Following a bench trial upon stipulated facts in the State Court of Coweta County, Scott Hough was found guilty under a two-count accusation of DUI —less safe driver, and DUI “per se” —excessive BAC.1 These charges arose in relation to an accident investigation initiated after Hough skidded his GMC Sonoma pickup truck off a curve on Elders Mill Road near Newnan and into a wooden fence, resulting in serious injury to Hough’s face and head. He was sentenced to 12 months, serve one day, balance probated; a $750 fine; and 40 hours of community service. Hough appeals and, upon review of the enumerated errors, we affirm. 1. Statutory double jeopardy bars multiple convictions for the same conduct, and consideration of this issue is required when it is raised upon the record as a whole.2 Here, it is undisputed that both DUI counts arose from the same conduct.3 The trial court gave Hough a single sentence on the two DUI counts, thereby treating the counts alternatively and as though they were one count; the court neither merged one count into the other nor indicated to which count the sentence applied. “Even though the trial court enters only a single sentence, if that sentence applies to both DUI counts of the accusation, by definition the court has convicted defendant of two counts of DUI.”4 Consequently, Hough’s sentence on both DUI counts of the accusation was improper.5 Accordingly, we vacate Count 2 the “per se” DUI conviction and affirm Count 1 the “less safe” DUI conviction without remand.6
2. Next, Hough claims the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress the results of his blood alcohol test because a his blood was tested pursuant to Implied Consent law, OCGA § 40-5-55, solely because he was involved in a serious accident, as prohibited by the Georgia Supreme Court’s recent holding in Cooper v. State ,7 and b the officer read an Implied Consent notice and obtained a blood test before Hough was arrested for DUI, as proscribed by both this Court’s holding in Buchanan v. State 8 and by OCGA § 40-5-67.1. We find no error in the denial of Hough’s motion to suppress.