Cameron Sherod McDaniel v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 14, 2007
Docket11-05-00276-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Cameron Sherod McDaniel v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion filed June 14, 2007

Opinion filed June 14, 2007

                                                                        In The

    Eleventh Court of Appeals

                                                                   __________

                                                          No. 11-05-00276-CR

                          CAMERON SHEROD MCDANIEL, Appellant

                                                             V.

                                        STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

______________________________________________________________________________

                                             On Appeal from the 203rd District Court

                                                            Dallas County, Texas

                                               Trial Court Cause No. F-0351230-MP

______________________________________________________________________________

                                                                   O P I N I O N

The jury convicted Cameron Sherod McDaniel of possession with intent to deliver cocaine in an amount of four grams or more but less than 200 grams.  Appellant pleaded true to an enhancement paragraph alleging a prior felony conviction, and the court found that enhancement paragraph to be true.  The trial court assessed punishment at thirty-five years confinement.  We affirm.

In three points of error, appellant argues that the evidence is both legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction and that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress.


On the evening of May 4, 2003, Officer Lorne Ahrens, Officer Starr, and Officer Jason Christopher Jarc were on patrol in southeast Dallas.  Officer Starr knew that people were selling drugs at a vacant house at

2224 Cooper Street
.  Around 9:40 p.m., the officers hid in some bushes behind the house.  Over a twenty-minute period, the officers observed eight individuals approach the back window and then leave in less than one minute.  Officer Jarc testified that, in his years of experience as a police officer, he had witnessed many drug transactions and that what he and the other officers observed that evening was consistent with drug activity.

After seeing the eight people come and go from the house, the officers approached the next buyer at the window.  They asked the buyer to get down on the ground, and they waited at the window until the person in the house, appellant, approached.  When appellant got to the window, the officers yelled, APolice, Police!@  Appellant ran toward the front of the house.  The officers called for backup officers, who were waiting around the corner.  Officer Jarc stayed at the back of the house, and Officer Ahrens and Officer Starr went to the front of the house with the backup officers.  Appellant ran to the back of the house with a pistol cradled in his right hand.  Officer Jarc shined a flashlight on appellant and yelled, APolice.@  Appellant slammed the back door shut.  The two officers tried to push the door open. Appellant let go of the door and ran back through the house.  The officers entered the house, and Officer Jarc picked up the gun that appellant had been holding in his hand before.  The gun was lying on the ground near the door.  It was later determined that the gun, a .38 caliber pistol, was loaded with five rounds of ammunition.[1]

Officer Ahrens continued running after appellant and caught up with him near the front of the house.  Officer Jarc was following Officer Ahrens.  Officer Jarc saw appellant make a motion with his arm and then saw a bag fly; the contents of that baggie was later determined to be crack cocaine.  Appellant and the other officers physically struggled until additional officers came in to subdue appellant and arrest him.  The officers searched the house and found that the only furniture in the house was a couch and a table.  An SKS assault rifle was found near the front door.  The officers retrieved a small baggie of marihuana and $1,057 in cash from appellant=s person.  The officers found three other individuals in the house, and they were all arrested.


Other bags of both crack cocaine and marihuana were found on the table, but appellant was not charged with possession of those drugs.  The bags came in three different colors B clear, green, and yellow.  The green bags contained the smallest amount of crack cocaine being sold at that location, the clear bags contained the next level of amount, and the yellow bags contained even a larger amount.  Officer Barry W. Ragsdale, an officer with the Dallas Police Department for over fifteen years, with ten of those years in the narcotics division, testified that it was not uncommon to find guns inside of drug houses because they were used by dealers for both protection and intimidation against other drug dealers and law enforcement.  He further testified that it was common for drug houses to be virtually vacant and that the different size crack cocaine rocks separated into the different colored bags indicated that appellant had gone through a tedious process to divide his product for three different price levels. 

Officer Ragsdale estimated that the thirty-two grams of cocaine seized from appellant had a street value of around $3,200.  Officer Ragsdale testified that based on his experience and given the evidence and circumstances at the house B the amount of drugs and money found in appellant=

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