuant to subpoenas by
the district attorney) to testify, nor did the court review the body-worn
camera footage referenced in Feghhi’s motion.
The trial court considered two issues raised by the motion: the effect of
the implied consent law under Vehicle Code section 23612 and the
characterization of a blood draw under United States Supreme Court
precedent. The court distinguished the implied consent law, which was
“largely an administrative statute” that provided “collateral consequences”
affecting driving privileges, from the issue of “invasiveness of” the blood draw
such that the magistrate would not have issued the warrant had she been
informed the defendant had agreed to a breath test.
The trial court determined that Feghhi’s assertion, following his initial
rejection of the request for a chemical test, that he did not “ ‘like needles’ ”
and would “ ‘take a breath test’ ” should have resolved the warrant issue.
The court stated it did not believe that “[h]ad that been put in the affidavit,
. . . [the magistrate] would have issued that warrant. She simply would have
said, ‘You have your alternative to a breath [sic] test. He says he will take it.
Go get it done.’ ” The court reasoned that although the defendant “may have
initially refused” consent, he later agreed to submit to a breath test, which
“under the current law, [the defendant] has that option, he exercised it, and
that should have ended it.” The court granted the motion to traverse (order
granting motion to traverse). It denied the motion to dismiss the murder
count.
On March 3, 2025, petitioner filed the instant petition, seeking writ
review of the order granting motion to traverse. Feghhi filed an opposition to
the petition, arguing the trial court correctly suppressed the blood draw
9
evidence, having found the failure to disclose the defendant’s consent to a
breath test was material and given the invasiveness of the blood draw. On
August 1, 2025, this court summarily denied the petition.
Petitioner sought review in the California Supreme Court. On October
1, 2025, our high court granted the petition for review and transferred the
matter to this court with directions to vacate the original order denying
mandate and issue an order to show cause. On October 3, 2025, this court
vacated the order denying the petition and ordered respondent to show cause
why petitioner is not entitled to the relief requested. As described ante (pt.
I.A.), in response to this court’s invitation to file a return in opposition to the
writ, Feghhi filed an unverified legal brief, which we treat as a return by
demurrer to the petition.
II. DISCUSSION
The petition challenges the suppression order on legal and procedural
grounds. 5 Petitioner contends the trial court applied an incorrect legal
standard in granting the motion because it failed to assess the affidavit
(modified to correct any omission or misrepresentation) for probable cause
and treated a purported statutory violation of the implied consent law as a
basis to deny a request for a search warrant supported by probable cause.
Petitioner also asserts the court erred by granting Feghhi’s motion without
hearing any evidence.
Feghhi’s return asserts, citing the transcript of the body-worn camera
footage of his arrest and attached to the motion, that after Feghhi was read
the admonition, he engaged in a colloquy with Officer Marquez wherein
5 While the petition sets forth three bases for reversal of the trial
court’s order, we understand the first and third asserted bases—both of
which challenge the order granting motion to traverse on legal grounds—to
be duplicative. We address those arguments together.
10
Feghhi admitted he was “ ‘a little bit scared of needles’ ” and “ ‘want[ed] [to]
do a breath[a]lizer test.’ ” Feghhi argues that by seeking and obtaining a
search warrant for a blood draw after he repeatedly requested a breath test
and by misrepresenting his purported refusal to submit to a chemical test,
the officers violated both California’s implied consent law and Feghhi’s
constitutional rights. Feghhi asserts that misrepresenting the need to obtain
a physically intrusive blood draw when a breath test was available and of
similar evidentiary value was unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment
and rendered the results of the search inadmissible.
A. Legal Principles and Standard of Review
“ ‘In California, issues relating to the suppression of evidence derived
from governmental searches and seizures are reviewed under federal
constitutional standards.’ ” (People v. Macabeo (2016) 1 Cal.5th 1206, 1212.)
The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution “provides in
relevant part that ‘[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons,
houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall
not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause.’ ”
(Missouri v. McNeely (2013) 569 U.S. 141, 148 (McNeely).) The Supreme
Court has described the warrant clause as “[t]he bulwark of Fourth
Amendment protection . . ., requiring that, absent certain exceptions, police
obtain a warrant from a neutral and disinterested magistrate before
embarking upon a search.” (Franks, supra, 438 U.S. at p. 164.) The warrant
clause applies to the blood draw in this case. (McNeely, at p. 148 [blood draw
“involved a compelled physical intrusion beneath [defendant]’s skin and into
his veins to obtain a sample of his blood for use as evidence in a criminal
investigation”].)
11
The Supreme Court in Franks recognized a defendant’s right to
challenge a search warrant “where the defendant makes a substantial
preliminary showing that a false statement knowingly and intentionally, or
with reckless disregard for the truth, was included by the affiant in the
warrant affidavit, and if the allegedly false statement is necessary to the
finding of probable cause, the Fourth Amendment requires that a hearing be
held at the defendant’s request.” (Franks, supra, 438 U.S. at pp. 155–156.)
Franks further held that if the defendant at the hearing shows reckless
disregard by a preponderance of the evidence “and, with the affidavit’s false
material set to one side, the affidavit’s remaining content is insufficient to
establish probable cause, the search warrant must be voided and the fruits of
the search excluded to the same extent as if probable cause was lacking on
the face of the affidavit.” (Id. at p. 156.)
California courts likewise apply Franks to deliberate omissions of
material facts from an affidavit for a search warrant. “ ‘A defendant can
challenge a search warrant by showing that the affiant deliberately or
recklessly omitted material facts that negate probable cause when added to
the affidavit.’ ” (People v. Sandoval (2015) 62 Cal.4th 394, 409, quoting
People v. Eubanks (2011) 53 Cal.4th 110, 136 (Eubanks).) Our high court has
explained that, “ ‘[t]hough similar for many purposes, omissions and
misstatements analytically are distinct in important ways. . . . An affidavit
need not disclose every imaginable fact however irrelevant. It need only
furnish the magistrate with information, favorable and adverse, sufficient to
permit a reasonable, common sense determination whether circumstances
which justify a search are probably present. [Citations.]’ [Citation.] ‘[A]n
affiant’s duty of disclosure extends only to “material” or “relevant” adverse
facts.’ [Citation.] ‘[F]acts are “material” and hence must be disclosed if their
12
omission would make the affidavit substantially misleading.” (Sandoval, at
p. 410.)
“Courts have a ‘strong policy favoring search by warrant rather than
upon other allowable basis.’ ” (People v. Amador (2000) 24 Cal.4th 387, 393.)
“For this reason, when . . . the police do obtain a warrant, that warrant is
presumed valid. ‘Thus if the defendant attempts to quash a search warrant,
. . . the burden rests on him [or her].’ [Citation.] A defendant claiming that
the warrant or supporting affidavit is inaccurate or incomplete bears the
burden of alleging and then proving the errors or omissions.” (Ibid.; see
Franks, supra, 438 U.S. at pp. 171–172.)
“ ‘A defendant has a limited right to challenge the veracity of
statements contained in an affidavit of probable cause made in support of the
issuance of a search warrant. The trial court must conduct an evidentiary
hearing only if a defendant makes a substantial showing that (1) the affidavit
contains statements that are deliberately false or were made in reckless
disregard of the truth, and (2) the affidavit’s remaining contents, after the
false statements are excised, are insufficient to support a finding of probable
cause. Innocent or negligent misrepresentations will not support a motion to
traverse. [Citations.] A defendant who challenges a search warrant based on
omissions in the affidavit bears the burden of showing an intentional or
reckless omission of material information that, when added to the affidavit,
renders it insufficient to support a finding of probable cause. [Citations.] In
either setting, the defendant must make his showing by a preponderance of
the evidence, and the affidavit is presumed valid.’ ” (People v. Miles (2020) 9
Cal.5th 513, 576–577 (Miles); see People v. Scott (2011) 52 Cal.4th 452, 484
(Scott).)
13
“On appeal, ‘[w]e defer to the trial court’s express and implied factual
findings if supported by substantial evidence, but we independently
determine the legality of the search under the Fourth Amendment.’ ” (Miles,
supra, 9 Cal.5th at p. 577, quoting Eubanks, supra, 53 Cal.4th at p. 133.)
B. The Trial Court Erroneously Granted Feghhi’s Motion To Traverse
the Search Warrant and Suppress the BAC Evidence
In his motion, Feghhi asserted that Officer Marquez “intentionally
misled the magistrate into a mistaken belief that [] Feghhi had refused a
chemical test so that police could obtain a blood sample, where none was
necessary given that [] Feghhi had repeatedly asserted his legal right to
choose a breath test.” The motion thus raised two issues: first, whether the
affidavit supporting the warrant falsely represented Feghhi’s nonconsent to a
chemical test (or omitted the fact of Feghhi’s consent), and second, whether
Feghhi’s purported consent rendered the blood draw (and thus, the warrant)
not “necessary” because Feghhi had exercised his statutory right to choose a
breath test.
Feghhi’s motion must be viewed under the Franks two-part framework
for analyzing a defendant’s claim in a criminal proceeding that factual
misstatements or omissions in the affidavit invalidate the probable cause
determination. This framework required the trial court to decide whether
Feghhi met his burden for an evidentiary hearing on the motion by
(1) evaluating Feghhi’s allegations of falsity or material omissions in the
affidavit supporting the warrant, and (2) determining whether the affidavit’s
remaining contents, after removing or correcting the alleged falsities, were
insufficient to support a finding of probable cause.
We have significant doubts whether the evidence presented at the
hearing provided substantial evidence in support of the magistrate’s implied
14
finding that Feghhi immediately consented to a breath test and that Officer
Marquez’s affidavit contained a material omission. But even assuming
arguendo there was a material omission in the affidavit, we decide the trial
court erred in determining the remainder was insufficient to support a
finding of probable cause by the magistrate.
“[I]f, when material that is the subject of the alleged falsity or
reckless disregard is set to one side, there remains sufficient content in the
warrant affidavit to support a finding of probable cause, no hearing is
required.” (Franks, supra, 438 U.S. at pp. 171–172.) In the context of an
alleged omission, we consider whether the affidavit’s contents—corrected to
include the omitted information—were insufficient to support a probable
cause finding. (Miles, supra, 9 Cal.5th at p. 576.) “Probable cause sufficient
for issuance of a warrant requires a showing in the supporting affidavit that
makes it substantially probable that there is specific property lawfully
subject to seizure presently located in the particular place for which the
warrant is sought.” (Scott, supra, 52 Cal.4th at p. 483; see Illinois v. Gates
(1983) 462 U.S. 213, 238 [reaffirming consideration of “all the circumstances
set forth in the affidavit” in deciding whether “there is a fair probability that
contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place”].)
The trial court’s determination that the magistrate would not have
issued the warrant had the affidavit included the omitted information
regarding Feghhi’s request to submit a breath test after being admonished by
Officer Marquez, reflected the court’s reasoning that the warrant was not
“necessary” and was unduly invasive because Feghhi had exercised his
statutory right to choose a breath test.
15
The effect of Feghhi’s delayed consent to a breath test under the
implied consent law on the probable cause evaluation is a legal issue subject
to our independent review. (Miles, supra, 9 Cal.5th at p. 577.)
In his motion, Feghhi asserted that Officer Marquez failed to comply
with the implied consent law “in two separate ways” – by failing to honor
Feghhi’s “ ‘choice’ ” between a blood or breath test (Veh. Code, § 23612, subd.
(a)(2)(A)) and by failing to ensure the arresting officer “shall have the test
performed” when an arrestee requests a chemical test to determine BAC (id.,
subd. (d)(1)). However, Feghhi did not articulate how these alleged statutory
violations—and the omission of their occurrence from the warrant affidavit—
precluded a finding of probable cause.
Feghhi instead focused on the distinction drawn by the United States
Supreme Court between the “almost negligible” physical intrusion of a breath
test (Birchfield v. North Dakota (2016) 579 U.S. 438, 461 (Birchfield)) and the
“significantly more intrusive” blood test (id. at p. 464). He suggested that
because the implied consent law recognizes that a breath (or urine) test is
“ ‘functionally equivalent of a blood test for evidentiary purposes with respect
to blood-alcohol level’ ” (quoting People v. Fiscalini (1991) 228 Cal.App.3d
1639, 1645 (Fiscalini)), “no warrant could or would reasonably have issued
for the forcible taking of [] Feghhi’s blood” had the magistrate been informed
of Feghhi’s consent to a breath test. Feghhi reiterates these arguments in his
return.
Feghhi’s arguments conflate several distinct issues.
The implied consent law provides that “[a] person who drives a motor
vehicle is deemed to have given his or her consent to chemical testing of his
or her blood or breath for the purpose of determining the alcoholic content of
his or her blood, if lawfully arrested for an offense allegedly committed in
16
violation of [s]ection 23140, 23152, or 23153.” (Veh. Code, § 23612, subd.
(a)(1)(A).) In other words, “drivers who are arrested on suspicion of DUI are
deemed to have consented to chemical testing to determine their blood-
alcohol concentration.” (Espinoza v. Shiomoto (2017) 10 Cal.App.5th 85, 97.)
The law provides the arrestee “the choice of whether the test shall be of his or
her blood or breath[,] and the officer shall advise the person that he or she
has that choice.” (Veh. Code, § 23612, subd. (a)(2)(A).) The law further
requires that if a person lawfully arrested for a suspected DUI offense
requests a chemical test (blood or breath), “the arresting officer shall have
the test performed.” (Id., subd. (d)(1).) The law requires the officer to advise
the motorist that a failure to submit to, or to complete, the required test will
result in certain administrative and other penalties. (Id., subd. (a)(1)(D).) 6
The implied consent law thus imposes requirements upon both driver
and law enforcement officer in the context of a lawful DUI arrest. It imposes
administrative penalties, including suspension or revocation of a driver’s
license, for a motorist’s refusal to submit to a chemical test. Contrary to
Feghhi’s argument in support of the suppression motion, however, it does not
constrain—and imposes no prerequisites upon—a law enforcement officer’s
decision to seek a search warrant for a blood test. Nothing in the statutory
6 Following the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Birchfield,
the Legislature in 2018 eliminated criminal penalties for the refusal to
submit to a blood test. (People v. Bolourchi, (2024) 103 Cal.App.5th 243, 257,
fn. 6, citing Assem. Bill No. 2717 (2017–2018 Reg. Sess.); Stats. 2018, ch. 177,
§§ 1–3; see Veh. Code, § 23577, subd. (c).) Birchfield reinforced prior
Supreme Court opinions that “have referred approvingly to the general
concept of implied-consent laws that impose civil penalties and evidentiary
consequences on motorists who refuse to comply” (Birchfield, supra, 579 U.S.
at pp. 476–477) but held, given the invasiveness of a blood test, that
motorists may not be criminally punished for refusing to submit to a blood
test based on their implied consent (id. at p. 476).
17
language or case law interpreting the provisions of Vehicle Code section
23612 indicates that an officer’s duties to advise the motorist of their implied
consent to submit to a chemical test and of the consequences of failing to
submit to or complete a test is a necessary predicate to obtaining a search
warrant.
The body of law that Feghhi relies upon does not suggest otherwise.
The United States Supreme Court precedents of McNeely and Birchfield
examined specific exceptions to the prohibition on nonconsensual,
warrantless blood draws in DUI investigations. (See McNeely, supra, 569
U.S. at p. 145 [rejecting natural metabolization of alcohol in the bloodstream
as the basis for “a per se exigency” exception to the Fourth Amendment’s
warrant requirement in DUI cases and requiring exigency to “be determined
case by case based on the totality of the circumstances”]; Birchfield, supra,
579 U.S. at p. 476 [concluding that a warrantless “breath test, but not a blood
test, may be administered as a search incident to a lawful arrest for drunk
driving”]; id. at p. 477 [rejecting the imposition of criminal penalties as a
basis for implied consent to a blood test].)
The United States Supreme Court’s distinction between breath and
blood tests based on the degree of physical intrusion as well as privacy
interests (Birchfield, supra, 579 U.S. at pp. 461–464) in these cases must be
understood in context of the issues being decided—namely, the
constitutionality of warrantless searches conducted in connection with
suspected drunk driving arrests. Feghhi relies on Supreme Court cases that
address the constitutional limits of warrantless searches that do not speak to
whether probable cause supported the warrant application in this case.
The United States Supreme Court’s Fourth Amendment jurisprudence
recognizes that “reasonableness is always the touchstone of Fourth
18
Amendment analysis.” (Birchfield, supra, 579 U.S. at p. 477.) In most
criminal cases, “reasonable[ness]” is defined by “the procedures described by
the Warrant Clause of the Fourth Amendment. [Citations.] Except in
certain well-defined circumstances, a search or seizure in such a case is not
reasonable unless it is accomplished pursuant to a judicial warrant issued
upon probable cause.” (Skinner v. Railway Labor Executives’ Assn. (1989)
489 U.S. 602, 619.) Feghhi has cited no authority—and we are similarly
unaware of any—holding that there is a categorical rule deeming blood tests
unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment where the police have secured a
warrant supported by probable cause, even if the defendant consents to a
chemical test. 7
Feghhi cites several California cases and a decision of the Ninth Circuit
Court of Appeals as support for the proposition that an arrestee’s consent to a
breath test under the implied consent law renders a forced blood test
unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment, given the functional equivalence
of the breath and blood tests for evidentiary purposes. (See Nelson v. City of
7 We acknowledge that compliance with the procedures of the warrant
clause does not invariably equate with reasonableness under the Fourth
Amendment. In Winston v. Lee (1985) 470 U.S. 753, for example, the United
States Supreme Court held that a court order requiring a suspect to undergo
surgery to remove a bullet—as probable evidence of a crime—from the
suspect’s chest violated the Fourth Amendment. (Id. at p. 755.) The court
reasoned that under such circumstances, “[a] compelled surgical intrusion
into an individual’s body for evidence, . . . implicates expectations of privacy
and security of such magnitude that the intrusion may be ‘unreasonable’ even
if likely to produce evidence of a crime.” (Id. at p. 759.) However, Winston
specifically contrasted the significant intrusion of surgery with routine blood
draws, which “do not constitute an unduly extensive imposition on an
individual’s personal privacy and bodily integrity.” (Id. at p. 762.) Winston
does not support the broad attack urged by Feghhi here on the
reasonableness of a probable-cause warrant for a blood draw.
19
Irvine (9th Cir. 1998) 143 F.3d 1196, 1205, 1207 (Nelson) [nonconsensual,
warrantless blood tests violated Fourth Amendment rights of DUI defendants
who had consented to undergo available breath or urine tests]; Fiscalini,
supra, 228 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1644–1645 [reversing denial of motion to
suppress where officers obtained warrantless blood sample after defendant’s
DUI arrest despite having already obtained a voluntary a urine test]; cf.
People v. Sugarman (2002) 96 Cal.App.4th 210, 215–216 [affirming denial of
defendant’s motion to suppress blood test evidence where conditions were
met for exigent circumstances exception to the warrant requirement and the
record showed defendant was obstructing attempts to obtain a breath
sample].) Like the United States Supreme Court cases cited by Fegghi, these
cases also involved warrantless searches. Feghhi’s attempt to compare the
circumstances of his blood draw to those in Nelson and Sugarman is therefore
unavailing.
Moreover, to the extent the cited authorities address the question of
whether a violation of the implied consent law by law enforcement officers
serves as a basis for application of the exclusionary rule to the evidence
obtained, courts have squarely rejected such an approach. (Fiscalini, supra,
228 Cal.App.3d at p. 1645, fn. 7 [“Mere noncompliance with the implied
consent law . . . does not implicate any constitutional issue or invoke any
statutory exclusionary rule.”]; accord, People v. Brannon (1973) 32 Cal.App.3d
971, 975 [“Evidence obtained in violation of a statute is not inadmissible per
se unless the statutory violation also has a constitutional dimension.”]; see
also People v. Vannesse (2018) 23 Cal.App.5th 440, 447 [holding that “failure
to give an advisement in compliance with the implied consent law does not
mandate the suppression of the test result” because “evidence may be
suppressed . . . only if the defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights were
20
violated and suppression is mandated by the federal exclusionary rule”];
Ritschel v. City of Fountain Valley (2006) 137 Cal.App.4th 107, 118
[“California case law unequivocally establishes a police officer’s failure to
comply with the implied consent law does not amount to a violation of an
arrestee’s constitutional rights.”].)
Nor has Feghhi advanced any argument regarding the effect of Officer
Marquez’s omission to the magistrate’s probable cause determination.
Feghhi does not dispute that the facts recited in Marquez’s affidavit related
to the traffic crash made “it substantially probable” (Scott, supra, 52 Cal.4th
at p. 483) that evidence of a DUI offense would be found in a blood test to
obtain Feghhi’s BAC. Facts supporting the probable cause finding included
evidence obtained at the scene that Feghhi was the driver of the Corvette
that crashed into Arellano’s vehicle, that Officer Stewart conducted a DUI
investigation of Feghhi and observed objective signs and symptoms of alcohol
intoxication, and that Arellano sustained fatal injuries.
For purposes of a Franks hearing to quash and traverse the warrant, it
was Feghhi’s burden to show that correcting the affidavit’s contents to
include the omitted information rendered the affidavit insufficient to support
a probable cause finding. (Miles, supra, 9 Cal.5th at p. 576.) Feghhi’s motion
did not engage in the requisite analytical exercise. Nor does he propose, in
response to the petition and order to show cause, how informing the
magistrate of his request to take a breath test in lieu of a blood test would
have adversely impacted the affidavit’s showing of probable cause for
issuance of the warrant for a blood draw.
Feghhi appears to concede as much in his return. He states that
petitioner “argued in the writ that Franks applies only on the issue of false
statements or omissions related to the probable cause requirement, which
21
was not the situation here.” (Italics added.) Feghhi contends that “even if
petitioner was correct about the Franks issue,” there remains a viable
argument, which has not been considered, “that the search was nevertheless
unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment as determined in Nelson where
the state insisted in obtaining a blood test despite the suspect’s demonstrated
consent to undergo a breath test.” Feghhi reiterates his earlier argument
that because the breath test was available and of similar evidentiary value,
the state’s insistence on obtaining a blood test, requiring “significant physical
intrusion . . . rendered the search unreasonable, and the results
inadmissible.”
We disagree. Feghhi’s argument ignores the contextual distinction—
procurement of a warrant versus a warrantless search—between this case
and Nelson. Because Nelson preceded the United States Supreme Court’s
decisions in McNeely and Birchfield, the controlling authority was Schmerber
v. California (1966) 384 U.S. 757, in which the high court established an
exigency exception to the warrant requirement for blood alcohol testing in
DUI cases. (Id. at pp. 770–771.) Exigency was a crucial component of the
Court of Appeals’ reasoning in Nelson: “Whenever a DUI arrestee consents to
a breath or urine test, and such tests are available, the administration of
either the breath or urine test would preserve the evidence and end the
exigency.” (Nelson, supra, 143 F.3d at p. 1205, italics added.) The court
concluded, “because the sole justification advanced to excuse the officers from
obtaining a warrant disappeared when the exigency ended, the blood tests
were not only unnecessary and unreasonable, but violated the Fourth
Amendment’s warrant requirement.” (Ibid.)
Here, exigency was irrelevant because the constitutionality of the blood
test search does not rely on any exception to the warrant requirement. Apart
22
from a single, conclusory argument that “any policy by a law enforcement
agency to take a blood test regardless of the suspect’s insistence on a breath
test is . . . unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment,” Feghhi fails to
provide any argument or authority for this categorical rule. 8 We decline to
adopt this significant departure from the general rule that a search
conducted pursuant to a warrant supported by probable cause issued by a
neutral and detached magistrate is “reasonable” under the Amendment’s
terms.
On this record, we conclude Feghhi has not met his burden to show
that the fact of his consent to a breath test was material to the magistrate’s
evaluation of probable cause under the warrant. Feghhi also has not shown,
on the specific facts of this case, that the issuance of a warrant for his blood
sample was unreasonable. In other words, Feghhi did not meet his burden
for a Franks hearing or the granting of his suppression motion.
The trial court’s contrary conclusion was error. 9
III. DISPOSITION
Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing respondent court to
vacate its January 31, 2025 order in case No. F2200028 granting real party in
interest’s motion to traverse and quash search warrant and suppress
evidence, and enter a new order denying said motion.
8 We do not suggest that use of a warrant for a blood draw rather than
a chemical breath test may never be unreasonable. That abstract question is
not before us. On these facts, involving a routine blood draw clearly
supported by probable cause, we decide that no violation of Feghhi’s Fourth
Amendment rights occurred.
9 Having decided that Feghhi’s motion to traverse the search warrant
and suppress the evidence of the blood draw should have been denied, we
need not reach petitioner’s additional argument that the trial court erred by
granting the motion to traverse without hearing any evidence.
23
______________________________________
Danner, J.
WE CONCUR:
____________________________________
Greenwood, P. J.
____________________________________
Bromberg, J.
H053051
People v. Superior Court (Feghhi)
Trial Court: County of Santa Clara
Trial Judge: Hon. Robert Foley
Counsel: Jeffrey F. Rosen, District Attorney and Thomas Butterfoss,
Deputy District Attorney for Petitioner.
No appearance for Respondent.
G. Cole Casey and Patrick Morgan Ford for Real Party in
Interest.
H053051
People v. Superior Court (Feghhi)