Arkansas appeals court judges have reversed and dismissed a drunken-driving conviction, ruling that it resulted from an unconstitutional sobriety checkpoint.
The Little Rock Democrat-Gazette reports that Jeremy Whalen was convicted in 2014 after being arrested at an Arkansas State Police checkpoint in 2012.
In the Dec. 9 decision, Judge Waymond Brown wrote there was no evidence presented to support Whalen’s conviction.
Whalen’s attorney says he’s pleased with the ruling for his client’s sake and so Arkansas law enforcement agencies can be held accountable for running roadblocks that seize citizen drivers.
Arkansas State Police spokesman Bill Sadler says the department won’t make a statement on the rulings until it receives a record of the court decision.
Attorney general spokesman Judd Deere says the office is evaluating further legal options.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
CyberCube: Insured Loss Estimate From AWS Outage Likely About $40M
GEICO Sues Medical Firms in Florida, NY Over Alleged No-Fault Auto Fraud
Old Republic to Acquire Small Farmowner Insurer Everett Cash Mutual
Rotting Apple: Berkley Explains Property Market, Company Appetite 

