Alma Montes v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 25, 2004
Docket08-02-00406-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Alma Montes v. State (Alma Montes v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alma Montes v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS
EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
EL PASO, TEXAS


)

ALMA MONTES,

)
No. 08-02-00406-CR
)

Appellant,

)
Appeal from
)

v.

)
168th District Court
)

THE STATE OF TEXAS,

)
of El Paso County, Texas
)

Appellee.

)
(TC# 20020D00998)

MEMORANDUM OPINION



Alma Montes appeals her conviction for possession of over four hundred grams of cocaine. She was charged with both possession and intent to deliver, but the jury found her guilty of the lesser offense and assessed punishment at confinement for fifteen years and a $5,000 fine. On appeal, she claims she received ineffective assistance of counsel. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

On August 20, 2001, Appellant planned to visit her husband at the El Paso County Jail. On the way, she stopped to pick up Eugene Nixon at his apartment. Although they had never met, Nixon had called her, said he had legal papers that could help get her husband out of jail, and asked for a ride. Appellant waited at the door while Nixon grabbed a package purportedly containing the legal documents. Upon entering Appellant's truck, Nixon put the package on the left side of the floor board. While waiting in line at the jail, Appellant realized she still had her purse with her. She told Nixon that nothing was allowed inside and that she was taking her purse back to the truck. Appellant asked whether he wanted her to take the package as well. Nixon said no. When they entered the doors to the jail, Nixon told Appellant that the package could get them into trouble. Appellant did not leave at this point because she was already inside the jail. It didn't occur to her to mention Nixon's statement to the officers. Appellant passed through the metal detector, waited for her keys, and headed toward the elevator.

Nixon offered a different scenario. He claimed he met Appellant and her husband a month or two earlier at a baseball game near his apartment. Appellant then showed up at his apartment on August 16 asking for his help in getting her husband out of jail. She came to his apartment again on August 20 talking about a deal to get her husband out of jail. He suggested the two of them go down to the jail to talk to her husband. Appellant implied she wanted Nixon to go alone, but since he did not have transportation, they went together. When he got into the truck, Nixon saw a black bag sitting between the seats. Appellant parked the truck a block down the street from the jail and told Nixon to carry the black bag since she was carrying her purse. When Nixon asked what was in the bag, Appellant told him it contained the papers to get her husband out of jail. Nixon claimed that he tried to give her the bag several times. At the jail, he followed Appellant through Station No. 1 where she checked in for visitation, then to Station No. 2, the security station. When Nixon entered the security station, the officer asked him what was in the bag. Nixon told him about the papers but the officer said he would have to inspect the bag. When Nixon opened the bag, he found a black bundle instead of legal papers.

According to Edgar Baca, an El Paso County Sheriff's Department detention officer on duty that evening, Appellant seemed to hesitate after passing through the metal detector. Nixon then proceeded through, carrying a nylon portfolio. Baca asked Nixon what was in the portfolio and Nixon told him about the legal papers. Baca suggested that an officer could take the papers upstairs to be signed. He told Nixon to open the portfolio so he could see the contents. Nixon hesitated and then handed it over. Inside was a black box a bit larger than a video cassette. Nixon told Baca he did not know what it was. Appellant told Baca the portfolio wasn't hers.

Appellant and Nixon were detained while Baca contacted Lieutenant Chairez and Deputies Conner and Lovato. At first, Deputy Conner thought the box might contain narcotics, but after feeling the box, he was concerned it contained explosives. Appellant and Nixon were moved away from the public. Appellant claimed that she and Nixon were left in a room alone for a few minutes. Nixon threatened Appellant's husband and told Appellant to take the blame for the package. Appellant was afraid to tell the officers about the threat.

Appellant and Nixon were then separated and Lieutenant Chairez interviewed them. When Chairez could not determine the contents of the box, he called Captain Gilbert Pinon. Chairez then spoke with Sergeant Scott Mann at the Criminal Investigation Division (CID), who instructed him to act as if the package held explosives and to secure and evacuate the first floor. Sergeant Mann ultimately contacted the military police for the bomb unit. The bomb unit x-rayed the package but no electrical wires were observed. After another x-ray was taken, the officers determined that the package did not appear to be a bomb. When the package was finally opened, it was found to contain a yellowish, off-white powder. A field tested revealed positive results for cocaine. The total gross weight of the substance was 1,080.6 grams.

On August 21, the Metro Narcotics Task Force Unit adopted the case, meaning that the task force took custody of the evidence and Appellant's truck. Detective Marcela Gil testified that the truck was parked in a nearby lot about a block from the jail. She asked Deputy Luis Almonte to bring his K-9, Blackjack, to sniff search Appellant's vehicle. Blackjack alerted to the bottom of the driver's seat and the vehicle was transported to the Task Force impound lot. When Gil interviewed Appellant, Appellant explained that she had received an anonymous call from a man instructing her to meet him around five in the afternoon at a nearby Furr's if she did not want her husband harmed. Appellant drove to Furr's in her truck, parked by the pay phones, and was approached by a white male on the passenger side. The man opened the door and placed a black portfolio underneath her seat. He instructed Appellant to drive to Nixon's apartment. Appellant drove to Nixon's home and delivered the portfolio. When she told Nixon she was going to visit her husband in jail, Nixon invited himself and brought along the portfolio. Appellant indicated to Gil that she knew some kind of narcotics were contained in the portfolio and she knew she would be arrested.

Gil admitted that the statement was not recorded and that the statement was not typed for Appellant's signature because Appellant had said she would not sign anything on the advice of her attorney. Appellant denied ever speaking to Detective Gil, maintaining that she gave her statement to Detective Onesimo Esparza instead.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

A defendant is entitled to "reasonably effective assistance." Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 2063, 80 L.Ed.2d 674, 693 (1984); Stafford v. State, 813 S.W.2d 503, 506 (Tex.Crim.App. 1991). However, a defendant is not entitled to errorless counsel or counsel whose competency is judged by hindsight. Stafford, 813 S.W.2d at 506; Calderon v. State, 950 S.W.2d 121, 126 (Tex.App.--El Paso 1997, no pet.).

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