“‘It comes down, basically, to are you going to see blood draws every single time someone gets pulled over for a DUI,’ said Michael A. Correll, a litigator with the international law firm Alston & Bird, who examined the legality of blood draws in the West Virginia Law Review last year. Because drunk-driving stops are such an everyday occurrence, ‘it’s going to affect a broad area of society,’ he told NBC News, adding: ‘This may be the most widespread Fourth Amendment situation that you and I are going to face’ for the foreseeable future.”
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