Back to News & Commentary

VICTORY! Supreme Court Finds Drunk-Driving Laws Can Be Strictly Enforced without Abandoning Constitutional Rights

decoding=async
decoding=async
Steven R. Shapiro,
Former 桃子视频Legal Director
Share This Page
April 17, 2013

The 桃子视频welcomes today's Supreme Court's decision in Missouri v. McNeely. Writing for the majority, Justice Sonia Sotomayor the 4th Amendment's privacy protections by rejecting the proposition that states may routinely compel drivers to submit to a blood test in drunk-driving cases without consent and without a warrant.

We know from experience that drunk-driving laws can be strictly enforced without abandoning constitutional rights. Today's decision appropriately recognizes what half the states have already demonstrated 鈥 that maintaining highway safety does not require sacrificing personal privacy.

Learn more about policing and other civil liberty issues: Sign up for breaking news alerts, , and .

Learn More About the 桃子视频 on This Page