To: IYAS9YAS
“Hardly. Patient confidentiality is a very real issue. HIPAA and the 4th Amendment are in play here.
The unconscious person in her hospital was the victim of a head-on collision caused by a perp (who died in this same collision) the Utah police were chasing.
There is no cause for this victim’s blood to be drawn.”
On the contrary, federal law requires a blood test be taken when a commercial truck driver is involved in a fatal collision regardless of who is at fault.
67 posted on
09/01/2017 8:22:50 AM PDT by
JoeRed
To: JoeRed; IYAS9YAS
> federal law requires a blood test be taken when a commercial truck driver is involved in a fatal collision regardless of who is at fault <
But that’s something a truck driver knows going into the job. It’s implied consent. For everyone else, the Fourth Amendment applies.
80 posted on
09/01/2017 8:32:41 AM PDT by
Leaning Right
(I have already previewed or do not wish to preview this composition.)
To: JoeRed; Leaning Right
On the contrary, federal law requires a blood test be taken when a commercial truck driver is involved in a fatal collision regardless of who is at fault.Thanks for that. I knew that at one time, but had forgotten it.
The question is, did the officer relay that information to the nurse. If not, then the nurse is still in the right, and officer is still in the wrong.
97 posted on
09/01/2017 8:45:48 AM PDT by
IYAS9YAS
(There are two kinds of people: Those who can extrapolate from incomplete data.)
To: JoeRed
On the contrary, federal law requires a blood test be taken when a commercial truck driver is involved in a fatal collision regardless of who is at fault.
Can you please post the text of this law, or at least a link to it? That way we can see where it says that a police officer can draw blood from an unconscious commercial truck driver.
193 posted on
09/01/2017 11:49:18 AM PDT by
drjimmy
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