Brandon W. Stafford v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 27, 2012
Docket10-11-00224-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Brandon W. Stafford v. State (Brandon W. Stafford 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
Brandon W. Stafford v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE TENTH COURT OF APPEALS

No. 10-11-00224-CR

BRANDON W. STAFFORD, Appellant v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

From the 249th District Court Johnson County, Texas Trial Court No. F45288

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Brandon Wesley Stafford, was convicted of unlawful possession of a

controlled substance in an amount more than one gram but less than four grams with

intent to deliver, a second-degree felony, and unlawful possession of less than one gram

of a controlled substance, a state-jail felony. See TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE ANN. §§

481.113(c), 481.116(b) (West 2010 & Supp. 2011). In three issues, Stafford argues that the

trial court erred in denying his motions to suppress and his request for an article 38.23

jury instruction. See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 38.23 (West 2005). We affirm. I. BACKGROUND

At about 11:10 a.m. on September 5, 2010, Texas Department of Public Safety

Troopers Samuel Travis Dendy and Karlton L. Cason observed a red Kia traveling

southbound on Highway 67 in Johnson County. According to Trooper Dendy, the Kia

was traveling approximately ten miles over the posted speed limit, which constituted a

violation of the Texas Transportation Code. See TEX. TRANSP. CODE ANN. § 545.351

(West 2011). The troopers activated the overhead lights on their patrol car and pursued

the Kia. Once they caught up with the Kia near the intersection of Highway 67 and

South Parkway, the troopers noticed that the “back left stop lamp was defective” and

that the vehicle’s inspection sticker had expired—both of which were violations of the

Texas Transportation Code. See id. §§ 547.323, 548.051, 548.101 (West 2011).

After the Kia parked on the shoulder of the road, Trooper Cason approached the

vehicle and attempted to make contact with the driver. Trooper Dendy approached the

front passenger window. Trooper Cason began speaking with the driver of the vehicle,

Stafford. When Trooper Cason asked Stafford where he lived, Stafford first stated that

he lived in Fort Worth, Texas. Stafford then corrected himself and said that he lived in

Cleburne, Texas. Trooper Dendy observed the interaction between Stafford and

Trooper Cason. Trooper Dendy testified that Stafford appeared to be unusually

nervous, which prompted the troopers to ask Stafford to exit the vehicle. Once Stafford

exited the vehicle, the troopers then sought to identify the other passengers. Leijah

Miller sat in the front passenger’s seat, and Mikala Adair was asleep in the back seat of

the vehicle. The troopers learned that the occupants of the vehicle were headed to

Stafford v. State Page 2 Cleburne to rest after partying all night in Dallas, even though their route seemed to

take them away from Cleburne.

Once they established the identities of the vehicle’s occupants, the troopers

returned to their patrol car to run the drivers’ licenses of the occupants. Although there

were not any active warrants out for any of the passengers, Adair and Miller both had

prior drug-related criminal histories. Suspecting that illegal drugs might be in the

vehicle, Trooper Cason returned to ask Stafford if he was transporting anything illegal

and for consent to a search of the vehicle. According to the troopers, Stafford, while

avoiding eye contact and “fidgeting around with his hands,” responded that nothing

illegal was inside the vehicle and denied consent to search because Adair was the

owner of the vehicle.

Thereafter, the troopers spent several minutes trying to wake Adair. Trooper

Dendy stated that Adair initially appeared to be “catatonic,” but that she eventually

awoke. Trooper Dendy noticed that Adair smelled of alcohol and that she stumbled

when getting out of the vehicle. He recalled that Adair appeared to be incoherent when

she first woke up. However, she eventually became coherent and alert. Once it

appeared that Adair had her wits about her and was thinking clearly, the troopers

asked for consent to search the vehicle.1 According to Trooper Dendy, Adair freely and

voluntarily consented to the search without any police pressure or coercion.

1 Trooper Cason testified at trial that, once Adair woke up, her demeanor “changed dramatically . . . . [H]er total mood changed. She became like as if I am right now, just really aware of things.”

Stafford v. State Page 3 After she gave the troopers consent to search the vehicle, Adair sat down on

some large rocks near the road. In searching the vehicle, the troopers found a “one-

hitter” pipe close to the ashtray in the center console area.2 Trooper Dendy noted that

the “one-hitter” pipe was a metal pipe used to smoke marihuana. He further noted that

the pipe smelled of marihuana and that there was marihuana residue inside the pipe.

After finding the “one-hitter” pipe, the troopers believed that they had probable cause

to continue searching the entire vehicle and its contents. As the troopers searched the

vehicle, Stafford “was kind of pacing, just real nervous. The closer I [Trooper Dendy]

got to the box[,] I think the more [sic] the signs of nervousness increased when [sic]

once I got towards the back of the vehicle.”

In the back seat, the troopers found a black bag. Inside one of the pockets of the

black bag were rolling papers, which are commonly used to roll loose-leaf tobacco or

marihuana. Inside the main compartment of the bag, Trooper Dendy found a small

box, which was locked. At this point, Trooper Dendy asked the passengers who owned

the bag. Stafford responded that the bag was his but that the box was not. Miller and

Adair both denied ownership of the box.

Trooper Dendy shook the box and remembered that the box smelled of

marihuana. He also asked the passengers for a key to the box; however, no one

responded to Trooper Dendy’s request for the key. Nevertheless, Trooper Dendy broke

2 At trial, Trooper Dendy stated that the “one-hitter” pipe was sent to the Garland Crime Lab for

destruction because “[i]t wasn’t an element of the offense. We don’t keep anything drug related whether it be contraband and/or controlled substances in our office. . . . [W]e send it to the Garland lab for analysis and destruction so there’s a disposition and a chain of custody of that evidence.”

Stafford v. State Page 4 open the box and found $432 in different denominations; a clear plastic bag containing

five orange ecstasy tablets imprinted with a Superman emblem; three purple ecstasy

tablets imprinted with a rhinoceros emblem; a brownish-orange substance identified as

a Penalty Group 2 controlled substance named “dimethyltrptamine”; and handwritten

ledgers that “said Johnny owes me X amount, Suzie owes me X amount, gave so many

tabs to so and so.”3

The troopers subsequently arrested Stafford and released the vehicle to Adair

and Miller. Stafford was transported to the Johnson County Law Enforcement Center

for booking. After escorting Stafford inside, the troopers returned to the patrol car and

found a gold key on an eight-ball key chain located in the front passenger floorboard

where Stafford had been sitting. The troopers took the key inside and successfully

inserted the key inside the keyhole of the locked box.

Stafford was charged by indictment with one count of unlawful possession of a

controlled substance in an amount more than one gram but less than four grams with

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