A blood test that revealed that a Minnetrista father was legally drunk when his sport-utility vehicle crashed through the ice in a Lake Minnetonka channel with his infant daughter inside is admissible in court, a judge ruled Monday.
The ruling leaves in question whether the criminal vehicular homicide case against Jonathan Markle will proceed to trial or end with a guilty plea.
Attorneys for Markle, 42, had challenged the legality of the blood test taken after the Jan. 18 accident that resulted in the death of his 8-month-old daughter, Tabitha, and the single felony charge against him. In a hearing last June, they argued that the blood sample — the key piece of evidence — should be thrown out in the wake of a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling that deemed search warrants necessary for blood draws in most drunken-driving cases.
However, in his ruling, District Judge Jay Quam said that the events of that night justified the need to take Markle's blood without a search warrant at a Waconia hospital.
"The exigent circumstances of this case — including the time-consuming nature of the rescue, the time involved in bringing Mr. Markle to the hospital, and the time necessary to ensure that Mr. Markle did not need medical care — relieved the officer of the need to get a warrant before drawing blood from Mr. Markle without his consent," Quam wrote.
Markle's attorney, Joe Friedberg, said he's not certain of the next step in the case. Both sides will return to court Monday to determine how to proceed. "I'm disappointed, but the judge clearly put a lot of effort into it," he said. "I disagree with it in a lot of ways, but I'm a defense lawyer; I'm used to being ruled against."
The blood sample in question revealed a concentration of .13 percent, well over Minnesota's legal driving limit of .08 percent, less than two hours after Markle's SUV broke through the channel between Priests and Halstead bays about 5 p.m. Jan. 18. His family was on the way home from Lord Fletcher's restaurant.
Markle, his wife, Amanda, and another daughter, 2-year-old Isabelle, escaped from the submerged vehicle and were treated for hypothermia. Tabitha, who was strapped into her car seat, was underwater more than 15 minutes. She died three days later.