Charles W. Herron v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 14, 2005
Docket01-04-00641-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Charles W. Herron v. State (Charles W. Herron 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
Charles W. Herron v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 14, 2005




In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NOS. 01-04-00640-CR

          01-04-00641-CR





CHARLES W. HERRON, Appellant


V.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from the 228th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause Nos. 964436 and 964437





MEMORANDUM OPINION


          Appellant, Charles W. Herron, was charged by indictment with two separate offenses of possession of a controlled substance (namely, cocaine weighing at least 400 grams in cause number 964436, and cocaine weighing at least four but less than 200 grams in cause number 964437) with intent to deliver, each enhanced by a prior conviction for felony possession of a controlled substance. He pleaded not guilty to the primary offenses, but pleaded “true” to the enhancement. A jury found appellant guilty, found the enhancement paragraph true, and assessed punishment at 35 years’ confinement in cause number 964436, and 27 years’ confinement with a $1,000.00 fine in cause number 964437.

          In three issues, appellant contends that the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support his convictions and that the trial court erred in admitting hearsay testimony.

          We affirm.

FACTS

          Drug Enforcement Agent Terrence Brown, working undercover, arranged to purchase two kilograms of cocaine from Tracy Scott on May 13, 2003. Brown met Scott at a restaurant that morning to plan the exchange, and the meeting was recorded by police surveillance. When Scott left the restaurant, surveillance officers followed him to an apartment belonging to Lyn Davis.

          According to Davis, Scott arrived at his apartment asking for five kilograms of cocaine. Davis contacted his friend, Forrest Cook. Cook told Davis that he only had two kilograms available, and Davis determined that Scott and Cook needed to talk face-to-face. Scott and Davis left together in Scott’s Toyota Sequoia, followed by police surveillance. After stopping at Office Depot for a money marker, Scott and Davis went to meet Cook at a house belonging to his mother, Kathleen Herron, on Donovan Street. Cook and his brother, appellant, periodically lived there.

          Scott and Davis parked at the Donovan house and went into the open garage. Police surveillance stationed themselves across the street. Davis reported that he and Scott sat in the garage on lawn chairs and talked with Cook about the two-kilogram deal and the price. Cook then yelled to appellant, who was inside the house, and asked him to “go to the house and pick up those two things.”

          Police surveillance watched appellant leave in a blue Monte Carlo, return approximately 25 minutes later, back up to the open garage door, and then open the trunk. Davis testified that, inside the trunk, he saw two packages of cocaine inside a black trash bag. Davis stated that he, Scott, and Cook spent several minutes looking into the trunk and talking, and that appellant went into the house. Cook then took the black trash bag out of the trunk and set it on a barbecue grill in the garage.

          Davis testified that, moments later, Scott received a call from Brown, inquiring about the delay, and Scott walked around the front of the house on his cell phone during the call. Scott told Brown to come to the Donovan house to make the exchange, but Brown refused. Brown instructed Scott to meet him at a Shell gas station instead.

          According to Davis, he and Scott got into the Sequoia, and Scott told Cook to get “the stuff.” Davis testified that Cook told appellant to follow them to the gas station. Cook then walked into the garage, picked up the black trash bag, carried it to the Sequoia, and got into the back seat. Cook placed the bag under the driver’s seat. Appellant got into the Monte Carlo and followed. Witnessing these events, surveillance radioed Brown and the task force officers waiting at the gas station that the Sequoia had three people in it and that the individual following in the Monte Carlo appeared to be counter-surveillance.

          At the gas station, Scott parked the Sequoia next to Brown’s car and got out to speak to him. Appellant parked behind the Sequoia at a gas pump, got out, and stood next to the Monte Carlo while Scott talked with Brown. Brown went over to the Sequoia and Scott showed Brown the two kilograms of cocaine inside the black trash bag. Brown identified it by smell and packaging. Brown told Scott that he had to go and call for the money, then gave the “bust signal” to the other officers. Police moved in and arrested Scott, Davis, Cook, and appellant.

          During the arrests, officers obtained keys to the Donovan house from appellant. Afterwards, the officers met up with the surveillance agents at the house and ordered a search warrant. While they waited outside the house, an agent thought he saw a person enter the house through the garage. The agents went to the door and knocked, but nobody answered. They could hear scuffling going on inside and, fearing destruction of the evidence, entered and performed a protective sweep of the house. Nobody was found inside. The agents came back outside and waited for the warrant.

          While they were waiting, appellant’s mother arrived home from work. Agents told her what had happened and requested consent to search the house. She agreed and pointed out appellant’s bedroom. A canine unit was brought in and a dog alerted on a shoe box jutting out from underneath appellant’s bed. Agents opened the box and found a rock-like substance in bags, along with a pay-stub, some mail, and an address list belonging to appellant.

          The police chemist identified the cocaine recovered from the sale at the gas station as 1.8 kilograms of powder cocaine and the rock-like substance found under appellant’s bed as 37.5 grams of base-form cocaine.

Possession with Intent to Deliver

          In his first and second issues, appellant contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction because “the State failed to prove the appellant committed possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance as alleged in the indictments.” (Emphasis added).

          In cause number 964436, appellant was convicted for his part in possessing and intending to distribute cocaine to undercover agent Brown.

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