Barrios v. State

27 S.W.3d 313, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 5941, 2000 WL 1230513
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2000
Docket01-98-00872-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 27 S.W.3d 313 (Barrios 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
Barrios v. State, 27 S.W.3d 313, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 5941, 2000 WL 1230513 (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

LEE DUGGAN, Jr., Justice (Retired).

A jury found appellant, Alcario Barrios, Jr., guilty of possession of not less than 200 grams, nor more than 400 grams of cocaine, and the court assessed his punishment at 50-years confinement. Appellant urges two points of error on appeal. We affirm.

In his first point of error, appellant asserts the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress the contraband seized illegally from his home. He argues that officers obtained a warrant to search his home and truck for a described shotgun, and entered his home to search for drugs on the pretext of searching for the weapon, when he had, in fact, already shown them the weapon in his truck when he was arrested in the truck away from his home.

I.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A Colorado County reserve deputy sheriff, employed in an Eagle Lake sporting goods store, recognized appellant as a possible felony probationer when he came into the store and purchased a shotgun. The employee notified the Eagle Lake police chief, who in turn notified Officer Johnny L. Gray of the 25th Judicial District Narcotics Task Force (the “task force”), a state law enforcement agency. Before a search warrant could be obtained, Crime Stoppers in Eagle Lake received and forwarded to Officer Gray information from an anonymous phone call implicating appellant in illegal drug activity.

Officer Gray prepared an affidavit and obtained a warrant to search appellant’s residence and truck for the shotgun, seize it, and arrest appellant. Gray’s warrant affidavit did not mention the Crime Stoppers’ tip, or the possibility of drugs. Officers testified at the suppression hearing that they had no probable cause to believe appellant possessed illegal drugs. As issued, the warrant directed officers to search appellant’s residence and vehicle for a “Winchester model 1300 12 gauge shotgun serial number L3137460.”

The task force took over the execution of the warrant, and 10 to 12 officers, travel-ling in seven vehicles, proceeded to appellant’s residence. En route, one of the participating deputies recognized appellant’s pickup at an intersection approximately one-half mile away from the residence, and notified other officers by radio. Ml of the officers except the four-member “entry” team turned aside and stopped the pickup, which appellant was driving, and took him into custody. The entry team continued to appellant’s residence, effected entry, and secured the premises before appellant, his wife and children, and the three carloads of officers arrived. Appel *316 lant was brought to his residence in one of the police vehicles, while one of the officers drove appellant’s truck.

At appellant’s residence, officers brought appellant inside and seated him at a kitchen table. After placing a copy of the warrant before him and giving him his Miranda warning, officers questioned him. After the conversation, Officer Gray found a digital electronic scale (commonly used to weigh cocaine) and a packet of crack cocaine on one shelf of a kitchen cabinet, and a bag containing two envelopes of cocaine behind a toaster on another shelf in the same cabinet.

Although testimony conflicted as to when it was discovered, the shotgun described in the warrant, along with ammunition, was later recovered from behind the driver’s seat in appellant’s pickup truck. Officer Gray, who found all of the items, determined that the shotgun’s serial number matched the number listed in the warrant.

Appellant filed a motion to suppress the cocaine and scale, challenging the legality of the search of his residence because, he contends, officers knew the whereabouts of the shotgun in his pickup truck before the search. The trial court denied this motion at a pre-trial hearing, and again when it was reurged at the close of evidence. Appellant’s motion for new trial, based on newly-discovered evidence, was also denied.

II.

DISCUSSION

A. Whether the trial court abused its discretion in denying the suppression motion

Testimony by police officers sharply conflicted with that of appellant and his wife about when the shotgun was discovered. Officer Gray testified that when the officers stopped appellant’s vehicle, they neither told him why he was being arrested under a warrant — contrary to their standard practice — nor searched his vehicle at the scene. Instead, they removed the occupants from the truck, and an officer drove the vehicle to appellant’s residence. Gray testified that it is common practice not to search a vehicle on the road when executing a search warrant because of safety concerns. Narcotics Task Force Commander Keith Majors also testified that it was standard operating procedure for task force officers to take a vehicle back to a residence for a search if the vehicle is located away from the residence.

Once appellant was brought inside the residence, Majors testified that he identified himself to appellant as Commander of the 125th Judicial District Drug Task Force and gave appellant a copy of the warrant. The warrant did not state on its face either the offense for which appellant was being arrested or the item to be seized. However, both were shown in the affidavit to the warrant. 1 Majors testified that he did not refer to the shotgun at this point. Instead, after reading appellant his Miranda warnings and hearing his acknowledgment that he understood his rights, Majors stated something to the effect of “You know why we are here,” or ‘You know what we are here for.” Majors acknowledged he and the officers who made the initial arrest did not follow policy or standard operating procedure when they failed to tell appellant what they were looking for or why he was being arrested.

Majors testified that appellant then volunteered the location of the contraband, *317 saying, “It is in there behind, it is in the kitchen cabinets.” According to Majors, the size and shape of the kitchen cabinets were such that the shotgun could have been hidden in them. 2 Officer Gray testified that he looked in the cabinet because appellant “pointed to the cabinets and said it was in there.” In the cabinet, Gray found a digital electronic scale commonly used to weigh cocaine, together with a packet of crack cocaine. Majors and Gray both testified that appellant then added, “Behind the toaster.” Responding, Gray then found a bag containing two envelopes of cocaine.

Gray testified that when the officers did not find the shotgun in the cabinet or elsewhere in the residence, he asked appellant where it was. Only then — after the contraband drugs were found and seized — did appellant tell him it was in his pickup truck behind the seat. Gray testified that he then went outside to the truck, found the shotgun and ammunition hidden behind the seat, and determined that the serial number on the gun matched the one set out in the warrant. Gray testified that the gun was in the original box and was not visible until the seat was moved forward.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.W.3d 313, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 5941, 2000 WL 1230513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrios-v-state-texapp-2000.