Akintayo Taiwo Akinrinlola v. the State of Texas

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 1st District (Houston)
DecidedMay 28, 2026
Docket01-24-00410-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Akintayo Taiwo Akinrinlola v. the State of Texas (Akintayo Taiwo Akinrinlola v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 1st District (Houston) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Akintayo Taiwo Akinrinlola v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 28, 2026

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-24-00410-CR NO. 01-24-00413-CR ——————————— AKINTAYO TAIWO AKINRINLOLA, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 405th District Court Galveston County, Texas Trial Court Case Nos. 22CR4315 & 23CR0180

OPINION

After a jury found appellant, Akintayo Taiwo Akinrinlola, guilty of the

felony offenses of possession with the intent to deliver a controlled substance, namely ketamine, weighing 400 grams or more,1 and engaging in organized

criminal activity,2 the trial court assessed his punishment at twenty-five years’

confinement for each offense, to run concurrently. In three issues, appellant

contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress and his trial

counsel provided him with ineffective assistance of counsel.

We reverse and remand.

Background

United States Customs and Border Protection (“CBP”) Officer A. Irizarry

testified that his job involved inspecting international shipments to the United

States for prohibited items, including controlled substances. In 2022, CBP

received an inspection request from one of its “container security officers

[working] in Germany,” stating that there was “a package coming into the United

States that was suspected of having ketamine” inside. In response, Irizarry placed

“a hold” on the package with the United Parcel Service (“UPS”) so that it could be

inspected by CBP when it arrived in the United States.

On November 9, 2022, Officer Irizarry received the package—a regular

cardboard box. The package was addressed to Lisa Pimbley, and its intended

1 See TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE ANN. §§ 481.102(10), 481.112(a), (f). 2 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 71.02(a), (b).

2 destination was Galveston, Texas.3 Irizarry opened the package, and inside he

found a “medicine ball” used for exercise. (Internal quotations omitted.) Irizarry

cut open the medicine ball and found “a crystalline substance” that he tested with a

“TruNarc”—“a handheld device that shoots a laser and . . . identifies [a]

substance.” The TruNarc test revealed that the substance inside the medicine ball

was ketamine.4

Former Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) Investigator R. Vera

testified that he previously worked at DHS’s Galveston office. While working

there, in November 2022, he received information about a package containing

ketamine that had been seized, and he was tasked with investigating who was the

intended recipient of the package. According to Vera, the package was addressed

to Lisa Pimbley at the Holiday Inn hotel in Galveston.

In December 2022, a date was chosen to monitor the package’s

destination—the Holiday Inn hotel—to see if “someone [would] attempt to pick it

up.” Investigator Vera parked outside the front of the hotel “to monitor the area

for anyone walking out with th[e] package.” From his position, Vera was able to

3 Officer Irizarry noted that appellant’s name was not on the package. 4 Department of Public Safety Crime Lab forensic scientist Lauren Molina testified that she tested a white substance that was inside a “medicine ball” which was inside a cardboard box. Her testing identified the white substance as ketamine and its weight as 4,100 grams. Molina stated that ketamine was a controlled substance. A copy of Molina’s report was admitted into evidence during her testimony.

3 see people coming in and out of the front entrance of the hotel. There were other

law enforcement officers parked in different locations to ensure “that [the] package

wasn’t lost and if [an] individual did come and pick [it] up,” then officers could

“monitor th[e] individual leaving the area.”

On that day, Investigator Vera saw a black man walk out of the hotel with

the package containing ketamine that Vera was investigating. Vera and other law

enforcement officers stopped the man before he could get into a car and leave.

When Vera made contact with the man, the man stopped, put down the package,

and followed the instructions given by the officers. The man was arrested, but

Vera learned that another person had been arrested as well. The black man who

picked up the package with whom Vera interacted was not appellant.

DHS Investigator K. Bradley testified that in December 2022, he was

involved in an investigation related to a delivery of a package containing ketamine

at a Holiday Inn hotel in Galveston. Bradley was involved with surveillance of the

hotel. He parked his car on the right side of the hotel, facing the parking area.

While parked, Bradley saw a light-colored car pull into the hotel’s parking lot and

a black man, whom Bradley later learned was named Dalton Brown, exit the car

and walk into the hotel. A second black man, the driver of the car, 5 parked and

5 Investigator Bradley later learned the last name of the driver, which was “Akinrinlola.”

4 exited the car, walking back toward the rear of the hotel between some buildings

and out of sight.

Investigator Bradley was then notified that Brown had picked up the

package containing the ketamine and exited the hotel. Law enforcement officers

stopped him once he exited the hotel with the package. After the “arrest signal”

was “called,” Bradley moved his car “along the side of the pool area” “to block”

Brown, who had picked up the package, “if [he] tried to run.” Bradley saw Brown

with the package containing ketamine in his hands. Brown was not appellant.

Investigator Bradley further explained that while other law enforcement

officers were arresting Brown, he “step[ped] back” to “pay attention to what[]

[was] going on around [him],” and he saw the driver of the car “coming from

behind th[e] buildings,” walking “back towards the direction of the car.” Bradley,

who could be identified as law enforcement by his armor, went toward the driver

and told him, “Hey, police. Come here, come here.” The driver had only a water

bottle and possibly a cellular telephone in his hands. According to Bradley, after

he yelled at the driver, the driver “kind of froze” and then “start[ed] to turn and to

look both ways.” At that point, Bradley “drew [his] firearm” and told the driver,

“Hey, don’t move.” The driver complied, and Bradley placed him in handcuffs

and arrested him. Bradley never saw the driver interact with the package

containing ketamine that Brown retrieved from the hotel.

5 Former Galveston Police Department Detective M. Cauley testified that he

was previously a “task force officer” with DHS. As part of that role, Cauley

participated in “package review[s],” meaning he reviewed international or

interstate package shipments for illicit goods, such as narcotics. In fall 2022,

Cauley was assigned a package-review case and was informed that CBP “had

intercepted a package of illicit drugs that was supposed to be delivered to a hotel”

in Galveston. The package was sent from a narcotics distributor in Belgium, and it

contained more than four kilograms of ketamine.6 According to Cauley, a typical

dose of ketamine was less than five milligrams; thus, the amount of ketamine in the

package was not “a personal use amount.”

Detective Cauley explained that the package was addressed to a Lisa

Pimbley, but his investigation revealed that no one by that name existed in the

Galveston area. Because there were no leads from the information Cauley

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