The prosecutor who charged a drunk-driving case against a Wyoming state lawmaker filed a 30-page argument Friday, urging a judge to keep the case and the evidence driving it alive for trial.
Thatâs after Rep. Bill Allemand, R-Midwest, asked the judge last month to dismiss the case, and called it a product of unfairly-gotten evidence.
The matter is set for a March 25 hearing in Buffalo Circuit Court.
Allemand had, through his attorney Mike Vang, filed a Feb. 25 motion accusing Johnson County Sheriffâs personnel of violating his constitutional rights. That includes a claim a deputy violated his right against unreasonable searches and seizures by handcuffing him after the deputy spotted a loaded pistol on the seat next to Allemand during a Dec. 28 midday traffic stop in Buffalo.
Vangâs motion challenges other pieces of evidence underpinning Johnson County Sheriffâs Deputy Caleb Campbellâs original traffic stop. It invokes a dispute over whether Allemand nearly caused a crash while Campbell watched, or whether the lawmaker was merely nosing into an intersection to survey traffic better.
Johnson County Deputy Attorney Joshua Stensaas countered Friday, in a motion asking Buffalo Circuit Court Judge Sheryl Bunting to keep the case alive for trial, calling Campbellâs evidence fairly gotten and his behavior supported by law.
âBecause the initial stop was lawful, the detention was properly expanded, and the arrest was supported by probable cause, the exclusionary rule (blocking evidence) does not apply,â wrote Stensaas. âSuppression (of evidence) is an extraordinary remedy reserved for constitutional violations, none of which have occurred here.â
If convicted, Allemand faces up to six months in jail and $750 in fines.
Vang, whose emphasis is in defending people charged with DUI cases, told Cowboy State Daily in a Monday phone interview that he plans on responding to the stateâs counter-motion, but he hasnât absorbed the whole argument yet.
The filing is âbiggerâ than heâs seen on a misdemeanor-level DUI, said Vang.
âIâve never seen them spend as much time to respond on a motion like this. So, obviously they (the prosecutors) feel itâs important. And we do too,â he said.
Vang clarified that heâs not seen such a âvoluminousâ counter motion on a misdemeanor DUI across the whole state â including but not limited to Johnson County.
He declined to theorize further about why the motion is so âvoluminous.âÂ
âIâm just saying Iâve got a lot to read and I havenât read it all yet,â he said. âThis got a bigger response than I had in my last aggravated vehicular homicide case.â
First, A Little Background
Allemand was arrested Dec. 28 after a caller contacted law enforcement to say a blue pickup truck with a topper was hitting rumble strips and swerving between lanes near the 260-mile marker on Interstate 25 near Buffalo, reportedly.
Court documents say Johnson County Sheriffâs Deputy Caleb Campbell arrived on scene, saw a blue pickup with a topper, plus a minivan matching the callerâs description of his own vehicle.
The blue truck nearly hit another vehicle as it attempted to enter an intersection off the exit ramp, documents say.
Campbell activated his lights to confront the driver at a gas station in Buffalo, and the driver, Allemand, didnât notice Campbell at first, reportedly.
Court documents say once confronted, Allemand told Campbell heâd been drinking beer for his âanxietiesâ over interstate driving, and that Allemand made a movement near a loaded pistol on his front seat that prompted Campbell to detain him in handcuffs during part of his investigation.
Allemandâs attorney in a Feb. 25 motion called this an unlawful interrogation, saying Campbell asked Allemand questions while the lawmaker was confined without giving him warnings of his Miranda rights first.Â
The Argument
Stensaas in his motion derided what he called an âinaccurateâ portrayal of the facts in Allemandâs motion. Thatâs regarding when Campbell removed Allemandâs handcuffs.
Allemandâs account says Allemand remained handcuffed throughout the traffic stop, while Campbellâs account â conveyed by Stensaas â says the deputy removed them once another deputy arrived on scene, and when he tried to have Allemand perform field sobriety tests.
In either case, Stensaas argues, the traffic stop, handcuffing, and the DUI investigation were all âconstitutionally validâ under the U.S. and Wyoming Constitutions.
Stensaas lays out three types of police interactions with people: encounters, investigatory stops, and arrests.
Consensual encounters donât implicate the Fourth Amendmentâs protection against unreasonable searches and seizures, wrote Stensaas, referencing a 2012 Wyoming Supreme Court case.
Investigatory traffic stops do implicate Fourth Amendment protections, since stopping someone to investigate him is a seizure under the Fourth Amendment. But officers only require specific and articulable facts and rational inferences giving rise to a reasonable suspicion a person has committed or is committing a crime, to perform such stops, Stensaasâ argument notes.
An arrest is more intrusive than the investigatory stop or detention and requires probable cause. And probable cause is a higher standard than âreasonable suspicion.â
Stensaas argues in his counter motion that Campbellâs stop of Allemand was an investigatory stop supported by a detailed description from another driver who called in a drunk driving concern. It was also supported by Campbellâs own encounter of the blue pickup near the origin of that call and near the callerâs own vehicle; and Campbellâs own observations of Allemandâs dangerous driving, says the filing.
When Campbell confronted Allemand in the parking lot of a gas station, Allemand lacked balance, spoke with slurred speech, appeared confused and seemed to lack comprehension of some of the things Campbell said to him, the prosecutorâs argument says.
It was when Allemand reached into his pickup to retrieve his license that Campbell noticed the pistol on the seat, the document says. Campbell told Allemand to step away from the truck, and decided to handcuff him for safety until another deputy arrived on scene, Stensaas added.
âThe defendantâs reckless movement and position in relation to a loaded firearm created the officer safety concern,â wrote Stensaas.Â
But, the prosecutor asserted, Campbellâs temporary detainment of the man for officer safety reasons didnât convert the investigative stop into an arrest, nor trigger the higher evidentiary standard of an arrest.
Thatâs contrary to Allemandâs argument on the subject. Allemand asserted that Campbell asked him incriminating questions while he was handcuffed, making that detainment an unlawful interrogation since he hadnât been warned of his Miranda rights.
Stensaas wrote in his argument that Allemand made multiple statements during the traffic stop, but many of them were voluntary, meaning Allemand gave them on his own and not because of questioning. The prosecutor said heâd air each of these statements at Allemandâs hearing on this matter so the court could weigh them.
Another deputy arrived on scene, and Allemandâs firearm âwas unloaded and secured,â the prosecutorâs filing says.
Allemandâs motion had challenged whether it was appropriate for investigators to ask him to perform field sobriety tests, since heâs had knee replacements and other health issues.
Stensaas countered that Allemand didnât ultimately perform field sobriety tests because his balance was so poor, he had to brace himself on his truck.
'Anxieties'
Deputies took Allemand to jail on other evidence, the prosecutor noted.
âWhile asking the Defendant standard medical questions for the (sobriety tests), the Defendant unprompted, stated he had two beers,â wrote the prosecutor. âWhen Deputy Campbell asked the defendant when he consumed his last beer, the defendant responded his last drink was about 15 miles down the road from Millerâs and Casper.â
Allemand said interstates bother him, and heâs learned âhaving a beer while going down the interstate was so much better, and he knew it was âhighly illegalâ but it helped with his âanxieties,ââ according to Stensaasâ filing.
Stensaas asserts that under the âtotality of circumstancesâ standard under which courts evaluate Fourth Amendment arguments like these, the evidence shows that Campbell acted within the law.
âThe traffic stop, investigatory detention, and the subsequent DUI investigation in this case were each constitutionally valid under both the fourth amendment to the United States and (the Wyoming Constitutionâs version of it),â he wrote.
A later blood draw, gotten by a warrant, showed Allemand had a BAC of 0.24%, the document adds.
Stensaas on Friday in another motion also resisted a request from Vang for scientific materials regarding Allemandâs blood sample, saying Vang is asking for âitems outside of the possession or control of the State.â
The state has already given Allemand the evidence to which Allemand is entitled, the prosecutor added.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.





